KAJAKI, Afghanistan -- Navy corpsman Andrew Sieber leaned over the
injured Afghan policeman, who had a gunshot wound to his right shoulder.
Sieber,
24, inspected the policeman's bandages and then helped load him onto a
vehicle for the short but bumpy ride to a landing zone ringed by
mountains.
Within moments, the policeman was whisked away by an
American helicopter that had squeezed over a steep mountain range and
landed in a blast of dust.
"He'll be fine," Sieber said, removing
his rubber gloves. "We haven't lost anybody yet." He said they get
three or four wounded Afghans a week.
The war in Afghanistan has
changed. The Afghan forces are doing most of the fighting and taking a
larger share of the casualties, as U.S. forces withdraw. But
Afghanistan's military remains dependent on Americans for medical
evacuation helicopters, surveillance and equipment to counter roadside
bombs. Afghan commanders worry the withdrawal of American forces will
leave them vulnerable.
The Taliban remain weakened, but still
capable of attacks. They are increasingly targeting Afghan forces. The
latest reminder came early Sunday, when Taliban suicide bombers attacked
a joint U.S.-Afghan air base in eastern Afghanistan, leaving at least
five Afghans dead.
Afghan Maj. Gen. Sayed Malouk, who commands the
215th Corps here in Helmand province, said morale in the Afghan army is
high despite the daily casualties they take. In a recent meeting,
Malouk told Marine Lt. Gen. Robert Neller, who was visiting from the
United States, that he appreciated the help the Americans have provided.
"But
we should be honest with each other," Malouk said. Without the medevac
support, many of his troops will die where they are injured and that
would hurt morale, he said.
He said that already the Taliban has
planted roadside bombs in areas where the United States has removed
surveillance cameras, in preparation for withdrawal. The Taliban is also
turning to remotely detonated bombs because its members know the Afghan
forces are not equipped with jamming equipment.
The coalition
strategy is to strengthen the Afghan military and police, and weaken the
Taliban before most U.S. troops leave in two years.
"Our job is
not to be here until you get a Taliban surrender," said Marine Maj. Gen.
Charles "Mark" Gurganus, commander of Regional Command Southwest. But
he said the Taliban remains weak in Helmand and Afghan security forces
have grown in size and quality.
It's not yet clear how much
support the United States and its allies will provide after 2014. U.S.
and Afghan officials recently began negotiating over the terms that
would allow a residual force to remain in Afghanistan after 2014. It
would probably be a smaller force that would be capable of providing
support, such as medevac helicopters and surveillance assets, and
launching targeted raids against terrorists.
American officers
cannot make any promises yet. "Those negotiations between our
governments are taking place now, and I have no idea what that will be,"
Neller told Malouk. "Over the next two years, we just need to figure
out the best way to move forward so that we leave you as capable and
successful as we can."
The number of U.S. Marines here in Helmand
province, once a Taliban stronghold, went from a peak of about 21,000
last year to 6,500 today. Overall in Afghanistan, the number of U.S.
forces has declined to about 68,000 from a peak of nearly 100,000.
Meanwhile,
the number of Afghan forces has increased. "The Afghan security forces
are moving into the lead," Marine Gen. John Allen, the top commander in
Afghanistan, told a gathering of U.S. troops at Camp Leatherneck in
Helmand. "That is success. That is what we intended all along."
The
215th Corps, based in Helmand province, has been boosted to about
16,000 and is getting larger as the Afghans take over the fight from the
Americans. Nationwide, the number of Afghan security forces is
projected to reach 352,000.
They have also gotten better,
according to NATO statistics. Nearly one-third of the Afghan battalions
in the Helmand region are considered capable of independent operations
coupled with U.S. advisers, the top NATO rating. At the beginning of
this year, no battalions held that rating.
"These guys will fight," Gurganus said. "They keep going back into the fight."
The
Taliban has tested the new Afghan security forces, attacking
checkpoints and other Taliban positions. But Afghan security forces have
withstood the assaults, officers say.
"They are absolutely
capable of defeating anything the Taliban throw at them," said British
Army Brig. Bob Bruce, commander of Task Force Helmand.
Now
American commanders are faced with the challenge of keeping them in the
fight as U.S. troops withdraw and take with them key support functions
that the Afghans don't yet have.
"They're going to get a bloody
nose once in a while," said Marine Col. Tim Fitzgerald, chief of staff
for the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force here. "We just don't want them to
get knocked out."
That means pushing the Afghans to be more independent without jeopardizing the momentum of the past couple years.
"Over
the course of 11 years, some of the Afghans have become very dependent
on some of the Marines and coalition forces," Gurganus said. "It's
really hard for us to say no in some areas, but we have."
For
Western troops, that means staying on their bases more, which can be a
frustrating role for Western officers trained to aggressively pursue the
enemy.
In a briefing, British Royal Marine Maj. Mike Scanlon, a
company commander, expressed some frustration that the Western forces
were doing less as the Afghans did more.
"It's called success," Neller shot back.
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