e-Ariana - Todays Afghan News
 Home 
 News 
 Articles 
 Cartoons 
 Feedback 
 Opinion  
 Contact Us  
 An Ariana Media Publication 07/30/2010
 Afghan spring no ally for U.S.

USA Today
03/19/2010
By Alan Gomez

[Printer Friendly Version]

SARKARI BAGH - The leaves have returned to the trees along the banks of the Arghandab River, and row after row of grape vines and pomegranate trees have received their first irrigation floods of the year.

Winter is yielding to spring, and that means one thing to the U.S. troops in this village outside Kandahar, birthplace of the Taliban.

"It's getting harder to see the insurgents," Staff Sgt. Michael Payne says.

Payne and his company are among the thousands of NATO and U.S. troops filtering into the province for an offensive against the core of the Taliban's strength. The preparation follows the successful clearing of Marjah, a city in nearby Helmand province.

The push is part of a counterinsurgency strategy by the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, and is bolstered by 30,000 additional U.S. servicemembers President Obama sent here to reverse Taliban gains.

Military leaders are positioning the new troops on the outskirts of Kandahar to prevent Taliban forces from infiltrating the city. Here in the Arghandab district is one of the most important points.

"If you control the environs around Kandahar, you go a long way to controlling Kandahar," McChrystal said. "Unlike a Marjah operation, where there was a D-day ... it is more likely that this will be a series of activities that target different parts of it to increase that security."

Payne and his men arrived in Arghandab Valley when the landscape was desolate. The valley, which sits across a small mountain range just north of Kandahar, is in full bloom. Visitors from Kandahar will be streaming in to take in the surroundings as a getaway from the city.

The growth creates blind spots along the river, and the floodwaters swallow up familiar paths the troops used for patrols.

Payne led a group of his men along the river Thursday in their armored personnel carriers to figure out where they can still navigate.

"Before, we could go anywhere," he says. "A lot of these fields are flooded now — thick mud, holes, low branches. We're just trying to have everything planned."

Capt. Claude Lambert, who commands the U.S. company responsible for the north edge of the river, says the foliage gets so thick in parts that helicopters with thermal imaging technology can't even see through the trees.

Since with so much of U.S. counterinsurgency strategy is dependent on foot patrols to better communicate with the locals, insurgents will be able to take quick shots at the troops and quickly hide under cover.

"It just gets so dark in there," Lambert says. "It concerns me greatly."

The spring bloom coincides with the beginning of the fighting season in Afghanistan. Traditionally, major fighting halts during the harsh winters, giving both sides time to regroup and plan, says Army Lt. Col. Guy Jones, commander of the 2nd Battalion, 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment, which is responsible for the river valley.

"It's going to get worse between now and the summer," Jones says.

The Taliban has already started. This week a suicide bomber struck a patrol in Arghandab, wounding two U.S. soldiers. In Kandahar City, coordinated blasts, including two car bombs and six suicide attackers, killed dozens of people Saturday night.

The Taliban issued statements saying the Kandahar attack was a response to the buildup of U.S. troops ahead of the summer Kandahar offensive.

On Thursday, many of Lambert's troops spent the day getting maintenance work done on their vehicles. A helicopter dropped off supplies, and troops rested as the relatively calm days of winter come to an end.

Pvt. Cory Brown finished up a two-hour shift standing guard at one of watchtowers surrounding the outpost late Thursday. The 20-year-old, on his first tour of Afghanistan, was looking forward to some sleep, but was ready for the fighting months ahead.

"Bring it," he said.

Back to Top



Other Stories:


Kabul rioters burn SUVs, yell 'Death to America'
MSNBC (07/30/2010)

US troop death tally of 63 makes for deadliest month in Afghanistan
The Associated Press (07/30/2010)

Afghan MP’s television station pulled off the air
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) (07/29/2010)

The Plight of Afghan Women: A Disturbing Picture (graphic content)
TIME (07/29/2010)

Karzai’s About-Face in the NYT
Columbia Journalism Review (07/29/2010)

Taliban congratulate Dutch
AFP (07/29/2010)

Voters Angry at “Warlord” Candidates
IWPR (07/29/2010)

International Forces Deny Funding Afghan Militia
IWPR (07/29/2010)

The threat of Afghan IEDs (Video)
AlJazeera (07/29/2010)

Afghanistan war logs: Recriminations fly over alleged support for Taliban
The Guardian (07/29/2010)

Envoy Says Corruption Helps Taliban Win Recruits
The New York Times (07/29/2010)

1 Soldier or 20 Schools?
The New York Times (07/29/2010)

End to Iran's meddling stressed
Pajhwok (07/29/2010)

Pakistan terms Afghan Presidents remarks "incomprehensible"
PNS (07/29/2010)

Afghan president asks why allies won't act on Pakistan
Reuters (07/29/2010)

Afghanistan war: How USAID loses hearts and minds
Christian Science Monitor (07/29/2010)

The CIA Solution for Afghanistan
The Wall Street Journal (07/29/2010)

House lawmakers, citing corruption, may block $4 billion in aid to Afghanistan
The Paul Richter (07/29/2010)

Drug Use, Poor Discipline Afflict Afghanistan's Army
The Wall Street Journal (07/29/2010)

Reference to missile-downed helicopter in leaked Afghanistan reports highlights a threat
The Los Angeles Times (07/29/2010)

Local strongman is U.S. troops' most reliable friend in Kandahar province
The Washington Post (07/29/2010)

For General Petraeus, battling corruption in Afghanistan is a priority
The Washington Post (07/29/2010)

Pakistan cannot play both sides forever
Telegraph (08/28/2010)

Stewart, Colbert Weigh In on WikiLeaks (Video)
The Wrap (08/28/2010)

Afghanistan war logs: tensions increase after revelation of more leaked files
The Guardian (07/28/2010)

War logs are no surprise to Afghans
The Guardian (07/28/2010)

WikiLeaks War Diary Prompts Bored Media To Finally Admit Afghanistan Is Not Going Well
The Huffington Post (07/28/2010)

Osama, Zawahiri in Pakistan: Mullen
Pajhwok (07/28/2010)

Afghan asylum-seekers shot dead in Iran
United Press International (07/28/2010)

WikiLeaks: The 7 strangest revelations
The Week (07/28/2010)


Back to Top