Posted By Carolyn O'Hara Share


SHAH MARAI/AFP/Getty Images

In recent weeks, the Taliban have threatened to burn down cellular towers throughout Afghanistan unless the main wireless companies shut down service between 5 p.m. and 3 a.m. each night. Why? Taliban commanders are convinced that coalition forces are using the cell networks to track their fighters. (They don't seem to understand that while coalition forces might use the Afghan mobile networks for some intel, they certainly aren't dependent on them. Thank you, spy satellites.)

And now they've made good on their threat. In a country that is nearly wholly reliant on wireless communications (for lack of any land-line infrastructure), the main mobile networks (all privately run) have begun switching off service at night after attacks on 10 cell towers, the latest on Tuesday night. Score this round for the Taliban.

I can only hope that the frustration of not being able to make calls past dusk will inspire public condemnation of the men who forced the blackout. But then again, the government vowed to help the private sector stand up to Taliban pressure. And that unsuccessful stand hardly inspires confidence.

 

GKDUBS

9:48 PM ET

March 13, 2008

Or you could just turn off your phones

It is odd that the Taliban wants to shut down Afghanistan's wireless infrastructure to keep the coalition forces from tracking them when a far simpler and less disruptive choice would be turning off their cell phones. Surely they already realize this and either a.) can't control their own troops or b.) are shutting down the wireless infrastructure to increase civil unrest and pressure on the government. Or maybe it's both.

 

JOSHUA.FOUST

10:08 AM ET

March 14, 2008

This isn't about phones

The Taliban are just as reliant on phones as regular Afghans are. I think you hinted at this in your title: it is about intimidation and control. If the Taliban wanted to seriously impact cell service they would have cooridiated attacks at a single network node or area, not at scattered towers across the south.

In fact, I suspect that if GoA were to call the bluff, tower attacks would taper off, if only because eventually the commanders would realize they have no other good method of communication.

 

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