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Afghanistan
Afghan commander defects to Taliban with Humvee and weapons
2013-10-21
[Rooters] An Afghan army special forces commander has defected to an insurgent group allied with the Taliban in a Humvee truck packed with his team's guns and high-tech equipment, officials in the eastern Kunar province said on Sunday.

Monsif Khan, who raided the supplies of his 20-man team in Kunar's capital Asadabad over the Eid al-Adha religious holiday, is the first special forces commander to switch sides,
but undoubtedly not the last....
joining the Hezb-e-Islami organisation.
"He sent some of his comrades on leave and paid others to go out sightseeing, and then escaped with up to 30 guns, night-vision goggles, binoculars and a Humvee," said Shuja ul-Mulkh Jalala, the governor of Kunar.

Zubair Sediqi, a spokesman for Hezb-e-Islami, confirmed that Khan had joined the group, saying he had brought 15 guns and high-tech equipment.

The NATO-led coalition is grappling with a rise in "insider attacks" by Afghan soldiers who turn on their allies, undermining trust and efficiency. It has reported four lethal incidents over the past month taking the total number this year to 10, according to a Reuters tally.

Kunar, like all other provinces along the border with Pakistan, is among the more insecure and volatile parts of Afghanistan. Local security forces have started a manhunt for the commander and tribal elders have promised to help
as soon as US funding arrives.
"We are trying our best to use elders' influence in that area to bring back all equipment," Jalala said.
Has seldom worked previously. Perhaps this time will be different.
A record number of insider attacks - accounting for about one in every five coalition combat deaths - last year prompted the coalition to briefly suspend all joint activities and take steps to curb interaction between foreign and Afghan troops.

That has cut down the number of incidents, but some soldiers say the measures have further eroded the trust painstakingly nurtured between the allies over more than 12 years of war.
Ask nearly any US soldier if he trusts the ANSF and the answer will be a resounding no.
All entrants to the Afghan National Security Force have to pass an eight step vetting process, which includes providing identification cards, letters of recommendation by village or district elders and undergoing tests.
Posted by:Besoeker

#2  tip.
Now you know who the drone strikes are killing.
Emptying out the jr nco mess, we are.
Posted by: Richard Aubrey   2013-10-21 14:44  

#1  20 man team? Don't know how Afghan forces are organized but that would make this "commander" a senior NCO (or a 2ndLT at most) in most Western armies.
Posted by: tipover   2013-10-21 00:23  

00:00