Posted By Blake Hounshell Share


MASSOUD HOSSAINI/AFP/Getty Images

On Friday and on into the weekend, I was amazed by just how little television coverage there was of the Taliban's audicious raid on a Kandahar prison. I've got nothing against Tim Russert, but it's a big story that the Taliban can operate so brazenly. And it gets worse:

Hundreds of Taliban fighters have swarmed into a strategically important district just outside Kandahar.... Arghandab is a rich, heavily populated river valley of orchards and vineyards running northwest from Kandahar into a range of barren mountains that have been a refuge for mujahedeen fighters and Taliban insurgents. Control of Arghandab is considered critical to control of the city of Kandahar and has been the source of forces that have seized the city in the past.

I doubt that a couple hundred Taliban could long resist a concerted counterattack from combined NATO and Afghan forces, which are flying in reinforcements from Kabul. But the Taliban's commanders sure seem to be advertising their operations in the press. As one told the AP, "We've occupied most of the area and it's a good place for fighting. Now we are waiting for the NATO and Afghan forces." What kind of operational security is that?

My guess is that the intent here is not to win on the battlefield, but rather to score a propaganda victory and undermine support for the government of President Hamid Karzai. If Afghans start to believe that Karzai can't even control Kandahar, his supposed stronghold, they might start shading their loyalties in the Taliban's direction. That could have enormous benefits for the bad guys across the country, making it all the more urgent that the good guys win a decisive victory as quickly as possible.

 
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JGARZIK

1:06 PM ET

June 17, 2008

 

NQUIXOTE

1:15 PM ET

June 17, 2008

Kandahar is not Afghanistan's capital, Blake.

Kabul, not Kandahar, is the capital of Afghanistan.

 

BLAKE HOUNSHELL

3:04 PM ET

June 17, 2008

yes, of course

Thanks for catching the error.

 

JOSHUA.FOUST

1:35 PM ET

June 17, 2008

"Capital?"

Umm, the capital is Kabul, not Kandahar. And the Taliban couldn't "take" Kandahar like they used to; organizationally, they are incapable of action on a scale that large. By going aggressively cellular, they forfeit their ability for large scale actions, but also made themselves harder to "take out" by the U.S. military. And by being more franchised, they enable a far greater degree of disruption activity at the local level.

It's pretty remarkable: the Taliban have changed from realistic contenders in Afghanistan's power politics to mere spoilers. And they're far more successful at it than anyone imagined.

And, considering the pretty amazing work Sarah Chayes has done in Kandahar with the Arghand Cooperative, I'd be curious to see what her take on all of this is.

 

SAM

7:20 PM ET

June 17, 2008

Baluchestan

Taliban's new strategy, I believe, is to form a sort of strong Mafia inside Afghanistan which has shown to be a pretty wise strategy and has been working so far. Don't forget that they are, at least fractions of them, eventually trying to implement Sharia law in Afghanistan and they are doing it by showing the power to take out those local authorities who try to do otherwise: building schools for girls, allowing local media to form people's mind and other liberal policies.
This strategy has also worked against Iran, as they are doing these piracies and kidnapping in Baluchestan Province of Iran and therefore threatening local authorities and pursuing regional goals.
As in Pakistan, the Baluchestan Province of that country (neighboring the one for Iran) is completely in Taliban's hand, and in fact 2 out of four provinces in Pakistan is totally out control of Islam Abad. And that is were all the money goes and Jihadists come out!

It seems Obama understands that they are the threat! I am just sitting and waiting to see how he will react and the irony is if US does anything in her benefit there is another country which will benefit by the same amount, if not more: IRAN!

 

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