Weak Afghan police threaten NATO plan
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan | Outgunned, outmanned, poorly trained and underpaid, Afghan police are a weak link in the U.S.-led effort to stabilize the country and must improve or risk jeopardizing security seven years after U.S.-led forces toppled the Taliban government.
The challenge is particularly acute in the southeastern corner of the country - the former Taliban heartland - where militants and criminal gangs strike with alarming frequency. Ambushes, assassinations and hijackings are common.
A recent insurgent attack on Kandahar city's prison freed more than 1,000 inmates, including about 400 Taliban fighters.
Often, the only defense against gangs or the Taliban is the local police. But officers question whether it's worth risking their lives for a salary equivalent to about $100 a month.
Compared with the Taliban, who have rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and high-quality AK-47 assault rifles from Russia, "our weapons are no good," said Col. Abdulghafar Noorzi, deputy police chief in the city of Kandahar.
"The police are very weak," said Najibulla, a laborer in a mineral water factory who is in his 30s and, like many other Afghans, uses only one name.
Concerned about rising insecurity, the United States is poised to move more U.S. troops to Afghanistan next year from Iraq and to continue to expand the Afghan army. But police are also a major priority.
After three years of focusing on the army, NATO is six months into an ambitious project to overhaul, reform and rearm the Afghan national police as part of a $7 billion security initiative. Progress has been minimal.
A stop last month at a police checkpoint in the center of Kandahar city revealed some of the challenges.































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