December 15,2008:
The Taliban thought they had a decisive weapon when they adopted large
scale use of roadside and suicide bombing three years ago. This effort was a
bitter disappointment. Four years ago, there were only a few hundred roadside
or suicide bomb attacks in Afghanistan annually, and these had no major effect
on the fighting. This year, there have been nearly 2,500 such attacks, over 80
percent of them roadside bombs. But
about two-thirds of those roadside bombs were spotted and disabled before they
could go off. The U.S. and British troops had transferred their Iraq counter-IED
(Improvised Explosive Device, or roadside bomb) techniques and technology to
Afghanistan. Meanwhile, the Taliban found that they were not as good at this
IED stuff as the Sunni Arab terrorists in Iraq were. In 2005, when there were
far fewer IED/suicide bomber attacks, 130 foreign troops were killed in
Afghanistan. The foreign troops are the principal Taliban target, as it's a big
deal for the Taliban to "cast out the infidels (non-Moslems)."
Failure has been constant. Increasing the IED/suicide attacks this year by
about eight times the 2005 level has yielded 277 dead foreign troops.
What is
wrong here? Partly it's the foreign troops ability to deal with, and usually
disable roadside bombs. Then there's the airpower. The foreign troops have more
helicopters, and parachute drops of supplies (which have more than doubled
compared to last year). So far this year, over 7,400 tons of supplies have been
air dropped by U.S. Air Force C-130s and C-17s. That's more than was dropped in
all of the last four years combined. In the last four years, over 10,000 tons
have been dropped, with 98.5 percent of the drops being successful. Accuracy is
important in Afghanistan, with all the hills, gullies and forests. Air dropped
supplies have landed, on average, with 185 meters of the aim point. Where high
accuracy is required, the air force has developed JPADS (Joint Precision
Airdrop System) and ICDS (Improved Container Delivery System). Both of these
are systems whereby pallets of supplies are equipped with GPS, and mechanical
controls, to guide the direction of the descending parachute for pinpoint
landings.
Before the
development of GPS guided air drops, a large percentage of air dropped supplies
were lost, either by falling into enemy hands, or into things that destroyed
them (especially water). With the new delivery systems, it's possible to do
night drops, which is preferred when you don't want to alert nearby enemy
troops. Often, you can accurately drop pallets without the GPS systems, if you
have a large flat drop zone, daylight, and calm winds. But if conditions are
difficult, you now have GPS guided drops.
The Taliban
are very frustrated with their inability to cut U.S./NATO supply lines, like
they often did with the Russians in the 1980s. The Taliban are still at a big
disadvantage when they try to fight it out with U.S. troops, and Taliban losses
have gone up each year because of this. While the Taliban are making more
attacks, mainly by planting lots of IEDs, they have less to show for it, except
for increased casualties of their own. Worse, the Pakistani Army has been on
the offensive against Taliban bases across the border, forcing Afghan Taliban
to send gunmen into Pakistan to help out.
The Taliban
are determined, but morale is suffering. Some tribesmen are muttering about the
Americans being like the Mongols, unstoppable, and someone you must simply
surrender to in order to survive. Afghans did that, and the Mongols eventually
went away (leaving behind the hated Hazara tribes, who still resemble their
Mongol ancestors.) But the Taliban are heartened by their success with
manipulating foreign media, to at least make it look, from afar, like the
Taliban are winning. That's something, isn't it?