U.S. watchdog unwraps bleak statistics for Afghan progress

U.S. watchdog unwraps bleak statistics for Afghan progress

PanARMENIAN.Net - In his first report to the new Trump administration, a U.S. watchdog that monitors billions of dollars in aid to Afghanistan issued a bleak progress report, saying the Afghan government controls barely half the country, its security forces numbers are on the decline and drug production is on the rise, while eradication is down, The Associated Press reports.

The one bright spot, says the report, is a noticeable drop in corruption when procuring goods and services. Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has launched a country wide anti-corruption campaign since taking power in 2014 elections, which ended in controversy and the formation of a so-called Unity Government. In this government Ghani is president and his presidential election rival, Abdullah Abdullah, is chief executive.

In his 269-page report released Wednesday, February 1, John Sopko, the Special Inspector General for Afghan Reconstruction's (SIGAR) office, noted that this latest quarterly report is the first since President Donald Trump took office January 20. He said it was a good opportunity for the new administration to reflect on the $117 billion Washington has invested in Afghanistan since 2002.

The Taliban were ousted in December 2001 by the U.S.-led coalition after they refused to hand over Al Qaida chief Osama bin Laden, blamed for the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks against the United States.

In just the last three months, Sopko's office conducted an investigation that resulted in a $99 million dollar single-source contract being canceled, it flagged a large hotel/apartment construction project that had been abandoned after receiving $85 million in loans from the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, a U.S. government institution, and revealed that Afghan contractors working on U.S.-funded projects were not being paid.

SIGAR was set up in 2008 following widespread reports that hundreds of millions of U.S. taxpayers' dollars was being lost to waste, corruption and mismanagement by both Afghan and U.S. contractors.

After 15 years and billions of dollars "reconstruction remains tenuous and incomplete," Sopko said in his report.

"The Afghan security forces need continued donor support, plus mentoring and limited tactical support from the U.S. military, to block insurgent advances," he also said.

Afghanistan is the largest and longest operation in NATO's 68-year history, yet 15 years on the SIGAR report says the Afghan National Security Force numbers are down and insurgents control or influence more area than ever before. Citing an Asia Foundation survey, the report also says most Afghans say their country is moving in the wrong direction. According to the United Nations, more than half a million people fled their homes because of conflict last year, the highest number since record keeping began in 2008.

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