A Different Place

Kandahar & London

Kandahar’s Electricity Problems

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I’m with the short-termers on this one:

Convinced that expanding the electricity supply will build popular support for the Afghan government and sap the Taliban’s influence, some officers want to spend $200 million over the next few months to buy more generators and millions of gallons of diesel fuel. Although they acknowledge that the project will be costly and inefficient, they say President Obama’s pledge to begin withdrawing troops by July 2011 has increased pressure to demonstrate rapid results in their counterinsurgency efforts, even if it means embracing less-than-ideal solutions to provide basic public services.

U.S. diplomats and reconstruction specialists, who do not face the same looming drawdown, have opposed the military’s plan because of concerns that the Afghan government will not be able to afford the fuel to sustain the generators. Mindful of several troubled development programs over the past eight years, they want the United States to focus on initiatives that Afghans can maintain over the long term. (excerpted from The Washington Post)

I wrote about this a few weeks back, suggesting that it would probably be better just to pay for fuel and generators so as to deliver something tangible and real for people in Kandahar City. Martine van Bijlert (one of the co-founders of AAN) just posted a must-read commentary from her recent trip down to Kandahar in which she notes that:

I have returned from Kandahar shaken. Not because of the blasts and the warnings and the feelings of apprehension, but because of how dark the future looks when I listen to what people have to say. I fear that all the shiny plans will do very little to change that.

Electricity would, at the very least, be something that the government and foreigners could point to as having improved — only, that is, if it can be maintained past just a few months. The last two times we had regular and reliable electricity — just after Governor Torialai Weesa was appointed to the post for a month or so, and in the run-up to the Presidential and Provincial Council Elections — nobody benefited from the provision of the service because (a) there was very little follow-up in terms of publicising and trying to advertise and remind people it was there and (b) because it soon stopped and people went back to moaning about how useless the government and foreigners are.

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

April 23rd, 2010 at 5:21 pm

Posted in Afghanistan

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Mullah Omar captured?

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Today I heard for the third time that Mullah Mohammad Omar (i.e. Taliban leader) was captured by Pakistanis three weeks ago in Karachi. I don’t really believe it, but since everyone’s talking about it I thought I’d post something here. You know. Just in case…

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

April 19th, 2010 at 6:21 pm

Posted in Afghanistan, General

Tagged with ,

Kandahar Survey

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This is a pretty useful survey to read through. I have my usual concerns about how it was conducted, who they spoke to, who did the interviews, where people were interviewed, how they managed to get through all these long lists of questions etc etc, but there are some general trends here which reflect things said by people I speak to.

The conclusion presents a bleak picture:

This survey’s findings indicate endemic corruption, along with a lack of security and basic services, in Kandahar Province. Collectively, this sets conditions for a disenfranchised population to respond either by not supporting the government due to its inability to deliver improvements in the quality of life or, worse yet, by supporting the Taliban.

We should keep in mind, though, that this survey was carried out between December 23-29, 2009, a period that — compared to now — was and felt much safer. The exponential increase of insecurity, particularly in Kandahar City, since then would surely give more pause for thought. Next time they’re doing these surveys I’d be interested to see some data collected on whether people are sending family members outside the province in anticipation of the coming summer; I’ve heard mountains of anecdotal evidence that this is the case, but something concrete would be useful to confirm this.

[h/t to Nathan Hodge at Wired's Danger Room Blog for distributing this survey online]

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

April 18th, 2010 at 6:16 pm

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“So how is it?”

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I’m running out of ways to describe how difficult Kandahar is becoming, and more so each day. A good friend was just a little over 100 metres away yesterday evening when the foreign offices were attacked. Lucky guy. With him was someone else I interviewed a few months ago for an article I’m writing for The National. The commander of a group of men in a private security company, he had told me how dozens of his friends had died over the course of his work. Last night while he was out with friends, the group that he works with now were all killed in the blast.

We’re only at the beginning of the summer. Four or five months to go before we realise that the surge didn’t really work. If only we could fast-forward to that point and avoid all the deaths to come.

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

April 16th, 2010 at 8:15 am

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Civilian Casualties from Zheray

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Heard this morning about a bus travelling on the Herat-Kandahar road which was shot up by NATO troops. Above you can hear one of the victims explaining what happened. He seems to be the only one in the Mirwais Hospital in Kandahar City; the rest were taken to the main base at Kandahar Airfield (KAF).
A couple of pictures follow:

DSC02625 DSC02626

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

April 12th, 2010 at 12:04 pm

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Hearts and Minds

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I type to you now without the sound of a generator in the background. Yes, it’s that time of the week – we have city power. For those of you who haven’t had the pleasure of working with a generator in the next room, let me just tell you that it makes it difficult to think; by the end of the day you often feel like someone has been bashing your head all day. Turning the generator off is one of the most pleasant moments in my day.

…which is why it baffles me that restoring Kandahar’s city-power isn’t more of a priority for the guys who are ‘winning hearts and minds’ (supposedly) this summer in the city. I get that without sorting out Kajaki and Dahla dams paying for fuel for massive generators to supply the city with power is a little like burning money, but we seem to be doing that anyway so why not go for the short-term fix on this one when it could make SUCH a difference.

Anyway, rant over. Another interesting thing I heard yesterday is that shopkeepers are tearing up and throwing out their stocks of Seven Star cigarettes on account of a rumour that the company have written the word “Allah” inside the filter so that by smoking Seven Star somehow you are burning or desecrating the name of God. People really seem to be taking this one to heart.

UPDATE: (25 minutes later) The power went again. We’re back on generator. Yuk.

AGAIN UPDATE: Things like this don’t help either…

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

April 12th, 2010 at 8:52 am

Posted in Afghanistan

Tagged with

#overheardinkandahar

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“The storm is coming. Believe you me. The storm is coming. I try telling people, but it seems they’re all just making themselves busy with fixing the leaky roof or the squeaky door. The storm will destroy their entire house and city, though. The storm is coming. You have two options: get out now, or climb down into your bunker and hope that the storm will pass and that you’re still alive six months from now. The storm is coming.” (Businessman in Kandahar City).

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

April 12th, 2010 at 8:37 am

Posted in Afghanistan

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Back Home

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Kandahar, it seems, has changed. Felix and I were away for a little over two months, and during that time security conditions in the city have worsened considerably. The threat comes not just from the Taliban — who are able to carry out occasional prominent operations and move around the city — but also criminal groups. Kidnappings, robberies, intimidation — these seem to be par for the course for residents inside the city.

‘The surge’ is coming, too, and everyone knows it. Some families are sending women and children away, either to Quetta or to Kabul; those who could afford to do so had mostly done this already. Young people who manage to find work or study opportunities outside Kandahar are staying away. “Come back to Kandahar?” said one Kandahari friend of mine now working in Kabul. “You’ve got to be kidding, right?”

I haven’t really had a chance to catch up on what’s going on outside the city, let alone what’s going on in the districts, but I hope reporting this summer is going to be better than this recent article (“Barrel-chested governor Canada’s 250-lb political weapon in Kandahar” by Murray Brewster). Steve Coll’s blog post on everyone’s favourite brother is a must-read.

I’m knee-deep in research work and reading of my own. On my bed-side table for the coming couple of weeks (ok, I don’t have a bed-side table…) are:

Brynjar Lia’s Architect of Global Jihad

David Cloud and Greg Jaffe’s The Fourth Star

David Finkel’s The Good Soldiers

Philip Short’s Pol Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare

Vasily Grossman’s A Writer At War: V.G. with the Red Army, 1941-1945

Another book I’ve been dipping into recently is Patrick Porter’s Military Orientalism (Hurst, 2009), an excellent take on the way militaries see each other and adapt to their ‘enemy’. I haven’t yet read the chapter which deals with the Taliban, but I’ll be sure to comment here when I do.

The things we’re working on have completely filled our plates for the next half year or so: a collection of Taliban ‘poems’ or songs that we’re putting out a translation of next year; a second volume together with Mullah Zaeef on the history of the Taliban movement 1980s-present day that we hope will address all the things everyone said he neglected to mention in the first book; and a large research project for New York University on the extent of links between the Taliban and al Qaeda (and all the various affiliates of both) which tackles everything from the 1970s onwards.

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

April 11th, 2010 at 10:16 am

Posted in Afghanistan, General

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Real People, Real War

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Newspapers, politicians and the military on both sides of the Atlantic are salivating at the prospect of a great clash in Marjah (Helmand) in the coming days — “the most dangerous areas of central Helmand in a series of daring raids — the biggest since the first Gulf war” (Sunday Telegraph, UK) — and you’d be forgiven for forgetting the human cost.

Good thing that we have Holly Pickett’s latest blog post to remind us that war affects real people with real lives — strategise all you like, but remember all of this is about people in the end.  Holly’s photos are hard to look at.  That’s the point.

Go there.  Look at them.  Think.  Then act.

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

February 8th, 2010 at 2:27 am

Posted in Afghanistan, Journalism

FT does Kandahar

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Good article in yesterday’s Financial Times newspaper on Amir Mohammad Agha, very much a so-called ‘key player’ in Arghandab district of Kandahar province.  Matt Green outlined why he might be important to the viability of US forces in the district, possibly (although I don’t know this) invited down there by the 82nd Airborne to impress on Amir Mohammad Agha the importance of which way he decides to choose.  In any case, I don’t imagine any ‘decision’ taken by Amir Mohammad Agha to be public and clear-cut.

I was greatly disappointed, however, that Matt missed out on the key point when it comes to Amir Mohammad Agha — he is Mullah Mohammad Omar’s father-in-law.  (and with that, he also missed the extremely important 1980s context and just how involved Amir Mohamad Agha was involved in the early years of the Taliban movement post-1994.

Written by Alex Strick van Linschoten

February 5th, 2010 at 9:27 am

Posted in Uncategorized

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