Afghan forces battle-fatigued, unmotivated: witnesses
Testimony paints picture of frequent friendly-fire incidents and describes national army as disorganized and sometimes farcical
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By Andrew Duffy, Canwest News ServiceMay 1, 2010
The court martial of a Canadian soldier has offered a ground-level view of the difficulties faced by coalition forces as they ready the Afghan National Army to take on the Taliban.
Capt. Robert Semrau, accused of first-degree murder in the shooting death of a wounded Taliban insurgent on a battlefield in Helmand province, served as the leader of a four-man Canadian team embedded with an Afghan rifle company.
Their job, by all accounts, was challenging and perilous. From forward operating base Sperwan Ghar, west of Kandahar City, Semrau's team was to mentor the Afghans in the art of war: planning, tactics, ethics.
But the Afghans were not always receptive to the message of Canada's Operational Mentor and Liaison Teams, the court martial, which resumes Monday in Gatineau, Que., has heard.
Witnesses have variously described the Afghan forces as battle-fatigued and unmotivated. Drug use was said to be common, while professional development among the officer corps was almost unknown. Lower level commanders often had trouble reading maps.
The Afghan National Army had trouble with supplies, and would scavenge everything from a battlefield, including the weapons of Taliban casualties.
Friendly fire accidents were a constant concern.
"They [the Afghans] had a tendency to shoot at noise," Col. Joseph Shipley, former commander of the mentoring program in Afghanistan, testified at Semrau's court martial.
About 200 Canadian soldiers remain embedded with the Afghan National Army in Kandahar province.
The professional development initiative is crucial to NATO's withdrawal strategy, since it doesn't want the Taliban to overrun the country as soon as international forces leave.
NATO needs a strong, cohesive Afghan military to defend the country and its elected government.
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