You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Afghanistan
In Afghanistan, more and more roadside bombs
2011-08-08
[Dawn] The use of roadside kabooms in Afghanistan against foreign troops and civilians has reached record highs, with US forces struggling to cut off the flow of Pak fertilizer used to build them.

Taliban gunnies battling US and NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Originally it was a mutual defense pact directed against an expansionist Soviet Union. In later years it evolved into a mechanism for picking the American pocket while criticizing the cut of the American pants...
-led forces for nearly a decade are now using a growing number of improvised bombs (IEDs) to strike personnel or vehicles along Afghanistan's dusty roads.

The Pentagon's Joint IED Defeat Organization (JIEDDO), a specialized body tasked with putting a stop to the use of the often remote-controlled roadside kabooms, offered a bleak assessment of the situation now facing foreign forces.

"During the last 12 months, an unending supply of calcium ammonium nitrate, originating almost exclusively from Pakistain, has been used to produce IEDs in Afghanistan despite a countrywide ban" on importing the fertilizer, JIEDDO spokeswoman Irene Smith told AFP.

From April to June, 3,485 IEDs went kaboom! or were found in the war-ravaged country, according to JIEDDO -- a 14 per cent increase over the same period last year. In June, use of roadside kabooms was 25 per cent higher than average.

The volatile southern province of Helmand
...an Afghan province populated mostly by Pashtuns, adjacent to Injun country in Pak Balochistan...
, where the Taliban are entrenched, is the worst affected, along with Kandahar province and the country's east along the border with Pakistain.

Ground troops, who are trying to reach out to the population as part of the strategy to defeat the Taliban, are particularly vulnerable to IED attacks. Use of roadside kabooms against them surged 59 percent in the spring.

But coalition forces are not standing idly by. Nearly 1,900 weapons caches were discovered in the spring, three times more than in 2010, according to JIEDDO figures.

NATO-led troops have also seized 110 tons of homemade explosives and "removed over 300 high-value individuals" since the start of November, Major General James Terry, commander of ISAF forces in the south, told news hounds.

In 2010, IEDs -- the weapon of choice for lightly armed gunnies battling advanced militaries -- were responsible for 60 percent of coalition deaths, even if only one in 10 bombs leads to casualties.

As of August 1, 738 US soldiers had been killed and 7,857 maimed by IEDs since the start of the war in Afghanistan to oust the Taliban in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks, according to Pentagon data.

Two more soldiers, aged 19 and 21, were killed Wednesday when their vehicle drove over a roadside kaboom in Wardak province, southwest of the capital Kabul -- also the scene of the deadly Chinook incident late Friday.

The IEDs have not only been used against heavily-armed foreign troops, but also against the local population, accounting for a third of all civilian deaths in Afghanistan in the first six months of 2011.

"Civilian deaths from IEDs increased 17 per cent from the same period in 2010, making IEDs the single largest killer of civilians in the first half of 2011," the United Nations
...boodling on the grand scale...
said in a mid-year report on the conflict.

On July 29, 18 Afghans were killed when a roadside kaboom destroyed their minivan in Helmand province.

Most of the roadside kabooms are set to explode when a person or vehicle presses down on them.

"Most of the pressure plate IEDs used in Afghanistan contain approximately 20 kilos of explosive, more than twice that of a standard anti-tank mine -- yet have the trigger weight of an anti-personnel mine," the United Nations said.

JIEDDO says an overwhelming 84 per cent of IEDs used in Afghanistan are made from calcium ammonium nitrate, developed by fertilizer manufacturers as an alternative to pure ammonium nitrate that could not be detonated.

Smith explained that the substance is "reprocessed by gunnies and then used as a homemade explosive main charge."

Better cooperation with Pakistain, whose relations with the United States have been tense, is seen as essential to ending the flow of fertilizer into Afghanistan.
Except that Pakistan wants the fertilizer to flow, so better relations will change nothing until Pakistan gives up on the idea of owning Afghanistan... or at least the Pushtun bits.
"Unless we neutralize this network, through a whole-of-government approach, we will never defeat the IED threat confronting our troops in Afghanistan," Smith said.
Posted by:Fred

#1  Is Afghanistan worth the life of ONE nineteen year old kid from West Virginia?
I'd say not, not the whole country.
We have to find a solution to this cancer.
Posted by: bigjim-CA   2011-08-08 23:31  

00:00