September 15, 2013:
                    
                     Afghanistan has over 300,000 soldiers and police for a population of 30 million. That’s about the same as the United States, which has ten times as many military and police personnel for a population that is ten times as large. The big difference is that the U.S. forces are better trained, educated, and competent. They are also much less corrupt. The violence rates are also much different, with Afghanistan having a higher murder rate and many areas that are basically controlled by gangs, warlords, and the Taliban (usually in conjunction with a drug gang). The Afghan forces consider themselves successful because they have been able to keep the Taliban out of the cities and large towns and put the Islamic terrorists on the defensive in rural areas where the Taliban does its recruiting and maintains base camps and terrorist training and support facilities.
  
  
    Western trainers and advisors report that the Afghan security forces are more effective than their opponents (gangsters and the Taliban) but still less effective than their foreign counterparts. Then there is the problem with corruption and bad attitudes by many Afghan leaders (civilian and military) who seem more interested in stealing foreign aid than in using such assistance to improve the security forces or Afghanistan in general. This is a constant source of disappointment for foreigners (military trainers and aid workers). 
  
  
    For all these reasons it’s no surprise that Afghan officials are getting a lot more military aid and cooperation from Russia. Despite the brutal Russian invasion (in 1979) and occupation (until 1989), Russians are no longer regarded so bitterly by many Afghans. That’s because the Russian occupation was but one part of a civil war that began in the late 1970s, when the Afghan Communist Party sought to upset the tribal alliances that had defined Afghan politics for centuries and replace it with a communist dictatorship. The tribes saw this as an assault on their religion (communists were openly anti-religion) as well as their tribal independence and power. The tribes promptly took control of the countryside and began marching on the cities (where the communists had most of their supporters). Russia, which backed the new communist government, sent in troops in 1979, rather than see the tribes regain control. The Russians entered Afghanistan for political, not economic, reasons and departed a decade later, leaving a communist government behind. Most previous conquerors of Afghanistan had come for economic reasons and had the means and incentive to stay for long periods. But the Soviet Union was in terrible economic shape in 1979, and dissolved in 1991, which was a major reason they left in 1989 because it was an expense they could no longer afford. 
  
  
    The 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union cut off subsidies for the pro-Russian Afghan government, and that government was soon overthrown. The usual ethnic and tribal factions then continued the civil war, mostly over control of the traditional capital of Afghanistan, Kabul. The Russian departure led to more than two decades of more violence and oppression (by Taliban, warlords, and wealthy drug gang leaders). The Russians have been neighbors since the 19th century and, despite losing their Central Asian provinces in 1991 (when the Soviet Union dissolved), the Russians maintained close relations with the new Central Asian states that are now Afghanistan’s northern border. The Russians are still there and over time have come to be seen as more of a potential friend than a former foe. 
  
  
    After September 11, 2001, Russia
     initially 
    declined
    to
    provide
    much
    assistance
    for
    the
    NATO
    and
    U.S.
    effort
    in
    Afghanistan.
    Part
    of
    this
     was
    jealousy.
    The
    U.S.
    has
    been
    much
    more
    successful
    against
    the
    Afghans
    than
    the
    Russians
    were
    in
    the
    1980s.
    Not
    just
    militarily but
    also
    in
    terms
    of
    logistics.
    One
    of
    the
    big
    limitations
    on
    the
    Russian
    military
    effort
    in
    the
    1980s
    was
    the
    lack
    of
    roads
    and
    railroads
    in
    Afghanistan.
    The
    Soviet
    General
    Staff
    calculated,
    even
    before
    Russian
    troops
    went
    in,
    that
    the
    sparse
    transportation
    net
    would
    prevent
    Russia
    from
    supporting
    more
    than
    134,000
    troops
    there.
    Actually,
    the
    Russians
    generally
    had
    no
    more
    than
    110,000
    troops
    in
    Afghanistan
    through
    most
    of
    the
    1980s.
    But
    NATO
    and
    the
    U.S.
    built
    up
    a
    force
    that
     was
    nearly
    twice
    that
    size.
    There
    are
    a
    few
    more
    roads
    in
    Afghanistan
    these
    days,
    and
    railroad construction only recently got underway. Western troops
    required
    far
    more
    supplies
    than
    their
    1980s
    Russian
    counterparts
    ever
    got.
    The
    U.S.
    has
    achieved
    all
    this
    by
    developing
    ways
    to
    make
    better
    use
    of
    existing
    roads and
    flying
    more
    material
    in.
    Despite
    their
    silence
    on
    the
    matter,
    the
    Russians
    have
    been
    watching
    this
    logistical
    effort
    intently and
    taking
    notes. Russia also noted that Russian customs (more tolerant of bribes and shady behavior in general) was more in tune with Afghan culture. Russian businessmen and diplomats began to arrive in Afghanistan in 2002. Many Afghans were glad to see this happen and welcome more cooperation with their northern neighbor. 
  
  
    The
    northern
     Afghan 
    tribes
    remember
    that on
    September
    11,
    2001,
    they
    were
    still
    fighting
    the
    Taliban
    government
    that
    had
    not
    yet
    gained
    control
    over
    all
    of
    Afghanistan. The
    "Northern
    Alliance"
    of
    non-Pushtun
    tribes
    was
    still
    holding
    out.
    The
    United
    States
    sent
    in
    a
    few
    hundred
    Special
    Forces
    and
    CIA
    operators,
    a
    hundred
    million
    dollars
    in
    cash,
    and
    a
    few
    thousand
    smart
    bombs
    to
    help
    the
    Northern
    Alliance
    out and
    the
    Taliban
    were
    broken
    and
    fleeing
    the
    country
    within
    two
    months.
    The
    northern
    tribes
    didn't
    mind
    Pushtuns
    getting
    the
    top
    jobs
    in
    the
     new 
    government but
     were 
    no
    longer
    willing
    to
    meekly
    follow
    the
    Pushtun
    lead
    blindly.
    The
    Pushtun
    see
    it
    differently,
    claiming
    (with
    some
    truth)
    that
    they
    did
    most
    of
    the
    fighting
    against
    the
    Russians
    in
    the
    1980s,
    and
    that
    many
    of
    the
    northern
    tribes
    cut
    deals
    with
    the
    Russians
    (as
    did
    some
    Pushtun
    tribes,
    something
    the
    Pushtuns
    don't
    like
    to
    talk
    about).
    That
    had
    more
    to
    do
    with
    Afghan
    politics (the
    northern
    and
    southern
    tribes
    disagreed
    on
    how
    to
    deal
    with
    Russia
    and
    modernization)
    than
    with
    anything
    else.
    Then
    came
    the
    Taliban
    (a
    cynical
    invention
    of
    the
    Pakistanis,
    created
    from
    Pushtun
    refugees
    convinced
    that
    a
    Holy
    War
    would
    bring
    peace
    to
    Afghanistan).
    Meanwhile,
    the
    heroin
    trade
    (growing
    poppies
    and
    using
    a
    chemical
    process
    to
    turn
    the
    sap
    from
    these
    plants
    into
    opium
    and
    heroin)
    moved
    from
    Pakistan
    (where
    the
    government
    saw
    it
    as
    a
    curse)
    to
    Afghanistan.
    Many
    of
    the
    same
    tribes
    that
    produced
    the
    refugees
    who
    became
    the
    Taliban also
    produced
    the
    most
    successful
    drug
    lords.
    The
    Pushtun
    are
    many
    things,
    including
    well
    organized
    and
    ambitious, and Russia has always been a willing ally of the northern tribes.
     The Taliban today are basically a faction of the Pushtun tribes and the drug trade is basically run by Pushtuns. For most Afghans, the Pushtuns (40 percent of the population) are the enemy and Russia is a neighbor that has more often than not been a useful friend. The Russians are also interested in stopping the Pushtun drug trade, and this gives the northern tribes and Russia a common goal to work towards. Expect to see more of Russia in Afghanistan after NATO forces depart next year. 
  
  
    As the Afghan security forces take over from foreign troops they are suffering more casualties (over a thousand a month, including about 300 dead). They are inflicting even more casualties on the enemy, as are the growing number of pro-government militias organized to keep the Taliban out of rural areas. This is making recruiting more difficult for the Taliban because most of their recruits may be illiterate but they notice that an increasing number of local guys who went off to work for the Taliban didn’t come back, or came back suffering from combat wounds or having spent a long time in a jail. So the Taliban have lowered their standards and increased pay and benefits. But this has led to less capable and reliable Taliban foot soldiers.  
  
  
    September 14, 2013: In the south (Kandahar) a suicide car bomber, attempting to attack a military convoy, detonated his explosives before he could reach his target and killed three civilians instead. The foreign troops were unharmed. 
  
  
    September 13, 2013: In the west (Herat) nine Taliban were killed when they attempted to get into the U.S. consulate. Two Afghan security guards and an Afghan contractor died defending the place. 
  
  
    September 8, 2013: The Taliban attempted to get into an intelligence facility outside the capital. The attack failed with six attackers and four Afghan soldiers killed. 
  
  
    September 7, 2013: In Pakistan seven Taliban leaders were released from prison in an effort to encourage the Afghan Taliban to negotiate a peace deal. Afghan officials doubt this will do any good and are more frequently claiming  that Pakistan is doing this to win favor with the Taliban and don’t really want the Taliban to make peace. 
  
  
    September 5, 2013: In the east (Paktika province) an Indian woman was shot dead by the Taliban who claimed she was a spy for India. The woman, Sushmita Banerjee, was a foreign aid worker who had married an Afghan in 1988 and later escaped Afghanistan and the harsh rule of the Taliban. She wrote a book about her experiences which was made into a popular 2003 Indian movie. But the Taliban denounced the book and movie and threatened revenge. Sushmita Banerjee was well liked in Afghanistan for her work in bringing medical care to women.   
  
  
    September 4, 2013: A female member of parliament was released after being held prisoner by the Taliban for three weeks. This was negotiated, with the government releasing six prisoners the Taliban wanted. 
  
  
    September 3, 2013: In the northeast (Kunar province) local officials said a U.S. UAV missile strike killed eleven civilians and five Islamic terrorists. The federal government agreed with this but NATO officials said no civilians were killed, only ten Islamic terrorists and that this was double checked. It’s suspected that this is another of the “dead goat” scams. This occurs when 
    the
    locals
    lie about dead civilians in order to get
     NATO compensation 
    money
    (and
    to
    avoid
    Taliban
    retribution).
     Anytime a missile or 
    smart
    bomb
     is used on an
    isolated
    location
    (which
    describes
    most
    of
    Afghanistan),
    and
    there
    is
    any
    chance
    of
    civilian
    casualties,
    the
    locals
     sometimes attempt this scam. 
    Typically local tribal elders
     or government officials 
    insist
    that
    outsiders
    stay
    away
    during
    this
    trying
    time.
    Even
    the
    foreign
    soldiers
    and
    Afghan
    police
    are
    put
    off
    (after
    the
    search
    for
    Taliban
    bodies,
    documents,
    and
    equipment
    is
    completed).
    Being
    good
    Moslems,
    the locals
    bury
    the
    dead
    before
    sunset
    of
    the
    same
    day.
    The
    next
    day,
    the
    elders
    will
    claim
    as
    many
    civilian
    dead,
    killed
    by
    smart
    bombs,
    as
    they
    think
    they
    can
    get
    away
    with.
    Sometimes
    additional
    graves
    get
    a
    dead
    goat
    or
    other
    animal,
    so
    the
    proper
    stench
    permeates
    the
    mound
    of
    earth.
    Digging
    up
    graves
    is
    also
    against
    Islamic
    law,
    so
    the
    elders
    know
    the
    foreign
    troops
    have
    to
    take
    their
    word
    for
    it.
    The
    elders
    also
    know
    that
    the
    foreign
    troops,
    depending
    on
    nationality,
    will
    pay
    $1,000-$5,000
    compensation
    per
    dead
    civilian.
    Not
    only
    is
    there
    a
    big
    payday but
    the
    Taliban
    appreciate
    the
    bad
    publicity
    directed
    at
    the
    foreigners and
    usually
    show
    their
    appreciation
    by
    cutting
    this
    village
    or
    valley
    some
    slack
    in
    the
    future.
     NATO has been running into this scam for years and has learned to be determined about documenting what went on during an air strike to make it impossible for a scam to succeed. 
  
  
    August 31, 2013: In the south (Helmand province) a suicide car bomber detonated his explosives when he found himself trapped in a line of vehicles in front of an army checkpoint. Six people died and twenty were wounded, almost all of them civilians. 
  
  
    August 30, 2013: In the south (Helmand province) a roadside bomb killed twelve civilians. In the north (Kunduz province) a Taliban death squad went after a district (subdivision of the province) leader and killed him using a suicide bomber. The victim was exiting a mosque and eight others were killed and eleven wounded, most of them innocent civilians. The Taliban calls such victims “involuntary martyrs.” Few Afghans agree with this description. 
  
  
    August 29, 2013: In the west (Farah province) the Taliban ambushed a police convoy and killed fifteen policemen. 
  
  
    India is sending seventy-nine more police commandos to increase security around its Afghan embassy and consulates throughout the country.