Order Code RL30588
Afghanistan: Post-War Governance,
Security, and U.S. Policy
Updated September 2, 2008
Kenneth Katzman
Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division

Afghanistan: Post-War Governance,
Security, and U.S. Policy
Summary
U.S. and outside assessments of the effort to stabilize Afghanistan are
increasingly negative, although the Administration notes continued progress on
economic development and expansion of central government authority in some areas
of Afghanistan. The outside studies emphasize a growing sense of insecurity in
areas previously considered secure, increased numbers of suicide attacks, and
growing divisions within the NATO alliance about total troop contributions and the
relative share of combat. Both the official U.S. as well as outside assessments are
increasingly pointing to Pakistan, and particularly the new Pakistani government, as
failing to prevent Taliban and other militant infiltration from Pakistan. Although
available U.S. forces are short, the Administration is anticipating adding U.S. troops
to the Afghanistan theater, reorganizing the command structure for U.S. and partner
forces, and expanding the Afghan National Army. The Administration also has
increased direct U.S. action against Taliban concentrations inside Pakistan and is
contemplating additional steps in this direction.
Politically, the Afghan central government is relatively stable, but it is perceived
as weak and rife with corruption. The post-Taliban transition was completed with
the convening of a parliament in December 2005 following September 2005
parliamentary elections. A new constitution was adopted in January 2004, and
presidential elections were held on October 9, 2004. The parliament has become an
arena for factions that have fought each other for nearly three decades to peacefully
resolve differences, as well as a center of political pressure on President Hamid
Karzai. Major regional strongmen have been marginalized. Afghan citizens are
enjoying personal freedoms forbidden by the Taliban, and women are participating
in economic and political life. Presidential elections are to be held in the fall of 2009,
with parliamentary and provincial elections to follow one year later.
The United States and partner countries now deploy a 53,000 troop NATO-led
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) that commands peacekeeping
throughout Afghanistan. Of those, about 14,300 of the 33,600 U.S. forces in
Afghanistan are part of ISAF; the remainder are conducting anti-terrorism missions
under Operation Enduring Freedom. U.S. and partner forces also run regional
enclaves to secure reconstruction (Provincial Reconstruction Teams, PRTs), and are
building an Afghan National Army and National Police. The United States has given
Afghanistan over $25 billion (appropriated, including FY2008 to date) since the fall
of the Taliban, of which about $17 billion was to equip and train the security forces.
About $2 billion in reconstruction aid was requested for FY2009, including in a
FY2009 supplemental request. Breakdowns are shown in the tables at the end.
This paper will be updated as warranted by major developments. See also CRS
Report RS21922, Afghanistan: Government Formation and Performance, by
Kenneth Katzman; and CRS Report RL32686, Afghanistan: Narcotics and U.S.
Policy
, by Christopher M. Blanchard.

Contents
Background to Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
The Mujahedin Government and Rise of the Taliban . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Taliban Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
The “Northern Alliance” Congeals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Bush Administration Policy Pre-September 11, 2001 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
September 11 Attacks and Operation Enduring Freedom . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Post-War Stabilization and Reconstruction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Political Transition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Bonn Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Permanent Constitution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
National Elections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2009 Elections and Candidates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Governance Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
U.N. Involvement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Expanding Central Government Writ and Curbing “Warlords” . . . . . 12
Provincial Governance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Human Rights and Democracy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Combating Narcotics Trafficking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Post-War Security Operations and Force Capacity Building . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
The Combat Environment and U.S. Forces in the Combat Structure . . . . . 20
The Taliban “Resurgence,” Causes, and Early Responses . . . . . . . . . . 21
Taliban Command, Al Qaeda, and Related Insurgent Groups . . . . . . . 22
Policy Reviews and Further U.S. Troop Buildup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Committing Additional Resources and “Americanizing” the
Command Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Feelers to the Taliban . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
The NATO-Led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) . . . . . . . . 29
New NATO Force Pledges in 2008 and Since . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
National “Caveats” on Combat Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Provincial Reconstruction Teams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Afghan Security Forces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Afghan National Army . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Afghan National Police/Justice Sector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Tribal Militias . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
U.S. Security Forces Funding/”CERP” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Regional Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Pakistan/Pakistan-Afghanistan Border . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Increased Direct U.S. Action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Iran . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
India . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Russia, Central Asian States, and China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Russia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Central Asian States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
China . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Saudi Arabia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47

U.S. and International Aid to Afghanistan and Development Issues . . . . . . . . . . 47
National Solidarity Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Post-Taliban U.S. Aid Totals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Afghanistan Freedom Support Act of 2002 and Amendments . . . . . . 51
Afghan Freedom Support Act Re-Authorization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
International Reconstruction Pledges/Aid/Lending . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Residual Issues from Past Conflicts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Stinger Retrieval . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Mine Eradication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Appendix. U.S. and International Sanctions Lifted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
List of Figures
Figure 1. Map of Afghanistan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
List of Tables
Table 1. Afghanistan Social and Economic Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Table 2. Afghan and Regional Facilities Used for Operations in Afghanistan . . 28
Table 3. Recent and Pending Foreign Equipment for ANA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Table 4. Major Security-Related Indicators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Table 5. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY1978-FY1998 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Table 6. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY1999-FY2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Table 7. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Table 8. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Table 9. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
Table 10. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Table 11. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
Table 12. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2008 Request/Action . . . . . . . . . . 63
Table 13. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2009 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Table 14. USAID Obligations FY2002-FY2008 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Table 15. NATO/ISAF Contributing Nations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
Table 16. Provincial Reconstruction Teams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
Table 17. Major Factions/Leaders in Afghanistan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68

Afghanistan: Post-War Governance,
Security, and U.S. Policy
Background to Recent Developments
Prior to the founding of a monarchy in 1747 by Ahmad Shah Durrani,
Afghanistan was territory inhabited by tribes and tribal confederations linked to
neighboring nations, not a distinct entity. King Amanullah Khan (1919-1929)
launched attacks on British forces in Afghanistan shortly after taking power and won
complete independence from Britain as recognized in the Treaty of Rawalpindi
(August 8, 1919). He was considered a secular modernizer presiding over a
government in which all ethnic minorities participated. He was succeeded by King
Mohammad Nadir Shah (1929-1933), and then by King Mohammad Zahir Shah.
Zahir Shah’s reign (1933-1973) is remembered fondly by many older Afghans for
promulgating a constitution in 1964 that established a national legislature and
promoting freedoms for women, including freeing them from covering their face and
hair. However, possibly believing that he could limit Soviet support for communist
factions in Afghanistan, Zahir Shah also entered into a significant political and arms
purchase relationship with the Soviet Union.
Afghanistan’s slide into instability began in the 1970s when the diametrically
opposed Communist Party and Islamic movements grew in strength. While
receiving medical treatment in Italy, Zahir Shah was overthrown by his cousin,
Mohammad Daoud, a military leader who established a dictatorship with strong state
involvement in the economy. Communists overthrew Daoud in 1978, led by Nur
Mohammad Taraki, who was displaced a year later by Hafizullah Amin, leader of a
rival faction. They tried to impose radical socialist change on a traditional society,
in part by redistributing land and bringing more women into government, sparking
rebellion by Islamic parties opposed to such moves. The Soviet Union sent troops
into Afghanistan on December 27, 1979, to prevent a seizure of power by the Islamic
militias, known as the mujahedin (Islamic fighters). Upon their invasion, the Soviets
replaced Hafizullah Amin with an ally, Babrak Karmal.
Soviet occupation forces were never able to pacify the outlying areas of the
country. The mujahedin benefited from U.S. weapons and assistance, provided
through the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in cooperation with Pakistan’s Inter-
Service Intelligence directorate (ISI). That weaponry included portable shoulder-fired
anti-aircraft systems called “Stingers,” which proved highly effective against Soviet
aircraft. The mujahedin also hid and stored weaponry in a large network of natural
and manmade tunnels and caves throughout Afghanistan. The Soviet Union’s losses
mounted, and Soviet domestic opinion turned anti-war. In 1986, after the reformist
Mikhail Gorbachev became leader, the Soviets replaced Karmal with the director of
Afghan intelligence, Najibullah Ahmedzai (known by his first name).

CRS-2
On April 14, 1988, Gorbachev agreed to a U.N.-brokered accord (the Geneva
Accords) requiring it to withdraw. The withdrawal was completed by February 15,
1989, leaving in place the weak Najibullah government. The United States closed its
embassy in Kabul in January 1989, as the Soviet Union was completing its pullout.
A warming of relations moved the United States and Soviet Union to try for a
political settlement to the Afghan conflict, a trend accelerated by the 1991 collapse
of the Soviet Union, which reduced Moscow’s capacity for supporting communist
regimes in the Third World. On September 13, 1991, Moscow and Washington
agreed to a joint cutoff of military aid to the Afghan combatants.
The State Department has said that a total of about $3 billion in economic and
covert military assistance was provided by the U.S. to the Afghan mujahedin from
1980 until the end of the Soviet occupation in 1989. Press reports say the covert aid
program grew from about $20 million per year in FY1980 to about $300 million per
year during FY1986-FY1990. The Soviet pullout decreased the perceived strategic
value of Afghanistan, causing a reduction in subsequent covert funding.1
With Soviet backing withdrawn, on March 18, 1992, Najibullah publicly agreed
to step down once an interim government was formed. That announcement set off
a wave of rebellions primarily by Uzbek and Tajik militia commanders in northern
Afghanistan, who joined prominent mujahedin commander Ahmad Shah Masud of
the Islamic Society, a largely Tajik party headed by Burhannudin Rabbani. Masud
had earned a reputation as a brilliant strategist by preventing the Soviets from
occupying his power base in the Panjshir Valley of northeastern Afghanistan.
Najibullah fell, and the mujahedin regime began April 18, 1992.2
1 For FY1991, Congress reportedly cut covert aid appropriations to the mujahedin from $300
million the previous year to $250 million, with half the aid withheld until the second half
of the fiscal year. See “Country Fact Sheet: Afghanistan,” in U.S. Department of State
Dispatch,
vol. 5, no. 23 (June 6, 1994), p. 377.
2 After failing to flee, Najibullah, his brother, and aides remained at a U.N. facility in Kabul
until the Taliban movement seized control in 1996 and hanged them.

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Table 1. Afghanistan Social and Economic Statistics
Population:
31 million
Ethnic Groups:
Pashtun 42%; Tajik 27%; Uzbek 9%; Hazara 9%; Aimak 4%; Turkmen
3%; Baluch 2%; other 4%
Religions:
Sunni Muslim (Hanafi school) 80%; Shiite Muslim (Hazaras, Qizilbash,
and Isma’ilis) 19%; other 1%
Size of Religious
Christians - estimated 500 - 8,000 persons; Sikh and Hindu - 3,000
Minorities
persons; Bahai’s - 400 (declared blasphemous in May 2007); Jews - 1
person; Buddhist - unknown, but small numbers, mostly foreigners. No
Christian or Jewish schools. One church, open only to expatriates.
Literacy Rate:
28% of population over 15 years of age
GDP:
$10.2 billion est. for 2008. $7.5 billion in 2007. Value of opium
production in 2008 est. $732 million (7% of GDP), down from 13% of
GDP for 2007. (Aug. 2008 UNODC report.)
GDP Per Capita:
$300/yr; but $800 purchasing power parity
GDP Real Growth:
12% (2007)
Unemployment Rate: 40%
Children in
5.7 million, of which 35% are girls. Up from 900,000 in school during
School/Schools Built Taliban era. 300,000 children in south cannot attend school due to
violence. 8,000 schools built; 140,000 teachers hired since Taliban era.
Afghans With Access 85% with basic health services access - compared to 8% during Taliban
to Health Coverage
era, although access is more limited in restive areas. Infant mortality has
dropped 18% since Taliban to 135 per 1,000 live births. 680 clinics built
with U.S. funds since Taliban.
Roads Built
About 5,000 miles post-Taliban, including ring road around the country.
Now possible to drive from Kabul to western border in one day.
Access to Electricity
15% - 20% of the population.
Revenues:
Anticipated $1 billion in 2008; $715 million in 2007; $550 million 2006
Expenditures
$1.2 billion in 2007; 900 million in 2006
External Debt:
$8 billion bilateral, plus $500 million multilateral. U.S. forgave $108
million in debt to U.S. in 2006
Foreign Exchange:
$2.5 billion.
Foreign Investment
$500 billion est. for 2007; about $1 billion for 2006
Major Exports:
fruits, raisins, nuts, carpets, semi-precious gems, hides, opium
Oil Production:
negligible
Oil Proven Reserves: 3.6 billion barrels of oil, 36.5 trillion cubic feet of gas, according to
Afghan government on March 15, 2006
Major Imports:
food, petroleum, capital goods, textiles
Import Partners:
Pakistan 38.6%; U.S. 9.5%; Germany 5.5%; India 5.2%; Turkey 4.1%;
Turkmenistan 4.1%
Source: CIA World Factbook, January 2008, Embassy of Afghanistan in Washington, DC; President
Bush speech on February 15, 2007; International Religious Freedom Report, September 14, 2007;
Afghan National Development Strategy.

CRS-4
The Mujahedin Government and Rise of the Taliban
The fall of Najibullah exposed the differences among the mujahedin parties.
The leader of one of the smaller parties (Afghan National Liberation Front), Islamic
scholar Sibghatullah Mojadeddi, was president during April - May 1992. Under an
agreement among the major parties, Rabbani became President in June 1992 with
agreement that he would serve until December 1994. He refused to step down at that
time, saying that political authority would disintegrate without a clear successor.
Kabul was subsequently shelled by other mujahedin factions, particularly that of
nominal “Prime Minister” Gulbuddin Hikmatyar, a Pashtun, who accused Rabbani
of monopolizing power. Hikmatyar’s radical Islamist Hizb-e-Islami (Islamic Party)
had received a large proportion of the U.S. aid during the anti-Soviet war. Four years
of civil war (1992-1996) created popular support for the Taliban as a movement that
could deliver Afghanistan from the factional infighting.
In 1993-1994, Afghan Islamic clerics and students, mostly of rural, Pashtun
origin, many of them former mujahedin who had become disillusioned with
continued conflict among mujahedin parties and had moved into Pakistan to study
in Islamic seminaries (“madrassas”), formed the Taliban movement. They practiced
an orthodox Sunni Islam called “Wahhabism,” akin to that practiced in Saudi Arabia.
They viewed the Rabbani government as corrupt, anti-Pashtun, and responsible for
civil war. With the help of defections, the Taliban seized control of the southeastern
city of Qandahar in November 1994; by February 1995, it had reached the gates of
Kabul, after which an 18-month stalemate around the capital ensued. In September
1995, the Taliban captured Herat province, bordering Iran, and imprisoned its
governor, Ismail Khan, ally of Rabbani and Masud, who later escaped and took
refuge in Iran. In September 1996, Taliban victories near Kabul led to the withdrawal
of Rabbani and Masud to the Panjshir Valley north of Kabul with most of their
heavy weapons; the Taliban took control of Kabul on September 27, 1996. Taliban
gunmen subsequently entered a U.N. facility in Kabul to seize Najibullah, his brother,
and aides, and then hanged them.
Taliban Rule
The Taliban regime was led by Mullah Muhammad Umar, who lost an eye in
the anti-Soviet war while fighting under the banner of the Hizb-e-Islam (Islamic
Party of Yunis Khalis. Umar held the title of Head of State and “Commander of the
Faithful,” but he mostly remained in the Taliban power base in Qandahar, rarely
appearing in public. Umar forged a close bond with bin Laden and refused U.S.
demands to extradite him. Born in Uruzgan province, Umar is about 65 years old.
The Taliban progressively lost international and domestic support as it imposed
strict adherence to Islamic customs in areas it controlled and employed harsh
punishments, including executions. The Taliban authorized its “Ministry for the
Promotion of Virtue and the Suppression of Vice” to use physical punishments to
enforce strict Islamic practices, including bans on television, Western music, and
dancing. It prohibited women from attending school or working outside the home,
except in health care, and it publicly executed some women for adultery. In what
many consider its most extreme action, in March 2001 the Taliban blew up two large
Buddha statues carved into hills above Bamiyan city as representations of idolatry.

CRS-5
The Clinton Administration held talks with the Taliban before and after it took
power, but relations quickly deteriorated. The United States withheld recognition of
Taliban as the legitimate government of Afghanistan, formally recognizing no faction
as the government. Because of the lack of broad international recognition, the United
Nations seated representatives of the ousted Rabbani government, not the Taliban.
The State Department ordered the Afghan embassy in Washington, DC, closed in
August 1997. U.N. Security Council Resolution 1193 (August 28, 1998) and 1214
(December 8, 1998) urged the Taliban to end discrimination against women. Several
U.S.-based women’s rights groups urged the Clinton Administration not to recognize
the Taliban government, and in May 1999, the Senate passed a resolution (S.Res. 68)
calling on the President not to recognize any Afghan government that discriminates
against women.
The Taliban’s hosting of Al Qaeda’s leadership gradually became the Clinton
Administration’s overriding agenda item with Afghanistan. In April 1998, then U.S.
Ambassador to the United Nations Bill Richardson visited Afghanistan and asked the
Taliban to hand over bin Laden, but was rebuffed. After the August 7, 1998, Al
Qaeda bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, the Clinton
Administration progressively pressured the Taliban, imposing U.S. sanctions and
achieving adoption of some U.N. sanctions as well. On August 20, 1998, the United
States fired cruise missiles at alleged Al Qaeda training camps in eastern
Afghanistan, but bin Laden was not hit. Some observers assert that the
Administration missed several other opportunities to strike him. Clinton
Administration officials say that they did not try to oust the Taliban from power with
U.S. military force because domestic U.S. support for those steps was then lacking
and the Taliban’s opponents were too weak and did not necessarily hold U.S. values.
The “Northern Alliance” Congeals. The Taliban’s policies caused different
Afghan factions to ally with the ousted President Rabbani and Masud and their ally
in the Herat area, Ismail Khan — the Tajik core of the anti-Taliban opposition — into
a broader “Northern Alliance.” In the Alliance were Uzbek, Hazara Shiite, and even
some Pashtun Islamist factions discussed in Table 17.
! Uzbeks/General Dostam. One major Alliance faction was the
Uzbek militia (the Junbush-Melli, or National Islamic Movement of
Afghanistan) of General Abdul Rashid Dostam. Frequently referred
to by some Afghans as one of the “warlords” who gained power
during the anti-Soviet war, although Dostam first contributed to
efforts to oust Rabbani during his 1992-96 presidency, but then
joined him to try to oust the Taliban from power.
! Hazara Shiites. Members of Hazara tribes, mostly Shiite Muslims,
are prominent in Bamiyan Province (central Afghanistan) and are
always wary of repression by Pashtuns and other larger ethnic
factions. During the various Afghan wars, the main Hazara Shiite
grouping was Hizb-e-Wahdat (Unity Party, an alliance of eight
smaller groups).
! Pashtun Islamists/Sayyaf. Abd-I-Rab Rasul Sayyaf, who is now
a parliament committee chairman, headed a Pashtun-dominated

CRS-6
mujahedin faction called the Islamic Union for the Liberation of
Afghanistan. Even though his ideology is similar to that of the
Taliban, Sayyaf joined the Northern Alliance.
Bush Administration Policy Pre-September 11, 2001
Prior to the September 11 attacks, Bush Administration policy toward the
Taliban resembled Clinton Administration policy — applying economic and political
pressure while retaining dialogue with the Taliban, and refraining from providing
military assistance to the Northern Alliance. The September 11 Commission report
said that, in the months prior to the September 11 attacks, Administration officials
leaned toward such a step and that some officials wanted to assist anti-Taliban
Pashtun forces. Other covert options were under consideration as well.3 In a departure
from Clinton Administration policy, the Bush Administration stepped up engagement
with Pakistan to try to end its support for the Taliban. In accordance with U.N.
Security Council Resolution 1333, in February 2001 the State Department ordered
the Taliban representative office in New York closed, although the Taliban
representative continued to operate informally. In March 2001, Administration
officials received a Taliban envoy to discuss bilateral issues.
Fighting with some Iranian, Russian, and Indian financial and military support,
the Northern Alliance continued to lose ground to the Taliban after it lost Kabul in
1996. By the time of the September 11 attacks, the Taliban controlled at least 75%
of the country, including almost all provincial capitals. The Alliance suffered a major
setback on September 9, 2001, two days before the September 11 attacks, when
Ahmad Shah Masud was assassinated by alleged Al Qaeda suicide bombers posing
as journalists. He was succeeded by his intelligence chief, Muhammad Fahim, a
veteran figure but who lacked Masud’s undisputed authority.
September 11 Attacks and Operation Enduring Freedom. After the
September 11 attacks, the Bush Administration decided to militarily overthrow the
Taliban when it refused to extradite bin Laden, judging that a friendly regime in
Kabul was needed to enable U.S forces to search for Al Qaeda activists there. United
Nations Security Council Resolution 1368 of September 12, 2001 said that the
Security Council “expresses its readiness to take all necessary steps to respond”
(implying force) to the September 11 attacks. In Congress, S.J.Res. 23 (passed 98-0
in the Senate and with no objections in the House, P.L. 107-40) authorized:4
all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or
persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist
attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001 or harbored such organizations or
persons
.
3 Drogin, Bob. “U.S. Had Plan for Covert Afghan Options Before 9/11.” Los Angeles Times,
May 18, 2002.
4 Another law (P.L. 107-148) established a “Radio Free Afghanistan” under RFE/RL,
providing $17 million in funding for it for FY2002.

CRS-7
Major combat in Afghanistan (Operation Enduring Freedom, OEF) began on
October 7, 2001. It consisted primarily of U.S. air-strikes on Taliban and Al Qaeda
forces, facilitated by the cooperation between small numbers (about 1,000) of U.S.
special operations forces and the Northern Alliance and Pashtun anti-Taliban forces.
Some U.S. ground units (about 1,300 Marines) moved into Afghanistan to pressure
the Taliban around Qandahar at the height of the fighting (October-December 2001),
but there were few pitched battles between U.S. and Taliban soldiers; most of the
ground combat was between Taliban and its Afghan opponents. Some critics believe
that U.S. dependence on local Afghan militia forces in the war strengthened the
militias in the post-war period.
The Taliban regime unraveled rapidly after it lost Mazar-e-Sharif on November
9, 2001. Northern Alliance forces — the commanders of which had initially promised
U.S. officials they would not enter Kabul — entered the capital on November 12,
2001, to popular jubilation. The Taliban subsequently lost the south and east to pro-
U.S. Pashtun leaders, such as Hamid Karzai. The end of the Taliban regime is
generally dated as December 9, 2001, when the Taliban surrendered Qandahar and
Mullah Umar fled the city, leaving it under tribal law administered by Pashtun
leaders such as the Noorzai clan. Subsequently, U.S. and Afghan forces conducted
“Operation Anaconda” in the Shah-i-Kot Valley south of Gardez (Paktia Province)
during March 2-19, 2002, against 800 Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters. In March 2003,
about 1,000 U.S. troops raided suspected Taliban or Al Qaeda fighters in villages
around Qandahar. On May 1, 2003, then Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld announced
an end to “major combat operations.”
Post-War Stabilization and Reconstruction5
The war paved the way for the success of a decade-long U.N. effort to form a
broad-based Afghan government; the United Nations was viewed as a credible
mediator by all sides largely because of its role in ending the Soviet occupation.
During the 1990s, proposals from a succession of U.N. mediators incorporated many
of former King Zahir Shah’s proposals for a government to be selected by a
traditional assembly, or loya jirga. However, U.N.-mediated cease-fires between
warring factions always broke down. Non-U.N. initiatives made little progress,
particularly the “Six Plus Two” multilateral contact group, which began meeting in
1997 (the United States, Russia, and the six states bordering Afghanistan: Iran,
China, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan). Other failed efforts
included a “Geneva group” (Italy, Germany, Iran, and the United States) formed in
2000; an Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) contact group; and Afghan exile
efforts, including one from the Karzai clan (including Hamid Karzai) and one
centered on Zahir Shah.
5 More information on some of the issues in this section can be found in CRS Report
RS21922, Afghanistan: Government Formation and Performance, by Kenneth Katzman.
Some of the information in this section is derived from author participation on a
congressional delegation to Afghanistan in March 2008.

CRS-8
Political Transition
Immediately after the September 11 attacks, former U.N. mediator Lakhdar
Brahimi was brought back (he had resigned in frustration in October 1999). U.N.
Security Council Resolution 1378 was adopted on November 14, 2001, calling for
a “central” role for the United Nations in establishing a transitional administration
and inviting member states to send peacekeeping forces to promote stability and aid
delivery. After the fall of Kabul in November 2001, the United Nations invited major
Afghan factions, most prominently the Northern Alliance and that of the former King
— but not the Taliban — to a conference in Bonn, Germany.
Bonn Agreement. On December 5, 2001, the factions signed the “Bonn
Agreement.”6 It was endorsed by U.N. Security Council Resolution 1385 (December
6, 2001). The agreement, reportedly forged with substantial Iranian diplomatic help
because of Iran’s support for the Northern Alliance faction:
! formed the interim administration headed by Hamid Karzai.
! authorized an international peace keeping force to maintain security
in Kabul, and Northern Alliance forces were directed to withdraw
from the capital. Security Council Resolution 1386 (December 20,
2001) gave formal Security Council authorization for the
international peacekeeping force.
! referred to the need to cooperate with the international community
on counter narcotics, crime, and terrorism.
! applied the constitution of 1964 until a permanent constitution could
be drafted.7
Permanent Constitution. A June 2002 “emergency” loya jirga put a
representative imprimatur on the transition; it was attended by 1,550 delegates
(including about 200 women) from Afghanistan’s 364 districts. Subsequently, a 35-
member constitutional commission drafted the permanent constitution, and unveiled
in November 2003. It was debated by 502 delegates, selected in U.N.- run caucuses,
at a “constitutional loya jirga (CLJ)” during December 13, 2003-January 4, 2004.
The CLJ, chaired by Mojadeddi (mentioned above), ended with approval of the
constitution with only minor changes. Most significantly, members of the Northern
Alliance faction failed to set up a prime minister-ship, but they did achieve limits to
presidential powers by having major authorities assigned to an elected parliament,
such as the power to veto senior official nominees and to impeach a president. The
constitution made former King Zahir Shah honorary “Father of the Nation” - a title
that is not heritable. Zahir Shah died on July 23, 2007.8 The constitution also set out
timetables for presidential, provincial, and district elections (by June 2004) and
stipulated that, if possible, they should be held simultaneously.
6 Text of Bonn agreement at [http://www.ag-afghanistan.de/files/petersberg.htm].
7 The last loya jirga that was widely recognized as legitimate was held in 1964 to ratify a
constitution. Najibullah convened a loya jirga in 1987 to approve pro-Moscow policies; that
gathering was widely viewed by Afghans as illegitimate.
8 Text of constitution: [http://arabic.cnn.com/afghanistan/ConstitutionAfghanistan.pdf].

CRS-9
Hamid Karzai
Hamid Karzai, about 57, was selected to lead Afghanistan because he was a credible
Pashtun leader who seeks factional compromise rather than intimidation through armed
force. However, some observers consider his compromise a sign of weakness, and
criticize what they allege is his toleration o f corruption. Others say he seeks to maintain
Pashtun predominance in his government. From Karz village in Qandahar Province,
Hamid Karzai has led the powerful Popolzai tribe of Durrani Pashtuns since 1999, when
his father was assassinated, allegedly by Taliban agents, in Quetta, Pakistan. Karzai
attended university in India. He was deputy foreign minister in Rabbani’s government
during 1992-1995, but he left the government and supported the Taliban as a Pashtun
alternative to Rabbani. He broke with the Taliban as its excesses unfolded and forged
alliances with other anti-Taliban factions, including the Northern Alliance. Karzai entered
Afghanistan after the September 11 attacks to organize Pashtun resistance to the Taliban,
supported by U.S. special forces. He became central to U.S. efforts after Pashtun
commander Abdul Haq entered Afghanistan in October 2001 without U.S. support and
was captured and hung by the Taliban. Karzai was slightly injured by an errant U.S. bomb
during the major combat of Operation Enduring Freedom. Some of his several brothers
have lived in the United States, including Qayyum Karzai, who won a parliament seat in
the September 2005 election. Another brother, Ahmad Wali Karzai, is deputy chair of the
provincial council of Qandahar. With heavy protection, he has survived several
assassination attempts since taking office, including rocket fire or gunfire at or near his
appearances.
National Elections. Ultimately, Afghan security conditions precluded the
holding of all elections simultaneously. The first election was for president and it
was held on October 9, 2004, missing a June deadline. Turnout was about 80%. On
November 3, 2004, Karzai was declared winner (55.4% of the vote) over his
seventeen challengers on the first round, avoiding a runoff. Parliamentary and
provincial council elections were intended for April-May 2005 but were delayed until
September 18, 2005. Because of the difficulty in confirming voter registration rolls
and determining district boundaries, elections for the 364 district councils, each of
which will have small and likely contentious boundaries, have not been held.
For the parliamentary election, voting was conducted for individuals running in
each province, not as party slates. (There are now 90 registered political parties in
Afghanistan, but parties remain unpopular because of their linkages to outside
countries during the anti-Soviet war.) When parliament first convened on December
18, 2005, the Northern Alliance bloc, joined by others, selected a senior Northern
Alliance figure, who was Karzai’s main competitor in the presidential election,
Yunus Qanooni, for speaker of the lower house. In April 2007, Qanooni and
Northern Alliance political leader Rabbani organized this opposition bloc, along with
ex-Communists and some royal family members, into a party called the “National
Front” that wants increased parliamentary powers and direct elections for the
provincial governors. The 102-seat upper house, selected by the provincial councils
and Karzai, consists mainly of older, well known figures, as well as 17 females (half
of Karzai’s 34 appointments, as provided for in the constitution). The leader of that
body is Sibghatullah Mojadeddi, the pro-Karzai elder statesman.

CRS-10
2009 Elections and Candidates. Presidential and provincial elections are
to be held in fall 2009; parliamentary elections will follow in 2010. Karzai said in
August 2008 that he is seeking re-election; the two-round election virtually assures
victory by a Pashtun. Possible major anti-Karzai Pashtun contenders include former
Interior Minister Ali Jalali who resigned in 2005 in opposition to Karzai
compromises with faction leaders, or former Finance Minister and Pashtun hardliner
Ashraf Ghani. Former Foreign Minister Dr. Abdullah (Tajik) might run as “Northern
Alliance candidate.” Others in this faction, Qanooni and Rabbani, reportedly lean
against a run. Other contenders include Dostam; Hazara leader Mohammad
Mohaqqeq; Ramazan Bashardost (another Hazara); Sabit (Pashtun, mentioned
above); and Pashtun monarchist figures Pir Gaylani and Hedayat Arsala Amin.
Rumors have abated that U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., Afghan-born Zalmay
Khalilzad, might himself run, although some say this issue is still open. Karzai
reportedly has an estimated 63% approval rating, suggesting he draws support not
only from Pashtuns. Each election is to cost $100 million.
Governance Issues
With a permanent national government fully assembled, Karzai and the
parliament — relations between which are often contentious — are attempting to
improve and expand governance throughout the country. In testimony to the Senate
Armed Services Committee on February 28, 2008, Director of National Intelligence
Mike McConnell said that the Karzai government controls only 30% of the country,
while the Taliban controls 10%, and tribes and local groups control the remainder;
U.S. and NATO officials in Kabul told CRS in March 2008 they disagree with that
assessment as too pessimistic. At the same time, there is a broader debate among
Afghans over whether to continue to strengthen central government — the approach
favored by Karzai and the United States and most of its partners — or to promote
local solutions to security and governance.
Some have gone so far as to assert that Karzai, to build political support, is
deliberately tolerating officials in his government who are allegedly involved in the
narcotics trade (for example, former Coordinator for Counter-Narcotics and Justice
Reform Thomas Schweich, in a July 27, 2008, New York Times article). On the other
hand, Karzai reportedly might remove Interior Minister Ahmad Zarrar for failing to
act on information about the planned July 7, 2008 suicide attack on the Indian
Embassy in Kabul, in which 60 were killed. Another move that disappointed some
outside observers was Karzai’s firing of Attorney General Abd al Jabbar Sabit on
July 16, 2008 after he declared his intention to run against Karzai in 2009
presidential elections. Sabit had been appointed in 2007 to crack down on
governmental corruption, and some say he was performing that task effectively.
The parliament has asserted itself on several occasions, for example in the
process of confirming a post-election cabinet and in forcing Karzai to oust several
major conservatives from the Supreme Court in favor of those with more experience
in modern jurisprudence. In mid-2007, parliament enacted a law granting amnesty
to commanders who fought in the various Afghan wars since the Soviet invasion —
some of whom are now members of parliament — in an attempt to put past schisms
to rest in building a new Afghanistan. The law was rewritten to give victims the

CRS-11
ability to bring accusations of past abuses forward; its status is unclear because
Karzai did not veto it but he did not sign it either.
In a sign of tension between Karzai and his opposition in parliament, in May
2007, the National Front bloc engineered a vote of no confidence against Foreign
Minister Rangeen Spanta and Minister for Refugee Affairs Akbar Akbar for failing
to prevent Iran from expelling 50,000 Afghan refugees over a one-month period.
Karzai accepted in principle the dismissal of Akbar but deferred Spanta’s dismissal
because refugee affairs are not his ministry’s prime jurisdiction. The Afghan
Supreme Court has sided with Karzai and Spanta remains in position, causing
continued unrest among the National Front bloc members. The Front also conducted
a walkout of parliament on November 26, 2007, to protest what it said was Karzai’s
inattention to parliament’s views on whether or not panic by security forces caused
additional deaths following the November 6, 2007, suicide bombing in Baghlan
Province that killed 6 parliamentarians and about 70 other persons.
On the other hand, on some less contentious issues, the executive and the
legislature appear to be working well. Since the end of 2007, the Wolesi Jirga has
passed and forwarded to the Meshrano Jirga several laws, including a labor law, a
mines law, a law on economic cooperatives, and a convention on tobacco control. In
early 2008, the Wolesi Jirga also has recently confirmed Karzai nominees for a new
Minster of Refugee Affairs, head of the Central Bank, and the final justice to fill out
the Supreme Court. (For further information, see CRS Report RS21922, Afghanistan:
Government Formation and Performance.
)
U.N. Involvement. The international community is extensively involved in
Afghan stabilization, not only in the security field but in diplomacy and
reconstruction assistance. Some of the debate over the growing role of U.S. partners
there was represented in a proposal to create a new position of “super envoy” that
would represent the United Nations, the European Union, and NATO in Afghanistan.
This would subsume the role of the head of the U.N. Assistance Mission in
Afghanistan (UNAMA). In January 2008, with U.S. support, U.N. Secretary General
Ban Ki Moon tentatively appointed British diplomat Paddy Ashdown to this “super
envoy” position, but President Karzai rejected the appointment reportedly over
concerns about the scope of authority of such an envoy, in particular its potential to
dilute the U.S. role in Afghanistan. For political purposes, Karzai might have also
sought to show independence from the international community. Ashdown withdrew
his name on January 28, 2008.
U.N. Security Council Resolution 1806 of March 20, 2008, extends UNAMA’s
mandate for another year and expands it to include some of the “super-envoy”
concept. UNAMA is co-chair of the joint Afghan-international community
coordination body called the Joint Coordination and Monitoring Board (JCMB), and
Resolution 1806 directs UNAMA, in that capacity, to coordinate the work of
international donors and strengthen cooperation between the international
peacekeeping force (ISAF, see below) and the Afghan government. UNAMA is
helping implement the five-year development strategy outlined in a “London
Compact,” (now called the Afghanistan Compact) adopted at the January 31-
February 1, 2006, London conference on Afghanistan. The priorities developed in
that document also comport with Afghanistan’s own “National Strategy for

CRS-12
Development,” presented on June 12, 2008 in Paris, as discussed further below under
“assistance.” The head of UNAMA as of March 2008, and with the expanded
powers, is Norwegian diplomat Kai Eide. In Washington, D.C. in April 2008, Eide
said that additional capacity-building resources are needed, and that some efforts by
international donors are redundant or tied to purchases by Western countries.

Expanding Central Government Writ and Curbing “Warlords”. U.S.
policy asserts that stability and countering corruption and narcotics trafficking will
result from expanding the capacity, proficiency, transparency, and writ of the Afghan
central government. U.S. commanders and officials assert that Taliban militants are
able to infiltrate “un-governed space,” contributing to the persistence and in some
areas the expansion of the Taliban insurgency. A February 2008 U.N. report on the
narcotics situation, discussed below, says that where governance is improving and
growing, such as in northern and eastern Afghanistan, a reduction of opium
cultivation has been observed.
U.S. officials continue to try to bolster Karzai through repeated statements of
support and top level exchanges, including several visits there by Vice President
Cheney, by President Bush (March 1, 2006), and First Lady Laura Bush. President
Karzai has visited the United States repeatedly, and has met with President Bush on
the sidelines of several international meetings, including the April 2008 NATO
summit in Bucharest, Romania.
A key part of the U.S. strategy to strengthen the central government is to support
Karzai’s efforts to curb key regional strongmen and local militias — who some refer
to as “warlords.” Karzai has cited these actors as a major threat to Afghan stability
because of their arbitrary administration of justice and generation of popular
resentment through their demands for bribes and other favors. Some argue that
Afghans have always sought substantial regional autonomy, but others say that easily
purchased arms and manpower, funded by narcotics trafficking, sustains local
militias, as well as the Taliban insurgency.
Karzai has, to some extent, marginalized most of the largest regional leaders.
! Ismail Khan was removed as Herat governor in September 2004 and
later appointed Minister of Water and Energy. On the other hand,
Khan was tapped by Karzai to help calm Herat after Sunni-Shiite
clashes there in February 2006, clashes that some believe were
stoked by Khan to demonstrate his continued influence in Herat.
! In April 2005, Dostam was appointed Karzai’s top military advisor,
and in April 2005 he “resigned” as head of his Junbush Melli
faction. However, in May 2007 his followers in the north conducted
large demonstrations in attempting to force out the anti-Dostam
governor of Jowzjan Province. In February 2008, Afghan police
surrounded Dostam’s home in Kabul, but did not arrest him, in
connection with the alleged beating of a political opponent by
Dostam supporters. Some outside observers have cited Karzai’s
refusal to order an arrest as a sign of weakness of his leadership.

CRS-13
! Another key figure, former Defense Minister Fahim (Northern
Alliance) was appointed by Karzai to the upper house of parliament,
although he remained in that body only a few months. The
appointment was intended to give him a stake in the political process
and reduce his potential to activate Northern Alliance militia
loyalists. Fahim continues to turn heavy weapons over to U.N. and
Afghan forces (including four Scud missiles), although the U.N.
Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) says that large
quantities of weapons remain in the Panjshir Valley.

! In July 2004, Karzai moved charismatic Northern Alliance figure
Atta Mohammad Noor from control of a militia in the Mazar-e-
Sharif area to governor of Balkh province, although he reportedly
remains resistant to central government control. Still, his province
is now “cultivation free” of opium, according to the U.N. Office on
Drugs and Crime (UNODC) reports since August 2007. Two other
large militia leaders, Hazrat Ali (Jalalabad area) and Khan
Mohammad (Qandahar area) were placed in civilian police chief
posts in 2005; Hazrat Ali was subsequently elected to parliament.
Provincial Governance. Karzai has tried to use his power to appoint
provincial governors to extend government authority, although some have questioned
his past appointments, while noting that he has a limited talent pool of corruption free
officials to choose from. The key Afghan initiative to improve local governance was
the establishment in August 2007 of the “Independent Directorate of Local
Governance” (IDLG) headed by Jelani Popal and reporting to the presidential office.
This represents an attempt to institute a systematic process for selecting capable
governors by taking the screening function away from the Interior Ministry. The
directorate is also selecting police chiefs and other local office holders, and in many
cases has already begun removing allegedly corrupt local officials. Seven governors
have thus far been removed or are slated for replacement.
Among the notable successes of the new emphasis of the gubernatorial
appointments is the March 2008 replacement of the ineffective Helmand governor
Asadullah Wafa with Gulab Mangal. Mangal is considered a competent
administrator, but he is from Laghman province, not Helmand, somewhat to the
consternation of Helmand residents. The U.N. Office of Drugs and Crime said in an
August 2008 report that Mangal is expected to take effective action against poppy
cultivation in the province. The report also credited the strong leadership of Ghul
Agha Shirzai, Nangarhar’s governor, for moving that province into the “poppy free”
column in 2008. The governor of Qandahar was changed (to former General
Rahmatullah Raufi, replacing Asadullah Khalid) after the August 7, 2008 Taliban
assault on the Qandahar prison that led to the freeing of several hundred Taliban
fighters incarcerated there. Other governors said to successful in helping stabilize
and develop their provinces include Khost governor Arsala Jamal and Kabul
province governor Hajji Din Mohammad, son of the slain “Jalalabad Shura” leader
Hajji Abd al-Qadir.

CRS-14
DDR and DIAG Programs. A cornerstone of the effort to strengthen the
central government was a program, run by UNAMA, to dismantle identified and
illegal militias. The program, which formally concluded on June 30, 2006, was the
“DDR” program: Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration. The program
was run in partnership with Japan, Britain, and Canada, with participation of the
United States. The program got off to a slow start because the Afghan Defense
Ministry did not reduce the percentage of Tajiks in senior positions by a July 1, 2003,
target date, dampening Pashtun recruitment. In September 2003, Karzai replaced 22
senior Tajiks in the Defense Ministry officials with Pashtuns, Uzbeks, and Hazaras,
enabling DDR to proceed.
The DDR program had initially been expected to demobilize 100,000 fighters,
although that figure was later reduced. Figures for accomplishment of the DDR and
DIAG programs are contained in the security indicators table later in this paper. Of
those demobilized, 55,800 former fighters have exercised reintegration options
provided by the program: starting small businesses, farming, and other options. U.N.
officials say at least 25% of these have thus far found long-term, sustainable jobs.
Some studies criticized the DDR program for failing to prevent a certain amount of
rearmament of militiamen or stockpiling of weapons and for the rehiring of some
militiamen in programs run by the United States and its partners.9 Part of the DDR
program was the collection and cantonment of militia weapons. However, some
accounts say that only poor quality weapons were collected. UNAMA officials say
that vast quantities of weapons are still kept by the Northern Alliance faction in the
Panjshir Valley, although the faction is giving up some weapons to UNAMA slowly,
in small weekly shipments. Figures for collected weapons are contained in the table.
The total cost of the program was $141 million, funded by Japan and other donors,
including the United States.
Since June 11, 2005, the disarmament effort has emphasized another program
called “DIAG,” Disbandment of Illegal Armed Groups. It is run by the Afghan
Disarmament and Reintegration Commission, headed by Vice President Khalili.
Under the DIAG, no payments are available to fighters, and the program depends on
persuasion rather than use of force against the illegal groups. DIAG has not been as
well funded as was DDR: it has received $11 million in operating funds. As an
incentive for compliance, Japan and other donors made available $35 million for
development projects where illegal groups have disbanded. These incentives were
intended to accomplish the disarmament, by December 2007, of a pool of as many
as 150,000 members of 1,800 different “illegal armed groups”: militiamen that were
not part of recognized local forces (Afghan Military Forces, AMF) and were never
on the rolls of the Defense Ministry. These goals have not been met in part because
armed groups in the south fear the continued Taliban combat activity and refuse to
disarm voluntarily, but UNAMA reports that some progress has been achieved, as
shown in the security indicators table.
9 For an analysis of the DDR program, see Christian Dennys. Disarmament, Demobilization
and Rearmament?
, June 6, 2005, [http://www.jca.apc.org/~jann/Documents/Disarmament
%20demobilization%20 rearmament.pdf].

CRS-15
U.S. Embassy Operations/Budgetary Support to Afghan
Government. A key component of U.S. efforts to strengthen the Afghan
government has been maintaining a large diplomatic presence. Zalmay Khalilzad, an
American of Afghan origin, was ambassador during December 2003-August 2005;
he reportedly had significant influence on Afghan government decisions.10 The
current ambassador is William Wood, who previously was U.S. Ambassador to
Colombia and who has focused on the counter-narcotics issue. As part of a 2003 U.S.
push to build government capacity, the Bush Administration formed a 15-person
Afghan Reconstruction Group (ARG), placed within the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, to
serve as advisors to the Afghan government. The group is now mostly focused on
helping Afghanistan attract private investment and develop private industries. The
U.S. embassy, housed in a newly constructed building, has progressively expanded
its personnel and facilities. The tables at the end of this paper discuss U.S. funding
for Embassy operations, USAID operations, and Karzai protection.
Although the Afghan government has increased its revenue and is covering a
growing proportion of its budget, USAID provides funding to help the Afghan
government meet gaps in its budget — both directly and through a U.N.-run multi-
donor Afghan Reconstruction Trust Fund (ARTF) account. Those aid figures, for
FY2002-FY2007, are in Table 14 at the end of the paper.
Human Rights and Democracy. The Administration and Afghan
government claim progress in building a democratic Afghanistan that adheres to
international standards of human rights practices and presumably is able to earn the
support of the Afghan people. The State Department report on human rights practices
for 2007 (released March 11, 2008)11 said that Afghanistan’s human rights record
remained “poor,” but attributed this primarily to weak governance, corruption, drug
trafficking, and the legacy of decades of conflict. Virtually all observers agree that
Afghans are freer than they were under the Taliban.
The press is relatively free and Afghan political groupings and parties are able
to meet and organize freely, but there are also abuses based on ethnicity or political
factionalism and arbitrary implementation of justice by local leaders. In debate over
a new press law, both houses of parliament have approved a joint version, but Karzai
has vetoed it on the grounds that it gives the government too much control over
private media. Even in the absence of the law, media policy remains highly
conservative; in April 2008 the Ministry of Information and Culture banned five
Indian-produced soap operas on the grounds that they are too risque. That came amid
a move by conservative parliamentarians to pass legislation to ban loud music, men
and women mingling in public, video games, and other behavior common in the
West. Since the Taliban era, more than 40 private radio stations, seven television
networks, and 350 independent newspapers have opened. At the same time, press
reports and human rights assessments (including by the State Department) say that
10 Waldman, Amy. “In Afghanistan, U.S. Envoy Sits in Seat of Power.” New York Times,
April 17, 2004. Afghanistan’s ambassador in Washington is Seyed Jalal Tawwab, formerly
a Karzai aide.
11 For text, see [http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2007/100611.htm].

CRS-16
there are growing numbers of arrests or intimidation of journalists who criticize the
central government or local leaders.
The death penalty has been reinstituted, reversing a 2004 moratorium declared
by Karzai. Fifteen convicts were executed at once on October 7, 2007. In January
2008, Afghanistan’s “Islamic council,” composed of senior clerics, backed public
executions for convicted murderers and urged Karzai to end the activities of foreign
organizations that are converting Afghans to Christianity.
The State Department International Religious Freedom report for 2007 (released
September 14, 2007) said that “there was an increase in the number of reports of
problems involving religious freedom compared to previous years.” There continues
to be discrimination against the Shiite (Hazara) minority and some other minorities
such as Sikhs and Hindus. In May 2007, a directorate under the Supreme Court
declared the Baha’i faith to be a form of blasphemy. Others have noted that the
government has reimposed some Islamic restrictions that characterized Taliban rule,
including the code of criminal punishments stipulated in Islamic law. Other accounts
say that alcohol is increasingly difficult to obtain in restaurants and stores. Some
government policies reflect the conservative nature of Afghan society; recent
indications of that sentiment were the demonstrations in March 2008 in several
Afghan cities against Denmark and the Netherlands for Danish cartoons and a Dutch
film apparently criticizing aspects of Islam and its key symbols.
On January 25, 2008, in a case that has implications for both religious and
journalistic freedom, a young reporter, Sayed Pervez Kambaksh, was sentenced to
death for distributing a website report to student peers questioning some precepts of
Islam. Karzai has said he will allow the appeal process to play out — and the
Supreme Court is likely to overturn that sentence — before considering a pardon for
Kambaksh. A previous religious freedom case earned congressional attention in
March 2006. An Afghan man, Abd al-Rahman, who had converted to Christianity 16
years ago while working for a Christian aid group in Pakistan, was imprisoned and
faced a potential death penalty trial for apostasy — his refusal to convert back to
Islam. Facing international pressure, Karzai prevailed on Kabul court authorities to
release him on March 29, 2006. His release came the same day the House passed
H.Res. 736 calling on the Afghan government to protect Afghan converts from
prosecution.
Afghanistan was again placed in Tier 2 in the State Department report on human
trafficking issued in June 2008 (Trafficking in Persons Report for 2008). The
government is assessed as not complying with minimum standards for eliminating
trafficking, but making significant efforts to do so. The says that women (reportedly
from China and Central Asia) are being trafficked into Afghanistan for sexual
exploitation. Other reports say some are brought to work in night clubs purportedly
frequented by members of many international NGOs. In an effort to also increase
protections for Afghan women, in August 2008 the Interior Ministry announced a
crackdown on sexual assault — an effort to publicly air a taboo subject.
An Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) was formed in
2002 to monitor government performance and has been credited in State Department
reports with successful interventions to curb abuses. Headed by former Women’s

CRS-17
Affairs minister Sima Samar, it also conducts surveys of how Afghans view
governance and reconstruction efforts. The House-passed Afghan Freedom Support
Act (AFSA) re-authorization bill (H.R. 2446) would authorize $10 million per year
for this Commission until FY2010.
Funding Issues. USAID has spent significant funds on democracy and rule
of law programs (support for elections, civil society programs, political party
strengthening, media freedom, and local governance) for Afghanistan. Funding for
FY2002-FY2007 is shown in Table 14. USAID expects to spend about $130 million
on democracy in FY2008 based on regular and supplemental (P.L. 110-252)
appropriations, in part to help prepare for 2009 elections. Another $248 million for
these functions is requested for FY2009.
Advancement of Women. According to State Department human rights
report, the Afghan government is promoting the advancement of women, but
numerous abuses, such as denial of educational and employment opportunities,
continue primarily because of Afghanistan’s conservative traditions. A major
development in post-Taliban Afghanistan was the formation of a Ministry of
Women’s Affairs dedicated to improving women’s rights, although numerous
accounts say the ministry’s influence is limited and it is now headed by a male, (the
deputy minister is female). Among other activities, it promotes the involvement of
women in business ventures.
Three female ministers were in the 2004-2006 cabinet: former presidential
candidate Masooda Jalal (Ministry of Women’s Affairs), Sediqa Balkhi (Minister for
Martyrs and the Disabled), and Amina Afzali (Minister of Youth). However, Karzai
nominated only one (Minister of Women’s Affairs Soraya Sobhrang) in the cabinet
that followed the parliamentary elections, and she was voted down by opposition
from Islamist conservatives in parliament, leaving no women in the cabinet. (The
deputy minister is a female.) In March 2005, Karzai appointed a former Minister of
Women’s Affairs, Habiba Sohrabi, as governor of Bamiyan province, inhabited
mostly by Hazaras. (She hosted visiting First Lady Laura Bush during her visit to
Bamiyan in June 2008.) As noted, the constitution reserves for women at least 25%
of the seats in the upper house of parliament, and several prominent women have
won seats in the new parliament, including some who would have won even if there
were no set-asides. However, some NGOs and other groups believe that the women
elected by the quota system are not viewed as equally legitimate parliamentarians.
More generally, women are performing some jobs, such as construction work,
that were rarely held by women even before the Taliban came to power in 1996,
including in the new police force. Press reports say Afghan women are increasingly
learning how to drive. Under the new government, the wearing of the full body
covering called the burqa is no longer obligatory, and fewer women are wearing it
than was the case a few years ago. On the other hand, women’s advancement has
made women a target of Taliban attacks. Attacks on girls’ schools and athletic
facilities have increased in the most restive areas.
U.S. officials have had some influence in persuading the government to codify
women’s rights. After the Karzai government took office, the United States and the
new Afghan government set up a U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council to coordinate the

CRS-18
allocation of resources to Afghan women. According to the State Department, the
United States has implemented over 175 projects directly in support of Afghan
women, including women’s empowerment, maternal and child health and nutrition,
funding the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, micro-finance projects, and like programs.
Funding Issues. The Afghanistan Freedom Support Act of 2002 (AFSA, P.L.
107-327) authorized $15 million per year (FY2003-FY2006) for the Ministry of
Women’s Affairs. The House-passed AFSA reauthorization (H.R. 2446) would
authorize $5 million per year for this Ministry. Appropriations for programs for
women and girls, when specified, are contained in the tables at the end of this paper.

Combating Narcotics Trafficking.12 Narcotics trafficking is regarded by
some as one of the most significant problems facing Afghanistan, generating what
U.S. commanders estimate to be about 25% - 40% of the Taliban’s funds, and what
the UNODC estimates to be 7% of Afghanistan’s total GDP. Afghanistan is the
source of about 93% of the world’s illicit opium supply, and according to UNODC,
“... leaving aside 19th Century China, no country in the world has ever produced
narcotics on such a deadly scale.” However, the UNODC report of August 2008 was
the most positive such report since at least 2005, saying: “The opium flood waters
in Afghanistan have started to recede.” The estimate is based on a drop in area under
opium cultivation of 20%, an overall opium production drop of 6%, and a large
increase in the number of “poppy free provinces” from 13 in the 2007 report to 18
now. The report attributed the progress to strong leadership by some governors
(Atta Mohammad of Balkh, Ghul Agha Shirzai of Nangarhar, and Monshi Abdul
Majid of Badakhshan, in particular); as well as to drought that contributed to crop
failure in some areas. On June 11, 2008, the U.N. Security Council adopted
Resolution 1817, called for greater international cooperation to stop the movement
of chemical precursors used to process opium into Afghanistan. Still, there is poppy
cultivation growth in Helmand Province (which now produces about 65% of
Afghanistan’s total poppy crop) and other southern provinces where the Taliban
insurgency is still consistently active.
In March 2007 the Administration created a post of Coordinator for Counter-
Narcotics and Justice Reform in Afghanistan, naming Thomas Schweich of the
Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement (INL) to that post. The U.S.
strategy still follows Schweich’s August 9, 2007, announced counter-narcotics
program that seeks to better integrate counter-narcotics and counter-insurgency, as
well as enhance and encourage alternative livelihoods.13 He departed that post in June
2008 and, as noted above, has written opinion pieces critical of overall U.S. and
Afghan counter-narcotics strategy in Afghanistan and accusing Karzai of tolerating
or and protecting officials that are part of the narcotics trade in part to incur their
political support. The Afghan government wants to focus on funding alternative
livelihoods that will dissuade Afghans from growing poppy crop, and on building
governance in areas where poppy is grown. The Afghan side maintains that narcotics
flourish in areas where there is no security, and not the other way around.
12 For a detailed discussion and U.S. funding on the issue, see CRS Report RL32686,
Afghanistan: Narcotics and U.S. Policy, by Christopher M. Blanchard.
13 Text of the strategy, see [http://www.state.gov/p/inl/rls/rpt/90561.htm#section1]

CRS-19
U.S. officials emphasize eradication. In concert with interdiction and building
up alternative livelihoods, U.S.-trained Afghanistan counter-narcotics police
eradicate poppy fields by cutting down the crop manually on the ground. However,
there appears to be a debate between some in the U.S. government, including
Ambassador to Afghanistan William Wood, and the Afghan government over
whether to conduct spraying of fields, particularly by air. President Karzai strongly
opposes aerial spraying of poppy fields, arguing that doing so would cause a backlash
among Afghan farmers that could produce more support for the Taliban. NATO
commanders, who have taken over security responsibilities throughout Afghanistan,
are now focusing on interdicting traffickers and raiding drug labs. On June 12, 2008,
Afghan officials announced seizing 260 tons of hashish in Qandahar Province,
perhaps the world’s largest drug bust. U.S. troops deploying to Helmand in 2008
have not specifically acted against poppy fields, deliberately to avoid angering the
local population on which the success of U.S. operations depend. Congress appears
to be siding with Karzai; the FY2008 Consolidated Appropriation (P.L. 110-161)
prohibits U.S. counter-narcotics funding from being used for aerial spraying on
Afghanistan poppy fields.
The U.S. military, in support of the effort, is flying Afghan and U.S. counter-
narcotics agents (Drug Enforcement Agency, DEA) on missions and identifying
targets; it also evacuates casualties from counter-drug operations. The Department
of Defense is also playing the major role in training and equipping specialized
Afghan counter-narcotics police, in developing an Afghan intelligence fusion cell,
and training Afghan border police, as well as assisting an Afghan helicopter squadron
to move Afghan counter-narcotics forces around the country. The Bush
Administration has taken some legal steps against suspected Afghan drug
traffickers;14 in April 2005, a DEA operation successfully caught the alleged leading
Afghan narcotics trafficker, Haji Bashir Noorzai, arresting him after a flight to New
York. The United States is funding a new Counternarcotics Justice Center (estimated
cost, $8 million) in Kabul to prosecute and incarcerate suspected traffickers.15
The Bush Administration has repeatedly named Afghanistan (and again in the
February 2008 State Department INCSR report discussed above) as a major illicit
drug producer and drug transit country, but has not included Afghanistan on a smaller
list of countries that have “failed demonstrably to make substantial efforts” to adhere
to international counter-narcotics agreements and take certain counter-narcotics
measures set forth in U.S. law.16 The Administration has exercised waiver provisions
(the last was published in the Federal Register in May 2006) to a required
certification of full Afghan cooperation that was needed to provide more than $225
million in recent U.S. economic assistance appropriations for Afghanistan. A similar
certification requirement (to provide amounts over $300 million) is contained in the
House version of the FY2008 appropriation (P.L. 110-161). Other provisions on
14 Cameron-Moore, Simon. “U.S. to Seek Indictment of Afghan Drug Barons.” Reuters,
November 2, 2004.
15 Risen, James. “Poppy Fields Are Now a Front Line in Afghanistan War.” New York
Times
, May 16, 2007.
16 Afghanistan had been so designated every year during 1987 - 2002.

CRS-20
counter-narcotics, such as recommending a pilot crop substitution program and
cutting U.S. aid to any Afghan province whose officials are determined complicit in
drug trafficking, are contained in the AFSA reauthorization bill (H.R. 2446).
Narcotics trafficking control was perhaps the one issue on which the Taliban, when
it was in power, satisfied much of the international community; the Taliban enforced
a July 2000 ban on poppy cultivation, which purportedly dramatically decreased
cultivation.17 The Northern Alliance did not issue a similar ban in areas it controlled.
Post-War Security Operations and
Force Capacity Building
The top security priority of the Administration has been to prevent the Taliban
and its allies from challenging the Afghan government. Many of the “nation-
building” priorities discussed in previous sections are intended to weaken popular
support for the Taliban by promoting economic and political development and
eliminating the sources of funding for the insurgency. The pillars of the U.S. security
effort are (1) continuing combat operations by U.S. forces and a NATO-led
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF); (2) U.S. and NATO operation of
“provincial reconstruction teams” (PRTs); and (3) the equipping and training of an
Afghan National Army (ANA) and Afghan National Police (ANP) force.
The Combat Environment and U.S. Forces in the Combat
Structure

U.S. and partner country troop levels have increased significantly since 2006 to
combat a Taliban resurgence. NATO/ISAF has led peacekeeping operations
nationwide since October 5, 2006, and many U.S. troops in Afghanistan (numbers
are in the security indicators table below) are under NATO command. The
NATO/ISAF force is headed by U.S. Gen. David McKiernan, who on June 3, 2008,
took over from U.S. Gen. Dan McNeill. (McNeill had taken over in February 2007
from U.K. General David Richards.) The remainder are under direct U.S. command
as part of the ongoing anti-terrorism mission Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF).
Whether under NATO or OEF, most U.S. forces in Afghanistan are in eastern
Afghanistan and report to Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Schloesser as head of Combined Joint
Task Force 101 (CJTF-101). That mission is named for the 101st Airborne Division,
headquartered at Bagram Air Base north of Kabul. For now, Gen. Schloesser
commands OEF as well as ISAF Regional Command-East of the NATO/ISAF
mission, although this command structure may be altered in August 2008 as
discussed below. Incremental costs of U.S. operations in Afghanistan appear to be
running about $2.5 to 3 billion per month. The FY2008 Defense Authorization Act
(P.L. 110-181, Section 1229) requires a quarterly DOD report on the security
situation in Afghanistan, along the lines of the similar “Measuring Stability and
Security” report required for Iraq; the first was submitted in June 2008. For further
17 Crossette, Barbara. “Taliban Seem to Be Making Good on Opium Ban, U.N. Says.” New
York Times
, February 7, 2001.

CRS-21
information, see CRS Report RL33110, The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other
Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11
, by Amy Belasco.
OEF Partners. Prior to NATO assumption of command, 19 coalition
countries — primarily Britain, France, Canada, and Italy — were contributing
approximately 4,000 combat troops to OEF, but most of these have now been “re-
badged” to the expanded NATO-led ISAF mission. A few foreign contingents,
composed mainly of special operations forces, including a small unit from the UAE,
remain part of OEF. Until December 2007, 200 South Korean forces at Bagram Air
Base (mainly combat engineers) were part of OEF; they left in December 2007 in
fulfillment of a July-August 2007, agreement under which Taliban militants released
21 kidnapped South Korean church group visitors in Ghazni province.18 As of April
2008, South Korea is in the process of re-engaging in Afghanistan by planning to
take over the Parwan Province PRT based at Bagram Air Base and possibly train
Afghan security forces.
Japan provided naval refueling capabilities in the Arabian sea, but the mission
ended in October 2007 following a parliamentary change of majority there in July
2007. The mission was revived in January 2008 when the new government forced
through parliament a bill to allow the mission to resume. On June 1, 2008, a senior
Japanese official said Japan might expand the mission of its Self Defense Forces to
include some reconstruction activities in Afghanistan, but Japan decided against that
mission in July 2008. As part of OEF, the United States leads a multi-national naval
anti-terrorist, anti-smuggling, anti-proliferation interdiction mission in the Persian
Gulf/Arabian Sea, headquartered in Bahrain. That mission was expanded after the fall
of Saddam Hussein to include protecting Iraqi oil platforms in the Gulf.
The Taliban “Resurgence,” Causes, and Early Responses. In the
four years after the fall of the Taliban, U.S. forces and Afghan troops fought
relatively low levels of Taliban insurgent violence. The United States and
Afghanistan conducted “Operation Mountain Viper” (August 2003); “Operation
Avalanche” (December 2003); “Operation Mountain Storm” (March-July 2004)
against Taliban remnants in and around Uruzgan province, home province of Mullah
Umar; “Operation Lightning Freedom” (December 2004-February 2005); and
“Operation Pil (Elephant)” in Kunar Province in the east (October 2005). By late
2005, U.S. and partner commanders had believed that the combat, coupled with
overall political and economic reconstruction, had virtually ended any insurgency.
An increase in violence beginning in mid-2006 therefore took some U.S.
commanders by surprise, and Taliban insurgents have increasingly adapting suicide
and roadside bombing characteristic of the Iraq insurgency. The main theater of
combat is southern Afghanistan: particularly, Uruzgan, Helmand, and Qandahar
provinces — areas that NATO/ISAF assumed primary responsibility for on July 31,
2006. NATO counter-offensives in 2006 were only temporary successes, including
such major operations as Operation Mountain Lion, Operation Mountain Thrust, and
Operation Medusa (August-September 2006). The latter ousted Taliban fighters
18 Two were killed during their captivity. The Taliban kidnappers did not get the demanded
release of 23 Taliban prisoners held by the Afghan government.

CRS-22
from the Panjwai district near Qandahar, and demonstrated that NATO would
conduct intensive combat in Afghanistan. In the aftermath of Medusa, British forces
— who believe in working more with tribal leaders as part of negotiated local
solutions — entered into an agreement with tribal elders in the Musa Qala district of
Helmand Province, under which they would secure the main town of the district
without an active NATO presence. That strategy failed when the Taliban captured
Musa Qala town in February 2007. A NATO offensive in December 2007, approved
by President Karzai, retook Musa Qala, although there continue to be recriminations
between the Britain, on the one side, and the United States and Karzai, on the other,
over the wisdom of the original British deal on Musa Qala. Some Taliban activity
continues on the outskirts of the district, although a key Taliban commander in the
area was killed by a British air strike in late July 2008. Another surrendered to
Pakistani authorities at the same time.
Frustrated with continued violence, in 2007, NATO settled on a more integrated
strategy involving pre-emptive combat and improved governance was needed. During
2007, U.S. and NATO forces, bolstered by the infusion of 3,200 U.S. troops and
3,800 NATO/partner forces, pre-empted an anticipated Taliban “spring offensive.”
In March 2007, NATO and Afghan troops conducted “Operation Achilles” to expel
militants from the Sangin district of northern Helmand Province, in part to pacify the
area around the key Kajaki dam. The Taliban “spring offensive” did not materialize.
The NATO operations, and a related offensive in late April 2007 (Operation Silicon),
had a major success on May 12, 2007, when the purportedly ruthless leader of the
Taliban insurgency in the south, Mullah Dadullah, was killed by U.S. and NATO
forces in Helmand Province. His brother, Mansoor, replaced him as leader of that
faction but Mansoor was arrested crossing into Pakistan in February 2008. Arrests
and deaths such as these contributed to short-lived U.S. command optimism that it
would eventually defeat the Taliban outright.19 A U.S. airstrike in December 2006
killed another prominent commander, Mullah Akhtar Usmani. A key commander in
Kunar province, Mullah Ismail, was arrested while crossing over into Pakistan in
mid-April 2008.
Taliban Command, Al Qaeda, and Related Insurgent Groups.
Compounding the difficulty of stabilizing Afghanistan is the convergence of
insurgent threats — not only the ousted Taliban still centered around Mullah Umar.
Mullah Umar and many of his top advisers remain at large, believed in Pakistan in
and around the city of Quetta, according to Afghan officials (“Quetta Shura”). One
of his top deputies still at large is Mullah Bradar.. Umar continues to run a so-called
“shadow government” from his safehaven, and the Taliban has several official
spokespersons, including Qari Yusuf Ahmadi and Zabiullah Mujahid, and it operates
a clandestine radio station, “Voice of Shariat,” and publishes videos.
The Taliban is allied with Al Qaeda, other Afghan insurgent groups, and,
increasingly, Pakistani militants such as Beitullah Mehsud. U.S. commanders say
19 Mansoor Dadullah was one of five Taliban leaders released in March 2007 in exchange
for the freedom of kidnapped Italian journalist Daniele Mastrogiacomo, but there were
reports in January 2008 that Mullah Umar had dismissed Mansoor because of reported talks
with British military officers about his possible defection.

CRS-23
that, with increased freedom of action in Pakistan, Al Qaeda militants are
increasingly facilitating, through financing and recruiting, militant incursions in
Afghanistan. As of mid-2008, according to U.S. commanders, an increasing number
of foreign fighters are being captured or killed in battles in Afghanistan.
The two most notable Al Qaeda leaders at large, and believed in Pakistan, are
Osama bin Laden himself and his close ally, Ayman al-Zawahiri. They reportedly
escaped the U.S.-Afghan offensive against the Al Qaeda stronghold of Tora Bora in
eastern Afghanistan in December 2001.20 A purported U.S.-led strike reportedly
missed Zawahiri by a few hours in the village of Damadola, Pakistan, in January
2006, suggesting that the United States and Pakistan have some intelligence on his
movements.21 There were unconfirmed press reports in early August 2008 that he
might have been wounded in an airstrike that was confirmed to have killed Al Qaeda
chemical weapons expert Abu Khabab al-Masri. A strike in late January 2008, in an
area near Damadola, killed Abu Laith al-Libi, a reported senior Al Qaeda figure who
purportedly masterminded, among other operations, the bombing at Bagram Air Base
in February 2007 when Vice President Cheney was visiting.
Another “high value target” identified by U.S. commanders is the Hikmatyar
faction (Hizb-e-Islami Gulbuddin, HIG) allied with Al Qaeda and Taliban insurgents.
His fighters are operating in Kunar and Nuristan provinces, northeast of Kabul. On
February 19, 2003, the U.S. government formally designated Hikmatyar as a
“Specially Designated Global Terrorist,” under the authority of Executive Order
13224, subjecting it to financial and other U.S. sanctions. (It is not formally
designated as a “Foreign Terrorist Organization.”) On July 19, 2007, Hikmatyar
expressed a willingness to discuss a cease-fire with the Karzai government, although
no firm reconciliation talks were held and he has in 2008 issued hardline statements
suggesting he is continuing his fight.
Yet another militant faction is led by Jalaludin Haqqani and his eldest son, Siraj.
Haqqani is believed closer to Al Qaeda than to the ousted Taliban leadership in part
because one of his wives is purportedly Arab. This group is active around Khost
Province.
Policy Reviews and Further U.S. Troop Buildup. In mid 2008, a
perception of growing Taliban strength took hold supported by: (1) 2007 recording
the most casualties, of the war so far; (2) numbers of suicide bombings at a post-
Taliban high, including one near Qandahar on February 17, 2008 that killed 67
civilians and 13 Afghan police - the most lethal attack since 2002; (3) expanding
Taliban operations in provinces where it had not previously been active, including
Lowgar and Wardak, close to Kabul,, as well as formerly stable Herat, where there
are few Pashtuns sympathetic to the Taliban; (4) high profile attacks in Kabul against
targets that are either well defended or in highly populated centers, such as the
January 14, 2008, attack on the Serena Hotel in Kabul and the July 7, 2008 suicide
20 For more information on the search for the Al Qaeda leadership, see CRS Report
RL33038, Al Qaeda: Profile and Threat Assessment, by Kenneth Katzman.
21 Gall, Carlotta and Ismail Khan. “U.S. Drone Attack Missed Zawahiri by Hours.” New
York Times
, November 10, 2006.

CRS-24
bombing at the gates of the Indian Embassy in Kabul, killing 41, the most lethal such
attack in Afghanistan to date; (5) the April 27, 2008 assassination attempt on Karzai
during a military parade celebrating the ouster of the Soviet Union; (6) the June 12,
2008 prison break in Qandahar (several hundred Taliban captives were freed, as part
of an emptying of the 1,200 inmates there); (7) the reported 40% rise in attacks (over
2007 figures) in the U.S.-led eastern sector; (8) the July 13, 2008 on a U.S. outpost
in Nuristan Province that killed nine U.S. soldiers; and (9) the August 18 attack that
killed ten French soldiers near Sarobi, only 30 miles northeast of Kabul. That attack,
coupled with other attacks on supplies coming over the Khyber Pass from Pakistan,
raised concerns that the Taliban are attempting to break confidence in the overall
effort by choking off Kabul.
The attack on Sariposa prison in Qandahar particularly shook confidence in U.S.
and NATO policy because, subsequently, some of the freed militants fanned out
north of Qandahar and took over up to nine villages in nearby Arghandhab district,
prompting a NATO-Afghan counterattack. The counter-offensive was declared
successful by June 21, although some say that there might not have been 500
militants that gathered there as asserted by local residents. Even though the events
did not apparently pose a threat to government control of Qandahar city, the cycle
caused substantial consternation among Afghans in the province.
The upsurge in attacks in the eastern sector has caused particular consternation
at DoD because, throughout 2007, U.S. commanders were heralding substantial
progress in reducing Taliban attacks in that sector. The progress was attributed to the
fact that U.S. troops — those of which are under NATO/ISAF and those under OEF
are mostly in the eastern sector — were able to achieve significant coverage of the
area to be able to hold territory and accomplish construction and governance
expansion. Amid the June and July 2008 setbacks, U.S. commanders still maintain
that the overall effort is succeeding because 70% of the violence in Afghanistan
occurs in 10% of Afghanistan’s 364 districts, an area including about 6% of the
Afghan population. U.S. commanders say much of the increase in violence has been
caused by a higher tempo of U.S./ISAF anti-Taliban operations rather than any
increase in Taliban recruitment or capabilities.
The inability to quash the insurgency has triggered debate about whether the
violence is driven by popular frustration with the widely perceived corruption within
the Karzai government and the slow pace of economic reconstruction. Some believe
that Afghans in the restive areas are intimidated by the Taliban into providing food
and shelter, while others believe that some villages welcome any form of justice,
even if administered by the Taliban. Taliban attacks on schools, teachers, and other
civilian infrastructure have reportedly caused popular anger against the movement,
but others say they appreciate the Taliban’s reputation for avoiding corruption. Still
others say the Taliban are benefitting from Afghan civilian casualties, such as a
disputed incident near Herat on August 22, 2008, that the Afghan government said
killed 90 civilians but U.S. investigators say killed only five non-combatants.
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen testified on December
11, 2007, that the Taliban support had tripled to about 20% over the past two years,
and the June 2008 DoD report referenced earlier says the Taliban is now a “resilient
insurgency” likely to “increase the scope and pace” of attacks through 2008.
Increasingly in 2008, Afghan and U.S. officials and commanders are blaming

CRS-25
Pakistan for failing to curb the movement of militants based there into Afghanistan.
In 2007, the United States also found worrisome the Taliban’s first use
(unsuccessful) of a surface-to-air missile (SAM-7, shoulder held) against a U.S.
C-130 transport aircraft.
Committing Additional Resources and “Americanizing” the
Command Structure. To address the widespread perception of deterioration of
the U.S. effort, a reported National Security Council review (reported by the
Washington Post on November 25, 2007) concluded that the United States needed
to focus more attention and resources on the Afghan situation than it had previously.
Joint Chiefs Chairman Mullen largely confirmed the perception that the Afghan
battlefield was “under-resourced” in his December 11, 2007 testimony in which he
stated that, in Iraq, “the United States does what it must, while in Afghanistan, the
United States does what it can.” Senior U.S. officials have reiterated that assertion
several times since. Similar findings have been emphasized in outside assessments
of Afghanistan policy, including a report in November 2007 by the Senlis Council;22
a January 2008 study by the Atlantic Council (“Saving Afghanistan: An Appeal and
Plan for Urgent Action”) and a January 30, 2008 study by the Center for the Study
of the Presidency (“Afghanistan Study Group Report”), as well as several
congressional hearings.
In 2008, the Administration has taken several steps to keep the pressure on the
Taliban, as well as to ease strains with key NATO partners. On January 14, 2008,
Secretary of Defense Gates approved the deployment of an additional 3,200 Marines
to southern Afghanistan (for seven months, later extended through November 2008),
of which about 1,000 are training the Afghan security forces. Upon deploying, the
Marines cleared Taliban militants from Helmand Province; including an operation
in April 2008 that expelled Taliban militants from the Garmsar district of Helmand.
To counter continued Taliban momentum, U.S. and NATO commanders say
they still need brigades (about 10,000, of which about one brigade would be devoted
to training the Afghan security forces) to be able to stabilize the still restive southern
sector, as well as to reverse the deterioration of the eastern sector since mid-2008.
Some equate this to the Afghanistan equivalent of the U.S. “troop surge” that is
credited with greatly reducing violence in Iraq. On April 4, 2008, at the NATO
summit in Romania, President Bush pledged to further increase U.S. forces in
Afghanistan in 2009, regardless of the change in U.S. Administration at that time,
and it is increasingly apparent that most, if not all, of the needed 10,000 forces will
be U.S. troops, although Britain and other partner countries might contribute some
of these extra forces. The timing of the U.S. additions might depend on events in
Iraq; Joint Chiefs Chairman Mullen said on July 2, 2008 that there were not now
additional U.S. forces available for Afghanistan until forces were freed up from duty
in Iraq.
In perhaps an even more significant move, Defense officials confirmed on
August 7, 2008 that Secretary of Defense Gates would approve a plan to place almost
22 Text of the report is at [http://www.senliscouncil.net/modules/publications/Afghanistan_
on_the_brink/documents/Afghanistan_on_the_brink]

CRS-26
all U.S. troops, including those performing OEF anti-insurgent missions, under Gen.
McKiernan’s NATO/ISAF command, in order to create unity of command, and to
improve flexibility of deployment of U.S. forces throughout the battlefield. Gen.
McKiernan and his successors will also report to U.S. Central Command
(CENTCOM), not only to NATO headquarters, under the reported proposed changes
The command restructuring implies that NATO/ISAF will be led by an American
commander for the foreseeable future, but U.S. officials say that the OEF and
NATO/ISAF missions will not formally merge, meaning that there will still be
separate U.S. operations against high value targets and other militant concentrations.
A separate part of the new planning, discussed further below, is to fund a major
expansion of the Afghan National Army. In addition, on May 22, 2008, the Defense
Department confirmed that the United States is likely to take over the command of
Regional Command-South in November 2010, after rotations by the Netherlands
(2008-2009) and Britain (2009-2010). In the interim, as of the fall of 2008, a one-
star U.S. general, John Mickelson, will be deputy commander of Regional Command
South to give the U.S. force added weight at that headquarters. In July 2008, the
Defense Department deployed an additional aircraft carrier to the Afghanistan theater
to provide additional air strike capability, and there are reported plans to add AWACs
surveillance aircraft to the Afghan theater. The issue of NATO/ISAF and the
positions of contributing countries is discussed further below.
Even before the August 22 incident near Herat, discussed above, U.S. and
NATO commanders were increasingly sensitive to losing “hearts and minds” because
of civilian casualties resulting from U.S. and NATO operations, particularly air
strikes. In a joint meeting on May 21, 2007, President Bush and NATO Secretary
General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said that U.S. and NATO operations were seeking to
avoid civilian casualties but that such results were sometimes inevitable in the course
of fighting the Taliban. President Bush and President Karzai said they discussed the
issue during their Camp David meetings in August 2007. NATO is reportedly
examining using smaller air force munitions to limit collateral damage from air
strikes, or increased use of ground operations.
Feelers to the Taliban. President Karzai believes that an alternative means
of combating Taliban militants is to offer talks with Taliban fighters who want to
consider ending their fight. Noted above is the “Program for Strengthening Peace and
Reconciliation” (referred to in Afghanistan by its Pashto acronym “PTS”) headed by
Meshrano Jirga speaker Sibghatullah Mojadeddi and overseen by Karzai’s National
Security Council. The program is credited with persuading 5,000 Taliban figures and
commanders to renounce violence and joint the political process. Several Taliban
figures, including its foreign minister Wakil Mutawwakil, ran in the parliamentary
elections. The Taliban official who was governor of Bamiyan Province when the
Buddha statues there were blown up, Mohammad Islam Mohammedi — and who
was later elected to the post-Taliban parliament from Samangan Province — was
assassinated in Kabul in January 2007. In September 2007, Karzai offered to meet
with Mullah Umar himself, appearing thereby to backtrack on earlier statements that
about 100-150 of the top Taliban leadership would not be eligible for amnesty. The
Taliban rejected the offer, saying they would not consider reconciling until (1) all
foreign troops leave Afghanistan; (2) a new “Islamic” constitution is adopted; and (3)
Islamic law is imposed.


CRS-27
U.S. Military Presence/SOFA/Use of Facilities. U.S. forces operate in
Afghanistan under a “status of forces agreement” (SOFA) between the United States
and the interim government of Afghanistan in November 2002; the agreement gives
the United States legal jurisdiction over U.S. personnel serving in Afghanistan and
stated the Afghan government’s acknowledgment that U.S.-led military operations
were “ongoing.” Even if the Taliban insurgency ends, Afghan leaders say they want
the United States to maintain a long-term presence in Afghanistan. On May 8, 2005,
Karzai summoned about 1,000 delegates to a consultative jirga in Kabul on whether
to host permanent U.S. bases. They supported an indefinite presence of international
forces to maintain security but urged Karzai to delay a decision. On May 23, 2005,
Karzai and President Bush issued a “joint declaration”23 providing for U.S. forces to
have access to Afghan military facilities, in order to prosecute “the war against
international terror and the struggle against violent extremism.” The joint statement
did not give Karzai enhanced control over facilities used by U.S. forces, over U.S.
operations, or over prisoners taken during operations. Some of the bases, both in and
near Afghanistan, that support combat in Afghanistan, include those in the table. In
order to avoid the impression that foreign forces are “occupying” Afghanistan,
NATO said on August 15, 2006, that it would negotiate an agreement with
Afghanistan to formalize the NATO presence in Afghanistan and stipulate 15
initiatives to secure Afghanistan and rebuild its security forces.
The August 22, 2008 incident in Herat might have prompted some Afghan
reconsideration of the status of forces arrangements in operation. After the incident,
the Afghan cabinet demanded negotiation of a more formal status of forces
agreement that would spell out the combat authorities of non-Afghan forces, and
would limit the U.S. of airstrikes, detentions, and house raids.24
23 See [http://www.mfa.gov.af/Documents/ImportantDoc/US-Afghanistan%20Strategic%20
Partnership%20Declaration.pdf].
24 Gall, Carlotta. Two Afghans Lose Posts Over Attack. New York Times, August 25, 2008.

CRS-28
Table 2. Afghan and Regional Facilities Used for
Operations in Afghanistan
Facility
Use
Bagram
50 miles north of Kabul, the operational hub of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, and
Air Base
base for CJTF-82. At least 500 U.S. military personnel are based there, assisted
by about 175 South Korean troops. Handles many of the 150 U.S. aircraft
(including helicopters) in country. Hospital under construction, one of the first
permanent structures there. FY2005 supplemental (P.L. 109-13) provided about
$52 million for various projects to upgrade facilities at Bagram, including a
control tower and an operations center, and the FY2006 supplemental
appropriation (P.L. 109-234) provides $20 million for military construction
there. NATO also using the base and sharing operational costs.
Qandahar
Just outside Qandahar. Turned over from U.S. to NATO/ISAF control in late
Air Field
2006 in conjunction with NATO assumption of peacekeeping responsibilities.
Shindand
In Farah province, about 20 miles from Iran border. Used by U.S. forces and
Air Base
combat aircraft since October 2004, after the dismissal of Herat governor Ismail
Khan, whose militia forces controlled the facility.
Peter
Used by 1,200 U.S. military personnel as well as refueling and cargo aircraft.
Ganci
Leadership of Kyrgyzstan changed in April 2005 in an uprising against President
Base:
Askar Akayev, but senior U.S. officials reportedly received assurances about
Manas,
continued U.S. use of the base from his successor, Kurmanbek Bakiyev. Bakiyev
Kyrgyzstan
demanded a large increase in the $2 million per year U.S. contribution for use of
the base; dispute eased in July 2006 with U.S. agreement to give Kyrgyzstan
$150 million in assistance and base use payments.
Incirlik Air
About 2,100 U.S. military personnel there; U.S. aircraft supply U.S. forces in
Base,
Iraq and Afghanistan. U.S. use repeatedly extended for one year intervals by
Turkey
Turkey.
Al Dhafra,
Air base used by about 1,800 U.S. military personnel, to supply U.S. forces and
UAE
related transport into Iraq and Afghanistan.
Al Udeid
Largest air facility used by U.S. in region. About 5,000 U.S. personnel in Qatar.
Air Base,
Houses central air operations coordination center for U.S. missions in Iraq and
Qatar
Afghanistan; also houses CENTCOM forward headquarters.
Naval
U.S. naval command headquarters for OEF anti-smuggling, anti-terrorism, and
Support
anti-proliferation naval search missions, and Iraq-related naval operations (oil
Facility,
platform protection) in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea. About 5,100 U.S.
Bahrain
military personnel there.
Karsi-
Not used by U.S. since September 2005 following U.S.-Uzbek dispute over May
Khanabad
2005 Uzbek crackdown on unrest in Andijon. Once housed about 1,750 U.S.
Air Base,
military personnel (900 Air Force, 400 Army, and 450 civilian) in supply
Uzbekistan
missions to Afghanistan. Uzbekistan allowed German use of the base temporarily
in March 2008, indicating possible healing of the rift. Could also represent
Uzbek counter to Russian offer to U.S. coalition to allow use of its territory to
transport equipment into Afghanistan.

CRS-29
The NATO-Led International Security Assistance Force
(ISAF)25

The NATO-led “International Security Assistance Force” (ISAF) consisting of
all 26 NATO members states plus partner countries commands peacekeeping
operations throughout Afghanistan. ISAF was created by the Bonn Agreement and
U.N. Security Council Resolution 1386 (December 20, 2001),26 initially limited to
Kabul. In October 2003, ISAF contributors endorsed expanding its presence to
several other cities, contingent on formal U.N. approval. That decision came several
weeks after Germany agreed to contribute 450 military personnel to expand ISAF
into the city of Konduz. The U.N. Security Council adopted Resolution 1510
(October 14, 2003) formally authorizing ISAF to deploy outside Kabul. NATO’s
takeover of command of ISAF in August 2003 (previously the ISAF command
rotated among donor forces including Turkey and Britain) paved the way for further
expansion. NATO/ISAF’s responsibilities broadened significantly in 2004 with
NATO/ISAF’s assumption of security responsibility for northern and western
Afghanistan (Stage 1, Regional Command North, in 2004 and Stage 2, Regional
Command West, in 2005, respectively). The mission was most recently renewed by
U.N. Security Council Resolution 1776 (September 19, 2007), which also noted U.N.
support for the Operation Enduring Freedom mission. (Several tables at the end of
this paper list contributing countries, forces contributed, areas of operations, and
Provincial Reconstruction Teams they control.)
The transition process continued on July 31, 2006, with the formal handover of
the security mission in southern Afghanistan to NATO/ISAF control. As part of this
“Stage 3,” a British/Canadian/Dutch-led “Regional Command South” (RC-S) was
formed. Britain is the lead force in Helmand; Canada is lead in Qandahar, and the
Netherlands is lead in Uruzgan; the three now rotate the command of RC-S. “Stage
4,” the assumption of NATO/ISAF command of peacekeeping in fourteen provinces
of eastern Afghanistan (and thus all of Afghanistan), was completed on October 5,
2006. As part of the completion of the NATO/ISAF takeover of command, the
United States put about half the U.S. troops operating in Afghanistan under
NATO/ISAF in “Regional Command East” (RC-E).
As of now, the partner forces that are bearing the brunt of combat in southern
Afghanistan are Britain, Canada, the Netherlands, Denmark, and Australia. The need
to line up new pledges became acute in February 2008, when Canada said it would
extend its 2,500 troop deployment until 2009, but not beyond that, unless other
partners contribute 1,000 forces to assist with combat in the Canadian sector
(Qandahar province).
New NATO Force Pledges in 2008 and Since. At and in conjunction with
the NATO summit in Bucharest in early April 2008, twelve countries did indicate
25 Twelve other countries provide forces to both OEF and ISAF.
26 Its mandate was extended until October 13, 2006, by U.N. Security Council Resolution
1623 (September 13, 2005); and until October 13, 2007, by Resolution 1707 (September 12,
2006).

CRS-30
new pledges, although some are of reconstruction aid rather than troops, and others
were restatements of previous pledges. The following were the major pledges:
! France announced a deployment of up to 1,000 forces — a battalion
of about 700 plus 200 special forces that formerly were part of OEF.
The French forces are deploying mostly in the U.S.-led eastern
sector, freeing up U.S. forces to go to the south, although some
French forces are going to the southern sector to help train Afghan
security forces there.
! Poland recommitted to its February 2008 announcement that it
would add 400 troops to the 1,200 in Afghanistan, but that they
would continue to fight alongside U.S. forces as part of RC-E,
operating mainly in Ghazni province.
! Norway plans to add 200 troops but in the largely passive north,
where Norway is deployed.
! Denmark will add about 600 forces to the mission in the south.
! Georgia pledged 500 additional forces for Afghanistan.
! Croatia pledged 200 - 300, which would double its existing force.
! The Czech Republic pledged 120 new forces.
! Greece and Romania promised to send an unspecified number of
additional trainers for the Afghan security forces.
! New Zealand pledged to increase its contingent at the PRT it runs in
Bamiyan province.
! Azerbaijan pledged an additional 45, more than its existing force
there.
! In February 2008, Australia ruled out sending more forces to
supplement its contingent, which operates in combat intense
Uruzgan province, but said it would augment civilian assistance such
as training Afghan police and judges and build new roads, hospitals,
and schools.
! In May 2008, Italy announced that it was now willing to deploy
some of its forces to the combat-intense south.
! In June 2008, Britain announced it would add 230 troops to its
already significant 7,800 troop commitment to Afghanistan.
Although the forces will serve in Britain’s sector of the south (very
high combat Helmand Province), they would mainly conduct
training for the Afghan security forces. British leaders are also
contemplated a significant increase in forces in Afghanistan in 2009

CRS-31
as they draw down from duties in southern Iraq (4,100 British forces
remain there).
! Germany, as recently as June 21, 2008, has turned U.S. requests to
send forces to the combat-heavy south, but it pledged in early 2008
to add 500 forces to its sector in the north, mostly to take over a
Norway-led rapid reaction force there. On June 21, 2008, it was
reported that Germany would announce an increase in its authorized
troop ceiling for Afghanistan to 4,500, from 3,500, although still in
the northern sector. (Despite opposition in Germany to the entire
Afghanistan mission, Germany’s parliament voted by a 453-79 vote
margin on October 12, 2007, to maintain German troop levels in
Afghanistan.)
Among unfulfilled pledges are 3,200 trainers that are needed for Afghan
security forces. About 1,000 of the 3,200 Marines that deployed to Afghanistan in
March 2008 are trainers to address that shortage.
Another key point of contention has been NATO’s chronic equipment shortages
— particularly helicopters, both for transport and attack — for the Afghanistan
mission. One idea considered at a NATO meeting in Scotland on December 13,
2007, was for U.S. or other donors to pay for the upgrading of helicopters that partner
countries might possess but have inadequate resources to adapt to Afghanistan’s
harsh flying conditions. Some NATO countries reportedly are considering jointly
modernizing about 20 Russian-made transport helicopters that could be used by all
participating nations in Afghanistan. In 2007, to try to compensate for the shortage,
NATO chartered about 20 commercial helicopters for extra routine supply flights to
the south, freeing up Chinooks and Black Hawks for other missions. Some of the
extra Polish troops deployed in 2008 are operating and maintain eight helicopters.
The shortages persist even though several partner nations brought in additional
equipment in 2006 in conjunction with the NATO assumption of peacekeeping
command. At that time, Apache attack helicopters and F-16 aircraft were brought in
by some contributors. Italy sent “Predator” unmanned aerial vehicles, helicopters,
and six AMX fighter-bomber aircraft.27 Germany notes that it provides six Tornado
combat aircraft to assist with strikes in combat situations in the south. NATO/ISAF
also coordinates with Afghan security forces and with OEF forces as well, and it
assists the Afghan Ministry of Civil Aviation and Tourism in the operation of Kabul
International Airport (where Dutch combat aircraft also are located). In October
2008, Hungary will add 60 troops and take over security at the airport.
In an effort to repair divisions within the Afghanistan coalition, in his December
11, 2007, testimony, Secretary Gates previewed his presentation, at a NATO
meeting in Scotland on December 13, 2007, of a “strategic concept paper” that would
help coordinate and guide NATO and other partner contributions and missions over
the coming three to five years. This is an effort to structure each country’s
27 Kington, Tom. Italy Could Send UAVs, Helos to Afghanistan. Defense News, June 19,
2006.

CRS-32
contribution as appropriate to the politics and resources of that contributor. The
concept paper, now titled the “Strategic Vision,” was endorsed by the NATO summit
in Bucharest, Romania in early April 2008.
National “Caveats” on Combat Operations. Some progress has been
made in persuading other NATO countries to adopt flexible rules of engagement that
allow all contributing forces to perform combat missions, although perhaps not as
aggressively as do U.S. forces. All have agreed that their forces would come to each
others’ defense in times of emergency anywhere in Afghanistan. At the NATO
summit in April 2008, NATO countries pledged to continue to work remove the
other so-called “national caveats” on their troops’ operations that U.S. commanders
say limit operational flexibility. Some nations refuse to conduct night-time combat.
Others have refused to carry Afghan personnel on their helicopters. Others do not
fight after snowfall. These caveats were troubling to those NATO countries with
forces in heavy combat zones, such as Canada, which feel they are bearing the brunt
of the fighting. There has been some criticism of the Dutch approach in Uruzgan,
which focuses heavily on building relationships with tribal leaders and identifying
reconstruction priorities, and not on actively combating Taliban formations. The
Netherlands says this approach is key to a long-term pacification of the south. (See
CRS Report RL33627, NATO in Afghanistan: A Test of the Transatlantic Alliance,
by Paul Gallis.)
Provincial Reconstruction Teams
U.S. and partner officials have generally praised the effectiveness of “provincial
reconstruction teams” (PRTs) — enclaves of U.S. or partner forces and civilian
officials that provide safe havens for international aid workers to help with
reconstruction and to extend the writ of the Kabul government — in accelerating
reconstruction and assisting stabilization efforts. The PRTs, a December 2002 U.S.
initiative, perform activities ranging from resolving local disputes to coordinating
local reconstruction projects, although the U.S.-run PRTs, and most of the PRTs in
southern Afghanistan, focus mostly on counter-insurgency. Some aid agencies say
they have felt more secure since the PRT program began, fostering reconstruction
activity in areas of PRT operations.28 Secretary Gates and U.S. commanders have
attributed recent successes in stabilizing areas such as Ghazni and Khost to the
PRTs’ ability to intensify reconstruction by coordinating many different security and
civilian activities. In Ghazni, almost all the schools are now open, whereas one year
ago many were closed because of Taliban intimidation. In Khost, according to
Secretary Gates on December 11, 2007, PRT activities focused on road building and
construction of district centers that tie the population to the government led to a
dramatic improvement in security in 2007.
On the other hand, some relief groups do not want to associate with military
forces because doing so might taint their perceived neutrality. Others argue that the
PRTs are delaying the time when the Afghan government has the skills and resources
to secure and develop Afghanistan on its own.
28 Kraul, Chris. “U.S. Aid Effort Wins Over Skeptics in Afghanistan.” Los Angeles Times,
April 11, 2003.

CRS-33
There are 26 PRTs in operation. Virtually all the PRTs, including those run by
the United States, are now under the ISAF mission, but with varying lead nations.
The list of PRTs, including lead country, is shown in Table 16. Each PRT operated
by the United States is composed of U.S. forces (50-100 U.S. military personnel);
Defense Department civil affairs officers; representatives of USAID, State
Department, and other agencies; and Afghan government (Interior Ministry)
personnel. Most PRTs, including those run by partner forces, have personnel to train
Afghan security forces. Many U.S. PRTs in restive regions are “co-located” with
“forward operating bases” of 300-400 U.S. combat troops. U.S. funds support PRT
reconstruction projects, as shown in the tables at the report’s end. According to U.S.
officials in March 2008, 54 PRT development projects have been completed and 199
(valued at $20 million) are ongoing. USAID funds used for PRT programs are in the
table on USAID spending at the end of this paper.
In August 2005, in preparation for the establishment of Regional Command
South, Canada took over the key U.S.-led PRT in Qandahar. In May 2006, Britain
took over the PRT at Lashkar Gah, capital of Helmand Province. The Netherlands
took over the PRT at Tarin Kowt, capital of Uruzgan Province. Germany (with
Turkey and France) took over the PRTs and the leadership role in the north from
Britain and the Netherlands when those countries deployed to the south.
Representing evolution of the PRT concept, Turkey opened a PRT, in Wardak
Province, on November 25, 2006, to focus on providing health care, education, police
training, and agricultural alternatives in that region. In March 2008, the Czech
Republic established a PRT in Lowgar Province. As noted above, South Korea is
expected to soon take over the U.S.-run PRT at Bagram Air Base. There also has
been a move to turn over the lead in the U.S.-run PRTs to civilians rather than
military personnel, presumably State Department or USAID officials. That process
began in early 2006 with the establishment of a civilian-led U.S.-run PRT in the
Panjshir Valley.
Afghan Security Forces
U.S. officials see successful and capable Afghan National Security Forces
(ANSF) as the means by which the United States and NATO would eventually wind
down their involvement in Afghanistan. However, a June 2008 GAO study,
referenced below, as well as a June 2008 DoD report on the ANSF,29 suggests that
such capability is still at least a few years off. U.S. forces (“Combined Security
Transition Command-Afghanistan,” CSTC-A, headed as of July 2007 by Gen. Robert
Cone), along with partner countries and contractors, are training the new Afghan
National Army (ANA) and Afghan National Police (ANP).

Afghan National Army. U.S. and allied officers say that the ANA, now
about 58,000 trained and assigned,30 is becoming a major force in stabilizing the
country and a national symbol. According to the DoD report of June 2008 referenced
29 Required by FY2008 National Defense Authorization Act, Section 1231. (PL. 110-181)
30 Numbers actually on duty at any given time may be less than the assigned number due to
absenteeism, temporary desertions, or related factors.

CRS-34
earlier, the ANA has taken the lead in 30 significant combat and clearing operations
to date, and has demonstrated “increasing competence, effectiveness, and
professionalism.” The ANA is now leading 75% of the combat operations in the
eastern sector. The commando forces of the ANA, trained by U.S. Special
Operations Forces, are considered well-trained and are taking the lead in some
operations against high value targets, particularly against HIG elements in Nuristan
province. As of August 2008, the ANA has taken over security of the Kabul regional
command from Italy. However, then NATO/ISAF commander General McNeill said
in April 2008 that it would not be until 2011 that ANA (and ANP) forces would be
capable enough — and have sufficient air transport and air support — to allow for
a drawdown of international forces. Further negative assessments came in a GAO
study released June 2008 that, of 105 ANA units, only two are assessed by DoD as
being fully capable of conducting their primary missions.31
The August 2008 U.S. plan to increase its focus on the Afghan theater includes
substantial expansion of the ANA. The reported plan will include expanding its size
to 120,000 within five years, and for U.S. funding, possibly defrayed by partner
contributions, of about $20 billion in that time frame.
ANA battalions, or “Kandaks,” are the main unit of the Afghan force. They are
stiffened by the presence of U.S. and partner embeds, called “Operational Mentor and
Liaison Teams” (OMLTs). Each OMLT has about 12-19 personnel, and U.S.
commanders say that the ANA will continue to need embeds for the short term,
because embeds give the units confidence they will be resupplied, reinforced, and
evacuated in the event of wounding. Coalition officers also are conducting heavy
weapons training for a heavy brigade as part of the “Kabul Corps,” based in Pol-e-
Charki, east of Kabul. Among the partner countries contributing OMLTs (all or in
part) are Canada, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands,
Norway, Poland, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Britain, and the United States. As noted
above, about 1,000 of the extra 3,200 Marines sent to Afghanistan in early 2008 are
devoted to training the ANA and ANP. The Indian press reported on April 24, 2007,
that a separate team from the Indian Army would help train the ANA.32
The United States has built four AMA bases (Herat, Gardez, Qandahar, and
Mazar-e-Sharif). The ANA now has at least some presence in most of Afghanistan’s
34 provinces, working with the PRTs and assisted by embedded U.S. trainers (about
10-20 per battalion). The ANA deployed to Herat in March 2004 to help quell
factional unrest there and to Meymaneh in April 2004 in response to Dostam’s militia
movement into that city. It deployed outside Afghanistan to assist relief efforts for
victims of the October 2005 Pakistan earthquake. It is increasingly able to conduct
its own battalion-strength operations, according to U.S. officers. In June 2007, the
ANA and ANP led “Operation Maiwand” in Ghazni province, intended to open
schools and deliver humanitarian aid to people throughout the province.
31 Government Accountability Office. Further Congressional Action May Be Needed to
Ensure Completion of a Detailed Plan to Develop and Sustain Capable Afghan National
Security Forces. GAO-08-661. June 2008.
32 Indian television news channel NDTV. April 24, 2007.

CRS-35
On the other hand, as noted by the GAO study in June 2008, U.S. officers report
continuing personnel (desertion, absentee) problems, ill discipline, and drug abuse,
although some concerns have been addressed. Some accounts say that a typical ANA
unit is only at about 50% of its authorized strength at any given time. At the time the
United States first began establishing the ANA, Northern Alliance figures reportedly
weighted recruitment for the national army toward its Tajik ethnic base. Many
Pashtuns, in reaction, refused recruitment or left the ANA program. U.S. officials in
Afghanistan say this problem has been at least partly alleviated with better pay and
more close involvement by U.S. forces, and that the force is ethnically integrated in
each unit. The naming of a Pashtun, Abdul Rahim Wardak, as Defense Minister in
December 2004 also reduced desertions among Pashtuns (he remains in that
position). The chief of staff is Gen. Bismillah Khan, a Tajik who was a Northern
Alliance commander. U.S. officers in Afghanistan add that some recruits take long
trips to their home towns to remit funds to their families, and often then return to the
ANA after a long absence. Others, according to U.S. observers, often refuse to serve
far from their home towns. The FY2005 foreign aid appropriation (P.L. 108-447)
requires that ANA recruits be vetted for terrorism, human rights violations, and drug
trafficking.
Equipment, maintenance, and logistical difficulties continue to plague the ANA.
The June 2008 GAO study said that there are significant shortages in about 40% of
equipment items, although CSTC-A envisions that all ANA brigades will be
equipped to 85% of requirements by the end of 2008. Few soldiers have helmets,
many have no armored vehicles or armor. The tables below discusses major
equipment donations, as well as the new U.S. equipment being delivered in mid-
2008.
The Afghan Air Force, a carryover from the Afghan Air Force that existed prior
to the Soviet invasion, is expanding gradually after its equipment was virtually
eliminated in the 2001-2002 U.S. combat against the Taliban regime. It now has
about 400 pilots, as well as 22 helicopters and cargo aircraft. Its goal is to have 61
aircraft by 2011. By May 2008, it is expected to receive an additional 25 surplus
helicopters from the Czech Republic and the UAE, bought and refurbished with the
help of U.S. funds. Afghan pilots are based at Bagram air base. Afghanistan is
seeking the return of 26 aircraft, including some MiG-2s that were flown to safety in
Pakistan and Uzbekistan during the past conflicts in Afghanistan. U.S. plans do not
include supply of fixed-wing combat aircraft such as F-16s, which Afghanistan
wants, according to U.S. military officials.

CRS-36
Table 3. Recent and Pending Foreign Equipment
for ANA
Country
Equipment
Overview
Since 2002, 46 donor nations have contributed equipment
worth $822 million (a/o July 2008). Another 187 donations
are pending, worth almost $200 million. Major items include
Leopard 1 tanks, MI-17 and MI-35 helicopters, M2 machine
guns, and 81 mm mortars.
United States
Major $2 billion value in arms delivered between May 2006-end
of 2007. Includes several hundred Humvees, 800 other various
armored vehicles. Also includes light weapons. Authorized total
drawdown ceiling (un-reimbursed by appropriations) is $550
million; H.R. 2446 - AFSA reauthorization — would increase
ceiling to $300 million/year. Afghanistan is eligible to receive
grant U.S. Excess Defense Articles (EDA) under Section 516 of
the Foreign Assistance Act.
Hungary
20,500 assault rifles
Egypt
17,000 small arms
Russia
4 helicopters and other equipment, part of over $100 million
military aid to Afghanistan thus far
Turkey
24 — 155 mm Howitzers
Bulgaria
50 mortars, 500 binoculars
Czech Republic
12 helicopters and 20,000 machine guns
Estonia
4,000 machine guns plus ammunition
Greece
300 machine guns
Latvia
337 rocket-propelled grenades, 8 mortars, 13,000 arms
Lithuania
3.7 million ammunition rounds
Montenegro
1,600 machine guns
Poland
110 armored personnel carriers, 4 million ammo rounds
Switzerland
3 fire trucks
Turkey
2,200 rounds of 155 mm ammo
Croatia
1,000 machine guns plus ammo
UAE
10 Mi-17 helicopters (to be delivered)

CRS-37
Afghan National Police/Justice Sector. U.S. and Afghan officials believe
that building up a credible and capable national police force is at least as important
to combating the Taliban insurgency as building the ANA. There is a widespread
consensus that this effort lags that of the ANA by about 18 months, although U.S.
commanders say that it is increasingly successful in repelling Taliban assaults on
villages and that the ANP (now numbering about 80,000 assigned) is experiencing
fewer casualties from attacks. However, according to the June 2008 GAO study
referenced above, none of the ANP units is rated as fully capable.
To try to advance the effort, the U.S. military is conducting reforms to take ANP
out of the bureaucracy and onto the streets and it is trying to bring ANP pay on par
with the ANA. It has also launched a program called “focused district development”
to concentrate resources on developing individual police forces in districts, which is
the basic geographic area of ANP activity. (There are about ten “districts” in each of
Afghanistan’s 34 provinces.) In this program, a district force is taken out and
retrained, its duties temporarily performed by more highly trained police, and then
reinserted after the training is complete. As of August 2008, about twenty districts
have undergone this process, which is expected to take five years to complete for the
remainder of the country.
The U.S. police training effort was first led by State Department/INL, but the
Defense Department took over the lead in police training in April 2005. Much of the
training is still conducted through contracts with DynCorp. There are currently seven
police training centers around Afghanistan. In addition to the U.S. effort, which
includes 600 civilian U.S. police trainers (mostly still Dyncorp contractors) in
addition to the U.S. military personnel (see table on security indicators), Germany
(originally the lead government in Afghan police training) is providing 41 trainers.
The European Union is assisting with a 190-member “EUPOL” training effort, and
60 other experts to help train the ANP. The EU said in March 2008 the size of the
EUPOL training team should be doubled to about 400.
To address equipment shortages, in 2007 CSTC-A is providing about 8,000 new
vehicles and thousands of new weapons of all types. A report by the Inspectors
General of the State and Defense Department, circulated to Congress in December
2006, found that most ANP units have less than 50% of their authorized equipment,33
among its significant criticisms.
Justice Sector. Many experts believe that comprehensive police and justice
sector reform is vital to Afghan governance. Some of the criticisms and allegations
of corruption at all levels of the Afghan bureaucracy have been discussed throughout
this paper. Police training now includes instruction in human rights principles and
democratic policing concepts, and the State Department human rights report on
Afghanistan, referenced above, says the government and outside observers are
increasingly monitoring the police force to prevent abuses. However, some
governments criticized Karzai for setting back police reform in June 2006 when he
33 Inspectors General, U.S. Department of State and of Defense. Interagency Assessment of
Afghanistan Police Training and Readiness. November 2006. Department of State report No.
ISP-IQ0-07-07.

CRS-38
approved a new list of senior police commanders that included 11 (out of 86 total)
who had failed merit exams. His approval of the 11 were reportedly to satisfy faction
leaders and went against the recommendations of a police reform committee. The
ANP work in the communities they come from, often embroiling them in local
factional or ethnic disputes.
The State Department (INL) has placed 30 U.S. advisors in the Interior Ministry
to help it develop the national police force and counter-narcotics capabilities. U.S.
trainers are also building Border Police and Highway Patrol forces.
U.S. justice sector programs generally focus on building capacity of the judicial
system, including police training and court construction; many of these programs are
conducted in partnership with Italy, which is the “lead” coalition country on judicial
reform. The United States has trained over 750 judges, lawyers, and prosecutors,
according to President Bush on February 15, 2007, and built 40 judicial facilities.
USAID also trains court administrators for the Ministry of Justice, the office of the
Attorney General, and the Supreme Court.
Tribal Militias. Since June 2006, Karzai has authorized arming some local
tribal militias (arbokai) in eastern Afghanistan, building on established tribal
structures, to help in local policing. Karzai argues that these militias provide security
and are loyal to the nation and central government and that arming them is not
inconsistent with the disarmament programs discussed below. Britain favors
expanding the arbokai program to the south, but U.S. military commanders say that
this program would likely not work in the south because of differing tribal structures
there.
U.S. Security Forces Funding/”CERP”. U.S. funds appropriated for
Peacekeeping Operations (PKO funds) are used to cover ANA salaries. Recent
appropriations for the ANA and ANP are contained in the tables at the end of this
paper. In addition to the train and equip funds provided by DoD, the U.S. military in
Afghanistan has additional funds to spend on reconstruction projects that build
goodwill and presumably reduce the threat to use forces. These are Commanders
Emergency Response Program funds, or CERP. The U.S. military spent about $206
million in CERP in FY2007 and expect to spend, subject to FY2008 supplemental
appropriations, about $410 million in CERP in FY2008. During 2002-2006, over 40
non-U.S. donors provided about $425 million to train and equip the ANA. As noted
in the table, the security forces funding has shifted to DOD funds instead of
assistance funds controlled by the State Department.

CRS-39
Table 4. Major Security-Related Indicators
Force
Current Level
Total Foreign Forces in
About 65,000, of which: 43,500 are NATO/ISAF. (12,000 ISAF
Afghanistan
in 2005; and 6,000 in 2003.) U.S. forces: 33,600 total, of which
14,300 in NATO/ISAF and 19,300 U.S. (plus 2,000 partner
forces) in OEF. (U.S. total was: 25,000 in 2005; 16,000 in
2003; 5,000 in 2002). U.S. will rise further in 2009 by as much
as 10,000. U.S. forces deployed at 88 bases in Afghanistan, and
include 1 air wing (40 aircraft) and 1 combat aviation brigade
(100 aircraft).
U.S. Casualties in Afghanistan
512 killed, of which 364 by hostile action. Additional 65 U.S.
deaths in other OEF theaters, including the Phillipines and parts
of Africa (OEF-Trans Sahara). About 350 partner forces killed.
100+ U.S. killed in 2007, highest yet. 150 U.S. killed from
October 2001 - January 2003. 19 killed in July 2008.
NATO Sectors
RC-S - 23,000 (Canada, UK, Netherlands rotate lead); RC-E -
(Regional Commands-South,
16,400 (U.S. lead); RC-N - 4,300; RC-W - 2,500 (Italy lead)
east, north, west, and
RC-Kabul - 5,900 (France lead but Afghanistan planning to take
central/Kabul)
lead by July 2008).
Afghan National Army (ANA)
58,000 on duty. 63,000 including civilian support. There are 49
combat battalions. 80,000 troops by 2009 had been goal, but
U.S. now endorsing raising ceiling to 120,000. About 2,000
trained per month. 4,000 are commando forces, trained by U.S.
Special Forces. ANA private paid about $150 per month;
generals receive about $750 per month. ANA now being
outfitted with U.S. M16 rifles and 4,000 up-armored Humvees.
Afghan National Police (ANP) 80,000 assigned, close to authorized strength: 82,000. 18,000
are border police; 3,800 are counter-narcotics police; 5,300
civil order police. Salaries raised to $100 per month in mid-
2007 from $70 to counter corruption.
U.S. and Partner Trainers
About 9,000 total: 5,000 U.S. military trainers as Embedded
Training Troops and Police Mentoring Teams. 3,000 civilian
trainers. 900 of the U.S. military trainers are for ANP. 800
coalition trainers, including EUPOL for ANP (European Union
contingent of 190 trainers, organized as OMLTs), and 41
German trainers of senior ANP.
Legally Armed Fighters
63,380; all of the pool identified for the program
disarmed by DDR
Number of Taliban fighters
5,000 - 20,000 (U.S. military estimate June 2008). Plus about
1,000 Haqqani faction and 1,000 HIG. 7,000 killed 2007-8.
Armed Groups disbanded by
161 illegal groups (five or more fighters) disbanded. Goal is to
DIAG
disband 1,800 groups, of which several hundred groups are
“significant.” 5,700 weapons confiscated, 1.050 arrested.
Weapons Collected by DDR
57,630 medium and light; 12,250 heavy.
Taliban Reconciled
About 5,000 since May 2005 inception.
Attacks per day (average)
1,000 per month in 2007; 800 in 2006; 400 in 2005. Attacks up
40% in eastern sector (Jan- May 2008) compared to 2007.
Number of Suicide Bombings
21 in 2005; 123 in 2006; 160 in 2007.
Afghan Casualties
About 6,000 in 2007 (including Taliban; all types of violence).

CRS-40
Regional Context
Although most of Afghanistan’s neighbors believe that the fall of the Taliban
has stabilized the region, some experts believe that some neighboring governments
are attempting to manipulate Afghanistan’s factions to their advantage, even though
six of Afghanistan’s neighbors signed a non-interference pledge (Kabul Declaration)
on December 23, 2002. In November 2005, Afghanistan joined the South Asian
Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), and Afghanistan has observer
status in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which is discussed below. (Karzai
attended the SCO meeting in Tajikistan on August 30, 2008.)
Pakistan/Pakistan-Afghanistan Border34
As Pakistan’s government has changed composition over the past year, U.S.
commanders — in pointed criticism since May 2008 — have seen Pakistan as
increasingly unhelpful to U.S. efforts to stabilize Afghanistan. Some experts see
Pakistani and Afghan Taliban militants increasingly merging and pooling their efforts
against governments in both countries; Al Qaeda is reportedly actively facilitating the
Afghanistan insurgency. U.S. officials, in July 2008, confronted Pakistani officials
with evidence that Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI) is actively
helping Afghanistan militants, particularly the Haqqani faction.35 Afghan officials
have said they have specific evidence that ISI agents were involved in the July 7,
2008 suicide bombing of India’s embassy in Kabul.
The current criticism contrasts with that during 2001-2006, when the Bush
Administration praised outgoing President Pervez Musharraf for Pakistani
accomplishments against Al Qaeda, including the arrest of over 700 Al Qaeda
figures, some of them senior, since the September 11 attacks.36 After the attacks,
Pakistan provided the United States with access to Pakistani airspace, some ports,
and some airfields for OEF. Others say Musharraf acted against Al Qaeda only
because of its threat to him; for example, he stepped up Pakistani military activities
in the tribal areas of Pakistan only after the December 2003 assassination attempts
against him by that organization.
Afghan leaders resent Pakistan as the most public defender of the Taliban
movement when it was in power and they suspect it wants to have the option to
restore a Taliban-like regime. (Pakistan was one of only three countries to formally
recognize it as the legitimate government: Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
34 For extensive analysis of U.S. policy toward Pakistan, and U.S. assistance to Pakistan in
conjunction with its activities against Al Qaeda and the Taliban, see CRS Report RL33498,
Pakistan-U.S. Relations, by K. Alan Kronstadt.
35 Mazzetti, Mark and Eric Schmitt. “CIA Outlines Pakistan Links With Militants.” New
York Times, July 30, 2008.
36 Among those captured by Pakistan are top bin Laden aide Abu Zubaydah (captured April
2002); alleged September 11 plotter Ramzi bin Al Shibh (September 11, 2002); top Al
Qaeda planner Khalid Shaikh Mohammed (March 2003); and a top planner, Abu Faraj al-
Libbi (May 2005).

CRS-41
Emirates are the others.) Pakistan viewed the Taliban as providing Pakistan strategic
depth against rival India, and it remains wary that any Afghan government might fall
under the influence of India, which Pakistan says is using its diplomatic facilities in
Afghanistan to train and recruit anti-Pakistan insurgents, and is using its
reconstruction funds to build influence there. Pakistan ended its public support for
the Taliban after the September 11, 2001, attacks, but Pakistan-Afghanistan relations
began deteriorating after the March 2006 Afghan accusation that Pakistan was
allowing Taliban remnants, including Mullah Umar, to operating there. In a press
interview on February 2, 2007, Musharraf tacitly acknowledged that some senior
Taliban leaders might be able to operate from Pakistan but strongly denied that any
Pakistani intelligence agencies were deliberately assisting the Taliban.
The latest phase of U.S. attempts to broker cooperation between Pakistan and
Afghanistan began on September 28, 2006, when President Bush hosted a joint
dinner for Karzai and Musharraf. It resulted in the two leaders’ agreeing to gather
tribal elders on both sides of their border in a series of “peace jirgas” to persuade
them not to host Taliban militants. (The first of them, in which 700 Pakistani and
Afghan tribal elders participated, was held in Kabul August 9-10, 2007.37 Another is
planned, but no date has been announced.) In January 2007, Karzai strongly criticized
a Pakistani plan to mine and fence their common border in an effort to prevent
infiltration of militants to Afghanistan. Karzai said the move would separate tribes
and families that straddle the border. Pakistan subsequently dropped the idea of
mining the border, but is building some fencing.
The U.S. shift toward the more critical Afghan position increased following a
New York Times report (February 19, 2007) that Al Qaeda had re-established some
small Al Qaeda terrorist training camps in Pakistan, near the Afghan border. This
possibly was an outgrowth of a September 5, 2006, agreement between Pakistan and
tribal elders in this region to exchange an end to Pakistani military incursions into the
tribal areas for a promise by the tribal elders to expel militants from the border area.
In July 2007, U.S. counter-terrorism officials publicly deemed the agreement a
failure. Despite the widespread assessment, in April 2008, the new government,
dominated by Musharraf’s opponents who prevailed in February 2008 parliamentary
elections, began negotiating a similar “understanding” with members of the Mehsud
tribe, among which is militant leader Baitullah Mehsud. Mehsud is believed
responsible for harboring Afghan Taliban and for growing militant acts inside
Pakistan itself, possibly including the December 27, 2007 killing of Benazir Bhutto.
U.S. commanders in Afghanistan have blamed the negotiations for an increase in
militant infiltration across the border that has undermined some of the progress in
pacifying the Regional Command East sector. Others blame Mehsud for
increasingly sending his own fighters into Afghanistan to fight the Karzai
government. Musharraf announced his resignation and the governing coalition
fractured in August 2008, possibly leaving the newly dominant party of Bhutto’s
family with substantial discretion to continue to pursue negotiations with militant
leaders.
37 Straziuso, Jason. Musharraf Pulls Out of Peace Council. Associated Press, August 8,
2007.

CRS-42
Since February 2008, Pakistan has stopped attending meetings of the
“coordinating commission” under which NATO, Afghan, and Pakistani forces meet
regularly on both sides of the border. In April 2008, in an extension of the
commission’s work, the three agreed to set up six “border coordination centers” —
which will include networks of radar nodes to give liaison officers a common view
of the border area. These centers build on an agreement in May 2007 to share
intelligence on extremists’ movements. One has been established to date.
Increased Direct U.S. Action. With the
Pakistani
government
less
cooperative than the United States seeks, U.S. officials are increasingly evaluating
new options to try to combat militant concentrations in Pakistan without directly
violating Pakistan’s limitations on the U.S. ability to operate in Pakistan. Pakistani
political leaders across the spectrum publicly oppose any presence of U.S. combat
forces in Pakistan, and a reported Defense Department plan to send small numbers
of U.S. troops into the border areas is said to be “on hold” because of potential
backlash from Pakistan. This purported U.S. plan was said to be a focus of
discussions between Joint Chiefs Chairman Mullen and Pakistani Chief of Staff
Ashfaq Kayani aboard the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Lincoln on August 26, 2008,
although the results of the discussions are not publicly known.38 Karzai has
threatened to send Afghan troops against militants in Pakistan, but he is not believed
to have the capability to implement such a threat.
Since September 2007, U.S. military forces have increased direct U.S. firepower
against militants in Pakistan, short of deploying U.S. “boots on the ground.”39 In
January 2008, Secretary of Defense Gates said that any U.S. troops potentially
deployed to Pakistan would most likely be assigned solely to train Pakistani border
forces, such as the Frontier Corps. Former NATO commander Gen. McNeill, in June
2008, publicly criticized any U.S. reliance on the Frontier Corps as an unreliable
forces. Press reports add that visits to Pakistan by top U.S. intelligence officials in
January 2008 resulted in agreement for more U.S. Predator unmanned aerial vehicle
flights over the border regions. In addition, U.S. forces in Afghanistan have
acknowledged on a few occasion since early 2007 — most recently in June 2008 —
that they have shelled or conducted air strikes on purported Taliban positions inside
the Pakistani side of the border, and have done some “hot pursuit” a few kilometers
over the border into Pakistan. One air strike in early June 2008 reportedly killed by
accident a number of Pakistani border forces, incurring intense Pakistani criticism.
U.S. commanders said in June 2008 that NATO and U.S. forces had beefed up their
numbers on the border to deal with the spike in attacks caused by Pakistan’s
relaxation of efforts to prevent militant infiltration.
Suggesting that it can act against the Taliban when it intends to, on August 15,
2006, Pakistan announced the arrest of 29 Taliban fighters in a hospital in the
Pakistani city of Quetta. On March 1, 2007, Pakistani officials confirmed they had
38 Jelinek, Pauline. “U.S., Pakistan, In Secret, Discuss Rise in Violence.” Philadelphia
Inquirer
, August 29, 2008.
39 Tyson, Ann Scott. “Pakistan Strife Threatens Anti-Insurgent Plan.” Washington Post,
November 9, 2007.

CRS-43
arrested Mullah Ubaydallah Akhund, a top aide to Mullah Umar and who had served
as defense minister in the Taliban regime, in Quetta. He was later reported released.
Pakistan wants the government of Afghanistan to pledge to abide by the
“Durand Line,” a border agreement reached between Britain (signed by Sir Henry
Mortimer Durand) and then Afghan leader Amir Abdul Rahman Khan in 1893,
separating Afghanistan from what was then British-controlled India (later Pakistan
after the 1947 partition). It is recognized by the United Nations, but Afghanistan
continues to indicate that the border was drawn unfairly to separate Pashtun tribes
and should be re-negotiated. As of October 2002, about 1.75 million Afghan refugees
have returned from Pakistan since the Taliban fell, but as many as 3 million might
still remain in Pakistan, and Pakistan says it plans to expel them back into
Afghanistan in the near future.
Iran
Iran perceives its key national interests in Afghanistan as exerting its traditional
influence over western Afghanistan, which Iran borders and was once part of the
Persian empire, and to protect Afghanistan’s Shiite minority. Iran’s assistance to
Afghanistan has totaled about $205 million since the fall of the Taliban, mainly to
build roads and schools and provide electricity and shops to Afghan cities and
villages near the Iranian border. After the fall of the Taliban in late 2001, President
Bush warned Iran against meddling in Afghanistan. Partly in response to the U.S.
criticism, in February 2002 Iran expelled Karzai-opponent Gulbuddin Hikmatyar, but
it did not arrest him. Iran did not oppose Karzai’s firing of Iran ally Ismail Khan as
Herat governor in September 2004, although Iran has opposed the subsequent U.S.
use of the Shindand air base.40 Iran is said to be helping Afghan law enforcement
with anti-narcotics along their border. Karzai, who has visited Iran on several
occasions says that Iran is an important neighbor of Afghanistan. During his visit to
Washington, DC, in August 2007, some differences between Afghanistan and the
United States became apparent; Karzai publicly called Iran part of a “solution” for
Afghanistan, while President Bush called Iran a “de-stabilizing force” there. Still,
Karzai received Ahmadinejad in Kabul in mid-August 2007.
The U.S.-Afghan differences over Iran’s role represent a departure from the past
five years, when Iran’s influence with political leaders in Afghanistan appeared to
wane, and U.S. criticism of Iran’s role in Afghanistan was muted. The State
Department report on international terrorism, released April 30, 2008, said Iran
continued during 2007 to ship arms to Taliban fighters in Afghanistan, including
mortars, 107mm rockets, and possibly man-portable air defense systems
(MANPADS). On April 17, 2007, U.S. military personnel in Afghanistan captured
a shipment of Iranian weapons that purportedly was bound for Taliban fighters. On
June 6, 2007, NATO officers said they caught Iran “red-handed” shipping heavy
arms, C4 explosives, and advanced roadside bombs (“explosively-forced projectiles,
EFPs, such as those found in Iraq) to Taliban fighters in Afghanistan. Another such
shipment was intercepted in western Afghanistan on September 6, 2007. Gen.
40 Rashid, Ahmed. “Afghan Neighbors Show Signs of Aiding in Nation’s Stability.” Wall
Street Journal
, October 18, 2004.

CRS-44
McNeill said the convoy was sent with the knowledge of “at least the Iranian
military.” Because such shipments would appear to conflict with Iran’s support for
Karzai and for non-Pashtun factions in Afghanistan, U.S. military officers did not
attribute the shipments to a deliberate Iranian government decision to arm the
Taliban. However, some U.S. officials say the shipments are large enough that the
Iranian government would have to have known about them. In attempting to explain
the shipments, some experts believe Iran’s policy might be shifting somewhat to gain
leverage against the United States in Afghanistan (and on other issues) by causing
U.S. combat deaths.
There is little dispute that Iran’s relations with Afghanistan are much improved
from the time of the Taliban, which Iran saw as a threat to its interests in
Afghanistan, especially after Taliban forces captured Herat (the western province that
borders Iran) in September 1995. Iran subsequently drew even closer to the Northern
Alliance than previously, providing its groups with fuel, funds, and ammunition.41
In September 1998, Iranian and Taliban forces nearly came into direct conflict when
Iran discovered that nine of its diplomats were killed in the course of the Taliban’s
offensive in northern Afghanistan. Iran massed forces at the border and threatened
military action, but the crisis cooled without a major clash, possibly out of fear that
Pakistan would intervene on behalf of the Taliban. Iran offered search and rescue
assistance in Afghanistan during the U.S.-led war to topple the Taliban, and it also
allowed U.S. humanitarian aid to the Afghan people to transit Iran. About 300,000
Afghan refugees have returned from Iran since the Taliban fell, but about 1.2 million
remain, mostly integrated into Iranian society, and a crisis erupted in May 2007 when
Iran expelled about 50,000 into Afghanistan.
India
The interests and activities of India in Afghanistan are almost the exact reverse
of those of Pakistan. India’s goal is to deny Pakistan “strategic depth” in
Afghanistan, and India supported the Northern Alliance against the Taliban in the
mid-1990s. A possible reflection of these ties is that Tajikistan allows India to use
one of its air bases; Tajikistan supports the mostly Tajik Northern Alliance. India
saw the Taliban’s hosting of Al Qaeda as a major threat to India itself because of Al
Qaeda’s association with radical Islamic organizations in Pakistan dedicated to
ending Indian control of parts of Jammu and Kashmir. Some of these groups have
committed major acts of terrorism in India. For its part, Pakistan accuses India of
using its nine consulates in Afghanistan to spread Indian influence. The growing
Indian financial and political influence might have been a cause of the July 2, 2008
attack on India’s embassy, presumably by pro-Pakistan elements that want to limit
India’s influence. The attack has triggered more debate in India about whether it
should deploy more security forces in Afghanistan to protect its construction workers,
diplomats, and installations. India reportedly decided in August 2008 to improve
security for its officials and workers in Afghanistan, but not to send actual troops
there, either as protection forces or as part of the NATO-led coalition.
41 Steele, Jonathon, “America Includes Iran in Talks on Ending War in Afghanistan.”
Washington Times, December 15, 1997.

CRS-45
India has funded Afghanistan projects worth about $750 million. India, along
with the Asian Development Bank, is financing the $300 million project, mentioned
above, to bring electricity from Central Asia to Afghanistan. It has also renovated the
well known Habibia High School in Kabul and committed to a $25 million
renovation of Darulaman Palace as the permanent house for Afghanistan’s
parliament. Numerous other India-financed reconstruction projects are under way
throughout Afghanistan, including a road to the Iranian border in remote Nimruz
province.
Russia, Central Asian States, and China
Some neighboring and nearby states take an active interest not only in Afghan
stability, but in the U.S. military posture that supports OEF.
Russia. Russia provides some humanitarian aid to Afghanistan, although it
keeps a low profile in Afghanistan because it still feels humiliated by its withdrawal
from Afghanistan in 1989 and senses Afghan resentment of the Soviet occupation.
In an effort to try to cooperate more with NATO at least in Afghanistan, in
conjunction with the April 2008 NATO summit, Russia agreed to allow NATO to
ship non-lethal supplies to coalition forces in Afghanistan by land over Russian
territory. However, that pledge has been put into doubt following the August 2008
crisis over Georgia, an outcome of which has been suspension of Russian military
cooperation with NATO; Russia says this land route cooperation constitutes military
coordination covered under that suspension announcement.

During the 1990s, Russia supported the Northern Alliance against the Taliban
with some military equipment and technical assistance in order to blunt Islamic
militancy emanating from Afghanistan.42 Although Russia supported the U.S. effort
against the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan out of fear of Islamic (mainly
Chechen) radicals, Russia continues to seek to reduce the U.S. military presence in
Central Asia. Russian fears of Islamic activism emanating from Afghanistan may
have ebbed since 2002 when Russia killed a Chechen of Arab origin known as
“Hattab” (full name is Ibn al-Khattab), who led a militant pro-Al Qaeda Chechen
faction. The Taliban government was the only one in the world to recognize
Chechnya’s independence, and some Chechen fighters fighting alongside Taliban/Al
Qaeda forces have been captured or killed.
Central Asian States. During Taliban rule, Russian and Central Asian
leaders grew increasingly alarmed that radical Islamic movements were receiving
safe haven in Afghanistan. Uzbekistan, in particular, has long asserted that the group
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), allegedly responsible for four simultaneous
February 1999 bombings in Tashkent that nearly killed President Islam Karimov, is
linked to Al Qaeda.43 One of its leaders, Juma Namangani, reportedly was killed
while commanding Taliban/Al Qaeda forces in Konduz in November 2001.
42 Risen, James. “Russians Are Back in Afghanistan, Aiding Rebels.” New York Times, July
27, 1998.
43 The IMU was named a foreign terrorist organization by the State Department in
September 2000.

CRS-46
Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan do not directly border Afghanistan, but IMU guerrillas
transited Kyrgyzstan during incursions into Uzbekistan in the late 1990s.
During Taliban rule, Uzbekistan supported Uzbek leader Abdul Rashid Dostam,
who was part of that Alliance. It allowed use of Karshi-Khanabad air base by OEF
forces from October 2001 until a rift emerged in May 2005 over Uzbekistan’s
crackdown against riots in Andijon, and U.S.-Uzbek relations remained largely
frozen. Uzbekistan’s March 2008 agreement with Germany for it to use Karshi-
Khanabad air base temporarily, for the first time since the rift in U.S.-Uzbek relations
developed in 2005, suggests that U.S.-Uzbek cooperation on Afghanistan and other
issues might be rebuilt. As a follow-up to this, Uzbekistan at the April 2008 NATO
summit in Bucharest, proposed to revive the “6 + 2” process of neighbors of
Afghanistan to help its stability, but Karzai reportedly opposes this idea as unwanted
Central Asian interference in its affairs.
In 1996, several of the Central Asian states banded together with Russia and
China into a regional grouping called the Shanghai Cooperation Organization to
discuss the Taliban threat. It includes China, Russia, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan,
Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan. Reflecting Russian and Chinese efforts to limit U.S.
influence in the region, the group has issued statements, most recently in August
2007, that security should be handled by the countries in the Central Asia region.
Despite the Shanghai Cooperation Organization statements, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan,
and Kyrgyzstan are all, for now, holding to their pledges of facility support to OEF.
(Tajikistan allows access primarily to French combat aircraft, and Kazakhstan allows
use of facilities in case of emergency.)
Of the Central Asian states that border Afghanistan, only Turkmenistan chose
to seek close relations with the Taliban leadership when it was in power, possibly
viewing engagement as a more effective means of preventing spillover of radical
Islamic activity from Afghanistan. It saw Taliban control as facilitating construction
of a natural gas pipeline from Turkmenistan through Afghanistan (see above). The
September 11 events stoked Turkmenistan’s fears of the Taliban and its Al Qaeda
guests and the country publicly supported the U.S.-led war. No U.S. forces have been
based in Turkmenistan.
China.44 A major organizer of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, China
has a small border with a sliver of Afghanistan known as the “Wakhan corridor” (see
map). China had become increasingly concerned about the potential for Al Qaeda to
promote Islamic fundamentalism among Muslims in China. In December 2000,
sensing China’s increasing concern about Taliban policies, a Chinese official
delegation met with Mullah Umar. China did not enthusiastically support U.S.
military action against the Taliban, possibly because China was wary of a U.S.
military buildup nearby. In addition, China has been allied to Pakistan in part to
pressure India, a rival of China. Still, Chinese delegations are visiting Afghanistan
44 For more information, see CRS Report RL33001. U.S.-China Counterterrorism
Cooperation: Issues For U.S. Policy, by Shirley Kan.

CRS-47
to assess the potential for investments in such sectors as mining and energy,45 and a
deal was signed in November 2007 as discussed above (China Metallurgical Group).

Saudi Arabia
During the Soviet occupation, Saudi Arabia channeled hundreds of millions of
dollars to the Afghan resistance, primarily the Hikmatyar and Sayyaf factions. Saudi
Arabia, a majority of whose citizens practice the strict Wahhabi brand of Islam also
practiced by the Taliban, was one of three countries to formally recognize the Taliban
government. The Taliban initially served Saudi Arabia as a potential counter to Iran,
but Iranian-Saudi relations improved after 1997 and balancing Iranian power ebbed
as a factor in Saudi policy toward Afghanistan. Drawing on its reputed intelligence
ties to Afghanistan during that era, Saudi Arabia worked with Taliban leaders to
persuade them to suppress anti-Saudi activities by Al Qaeda. Some press reports
indicate that, in late 1998, Saudi and Taliban leaders discussed, but did not agree on,
a plan for a panel of Saudi and Afghan Islamic scholars to decide bin Laden’s fate.
According to U.S. officials, Saudi Arabia cooperated extensively, if not
publicly, with OEF. It broke diplomatic relations with the Taliban in late September
2001 and quietly permitted the United States to use a Saudi base for command of
U.S. air operations over Afghanistan, but it did not permit U.S. airstrikes from it
U.S. and International Aid
to Afghanistan and Development Issues
Many experts believe that financial assistance and accelerating reconstruction
would do more to improve the security situation than intensified anti-Taliban combat.
Afghanistan’s economy and society are still fragile after decades of warfare that left
about 2 million dead, 700,000 widows and orphans, and about 1 million Afghan
children who were born and raised in refugee camps outside Afghanistan. More than
3.5 million Afghan refugees have since returned, although a comparable number
remain outside Afghanistan. The U.N. High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)
supervises Afghan repatriation and Afghan refugee camps in Pakistan.
Still heavily dependent on donors, Karzai has sought to reassure the
international donor community by establishing a transparent budget and planning
process. Some in Congress want to increase independent oversight of U.S. aid to
Afghanistan; the conference report on the FY2008 defense authorization bill (P.L.
110-181) established a “special inspector general” for Afghanistan reconstruction,
(SIGAR) modeled on a similar outside auditor for Iraq (“Special Inspector General
for Iraq Reconstruction,” SIGIR). The law also authorized $20 million for that
purpose, and some funds were provided in P.L. 110-252, as shown in the tables. On
May 30, 2008, Maj. Gen. Arnold Fields (Marine, ret.) was named to the position.
U.S. and Afghan officials see the growth in narcotics trafficking as a product of
an Afghan economy ravaged by war and lack of investment. Efforts to build the
45 CRS Conversations with Chinese officials in Beijing. August 2007.

CRS-48
legitimate economy are showing some results, by accounts of senior U.S. officials,
including expansion of roads and education and health facilities constructed. USAID
spending to promote economic growth is shown in Table 14, and U.S. and
international assistance to Afghanistan are discussed in the last sections of this paper.

Some international investors are implementing projects, and there is substantial
new construction, such as the Serena luxury hotel that opened in November 2005
(long considered a priority Taliban target and was attacked by militants on January
14, 2008, killing six) and a $25 million new Coca Cola bottling factory that opened
in Kabul on September 11, 2006. Several Afghan companies are growing as well,
including Roshan and Afghan Wireless (cell phone service), and Tolo Television. A
Gold’s Gym has opened in Kabul as well. The 52-year-old national airline, Ariana,
is said to be in significant financial trouble due to corruption that has affected its
safety ratings and left it unable to service a heavy debt load, but there are new
privately run airlines, such as Pamir Air, Safi Air, and Kam Air. Some Afghan
leaders complain that not enough has been done to revive such potentially lucrative
industries as minerals mining, such as of copper and lapis lazuli (a stone used in
jewelry). However, in November 2007, the Afghan government signed a deal with
China Metallurgical Group for the company to invest $2.8 billion to develop
Afghanistan’s Aynak copper field in Lowgar Province; the agreement will include
construction of a coal-fired electric power plant and a freight railway.
The United States is trying to build on Afghanistan’s post-war economic
rebound. In September 2004, the United States and Afghanistan signed a bilateral
trade and investment framework agreement (TIFA). These agreements are generally
seen as a prelude to a broader but more complex bilateral free trade agreement, but
negotiations on an FTA have not begun to date. On December 13, 2004, the 148
countries of the World Trade Organization voted to start membership talks with
Afghanistan. Another initiative supported by the United States is the establishment
of joint Afghan-Pakistani “Reconstruction Opportunity Zones” (ROZ’s) which would
be modeled after “Qualified Industrial Zones” run by Israel and Jordan in which
goods produced in the zones receive duty free treatment for import into the United
States. For FY2008, $5 million in supplemental funding was requested to support the
zones, but P.L. 110-252 did not specifically mention the zones. Bills in the 100th
Congress, S. 2776 and H.R. 6387, would authorize the President to proclaim duty-
free treatment for imports from ROZ’s to be designated by the President.
Afghanistan’s prospects also appeared to brighten by the announcement in
March 2006 of an estimated 3.6 billion barrels of oil and 36.5 trillion cubic feet of
gas reserves. Experts believe these amounts, if proved, could make Afghanistan
relatively self-sufficient in energy and possibly able to provided some exports to its
neighbors.
Afghan officials are said to be optimistic for increased trade with Central Asia
now that a new bridge has opened (October 2007) over the Panj River, connecting
Afghanistan and Tajikistan. The bridge was built with U.S. assistance. The bridge
will further assist what press reports say is robust reconstruction and economic
development in the relatively peaceful and ethnically homogenous province of
Panjshir, the political base of the Northern Alliance.

CRS-49
Another major energy project remains under consideration. During 1996-1998,
the Clinton Administration supported proposed natural gas and oil pipelines through
western Afghanistan as an incentive for the warring factions to cooperate. A
consortium led by Los Angeles-based Unocal Corporation proposed a $2.5 billion
Central Asia Gas Pipeline (CentGas), which is now estimated to cost $3.7 billion to
construct, that would originate in southern Turkmenistan and pass through
Afghanistan to Pakistan, with possible extensions into India.46 The deterioration in
U.S.-Taliban relations after 1998 largely ended hopes for the pipeline projects while
the Taliban was in power.
Prospects for the project have improved in the post-Taliban period. In a summit
meeting in late May 2002 between the leaders of Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, and
Pakistan, the three countries agreed to revive the gas pipeline project. Sponsors of the
project held an inaugural meeting on July 9, 2002 in Turkmenistan, signing a series
of preliminary agreements. Turkmenistan’s new leadership (President Gurbanguly
Berdimukhamedov, succeeding the late Saparmurad Niyazov) favors the project as
well. Some U.S. officials view this project as a superior alternative to a proposed gas
pipeline from Iran to India, transiting Pakistan.
Some of the more stable provinces, such as Bamiyan, are complaining that
international aid is flowing mostly to the restive provinces in an effort to quiet them,
and ignoring the needs of poor Afghans in peaceful areas. Later in this paper are
tables showing U.S. appropriations of assistance to Afghanistan, including some
detail on funds earmarked for categories of civilian reconstruction, and Table 14 lists
USAID spending on all of these sectors for FY2002-FY2007.
! Roads. Road building is considered a U.S. priority and has been
USAID’s largest project category there, taking up about 25% of
USAID spending since the fall of the Taliban. An FY2008
supplemental funding requests asks for $50 million more for roads,
particularly to rehabilitate a road that would connect northern
Afghanistan with Kabul, running through Bamiyan Province. Roads
are considered key to enabling Afghan farmers to bring legitimate
produce to market in a timely fashion and former commander of
U.S. forces in Afghanistan Gen. Eikenberry said “where the roads
end, the Taliban begin.” Among major projects completed: the
Kabul-Qandahar roadway project; the Qandahar-Herat roadway,
funded by the United States, Japan, and Saudi Arabia, completed by
2006; a road from Qandahar to Tarin Kowt, built by U.S. military
personnel, inaugurated in 2005; and a road linking the Panjshir
Valley to Kabul. U.S. funds are also building roads connecting
remote areas to regional district centers in several provinces in the
eastern sector.
46 Other participants in the Unocal consortium include Delta of Saudi Arabia, Hyundai of
South Korea, Crescent Steel of Pakistan, Itochu Corporation and INPEX of Japan, and the
government of Turkmenistan. Some accounts say Russia’s Gazprom would probably receive
a stake in the project. Nezavisimaya Gazeta (Moscow), October 30, 1997, p. 3.

CRS-50
! Education. Despite the success in enrolling Afghan children in
school since the Taliban era (see statistics above), setbacks have
occurred because of Taliban attacks on schools, causing some to
close.
! Health. The health care sector, as noted by Afghan observers, has
made considerable gains in reducing infant mortality and improving
Afghans’ access to health professionals. In addition to U.S.
assistance to develop the health sector’s capacity, Egypt operates a
65-person field hospital at Bagram Air Base that instructs Afghan
physicians. Jordan operates a similar facility in Mazar-e-Sharif.
! Agriculture. USAID has spent about 5% of its Afghanistan funds
on agriculture, and this has helped Afghanistan double its
agricultural output over the past five years. Afghan officials say
agricultural assistance and development should be a top U.S. priority
as part of a strategy of encouraging legitimate alternatives to poppy
cultivation. (Another 10% of USAID funds is spent on “alternative
livelihoods” to poppy growing, mostly in aid to farmers.)
! Electricity. About 10% of USAID spending in Afghanistan is on
power projects. The Afghanistan Compact states that the goal is for
electricity to reach 65% of households in urban areas and 25% in
rural areas by 2010. There have been severe power shortages in
Kabul, partly because the city population has swelled to nearly 4
million, up from half a million when the Taliban was in power, but
power to the capital is more plentiful as of March 2008. An FY2008
supplemental request asks for $115 million more for this sector,
particularly to ensure that a 100 Megawatt diesel generator becomes
operational for Kabul. The Afghan government, with help from
international donors, plans to import electricity from Central Asian
and other neighbors beginning in 2009. Another major pending
project is the Kajaki Dam, located in unstable Helmand Province.
USAID has allocated about $500 million to refurbish the remaining
two electricity-generating turbines (one is operating) of the dam
(total project estimate, when completed) which, when functional,
will provide electricity for 1.7 million Afghans and about 4,000 jobs
in the reconstruction. However, progress depends on securing access
to the dam; surrounding roads and areas are controlled by or
accessible to Taliban insurgents.
National Solidarity Program. The United States and the Afghan government
are also trying to promote local decisionmaking on reconstruction. The “National
Solidarity Program,” largely funded by U.S. and other international donors seeks to
create and empower local governing councils to prioritize local reconstruction
projects. The assistance, channeled through donors, provides block grants of about
$60,000 per project to the councils to implement agreed projects, most of which are
water projects. Elections to these local councils have been held in several provinces,

CRS-51
and almost 40% of those elected have been women.47 The U.S. aid to the program is
part of the Afghanistan Reconstruction Trust Fund (ARTF) account. (Of FY2008
ESF funds requested, USAID expects to spend $45 million on the ARTF, of which
$25 million was to be for the budgetary support portion of the ARTF account, and
the remainder might be available for the National Solidarity Program.)
U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan
During the 1990s, the United States became the largest single provider of
assistance to the Afghan people. During Taliban rule, no U.S. aid went directly to
that government; monies were provided through relief organizations. Between 1985
and 1994, the United States had a cross-border aid program for Afghanistan,
implemented by USAID personnel based in Pakistan. Citing the difficulty of
administering this program, there was no USAID mission for Afghanistan from the
end of FY1994 until the reopening of the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan in late 2001.

Post-Taliban U.S. Aid Totals. Since FY2002 and including funds already
appropriated for FY2008, the United States has provided over $25 billion in
reconstruction assistance, including military “train and equip” for the ANA and ANP
and counter-narcotics-related assistance. These amounts do not include costs for U.S.
combat operations, which are discussed in CRS Report RL33110, The Cost of Iraq,
Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11
, by Amy
Belasco. The tables below depict the aid.48
Afghanistan Freedom Support Act of 2002 and Amendments. A key
post-Taliban aid authorization bill, S. 2712, the Afghanistan Freedom Support Act
(AFSA) of 2002 (P.L. 107-327, December 4, 2002), as amended, authorized about
$3.7 billion in U.S. civilian aid for FY2003-FY2006. For the most part, the
humanitarian, counter-narcotics, and governance assistance targets authorized by the
act were met or exceeded by appropriations. However, no Enterprise Funds have
been appropriated, and ISAF expansion was funded by the contributing partner
forces. The act authorized the following:
! $60 million in total counter-narcotics assistance ($15 million per
year for FY2003-FY2006);
! $30 million in assistance for political development, including
national, regional, and local elections ($10 million per year for
FY2003-FY2005);
! $80 million total to benefit women and for Afghan human rights
oversight ($15 million per year for FY2003-FY2006 for the Afghan
Ministry of Women’s Affairs, and $5 million per year for FY2003-
FY2006 to the Human Rights Commission of Afghanistan);
47 Khalilzad, Zalmay (Then U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan). “Democracy Bubbles Up.”
Wall Street Journal, March 25, 2004.
48 In some cases, aid figures are subject to variation depending on how that aid is measured.
The figures cited might not exactly match figures in appropriated legislation; in some, funds
were added to specified accounts from monies in the September 11-related Emergency
Response Fund.

CRS-52
! $1.7 billion in humanitarian and development aid ($425 million per
year for FY2003-FY2006);
! $300 million for an Enterprise Fund;
! $550 million in draw-downs of defense articles and services for
Afghanistan and regional militaries. (The original law provided for
$300 million in drawdowns. That was increased to $450 million by
P.L. 108-106, an FY2004 supplemental appropriations); and
! $1 billion ($500 million per year for FY2003-FY2004) to expand
ISAF if such an expansion takes place.
A subsequent law (P.L. 108-458, December 17, 2004), implementing the
recommendations of the 9/11 Commission, contained a subtitle called “The
Afghanistan Freedom Support Act Amendments of 2004.” The subtitle mandates the
appointment of a U.S. coordinator of policy on Afghanistan and requires additional
Administration reports to Congress, including (1) on long-term U.S. strategy and
progress of reconstruction, an amendment to the report required in the original law;
(2) on how U.S. assistance is being used; (3) on U.S. efforts to persuade other
countries to participate in Afghan peacekeeping; and (4) a joint State and Defense
Department report on U.S. counter-narcotics efforts in Afghanistan. The law also
contains several “sense of Congress” provisions recommending more rapid DDR
activities; expansion of ISAF; and counter-narcotics initiatives.
Afghan Freedom Support Act Re-Authorization. In the 110th Congress,
H.R. 2446, passed by the House on June 6, 2007 (406-10), would reauthorize AFSA
through FY2010. Some observers say the Senate might take it up early in 2008. The
following are the major provisions of the bill:
! A total of about $1.7 billion in U.S. economic aid and $320 in
military aid (including draw-downs of equipment) per fiscal year
would be authorized.
! a pilot program of crop substitution to encourage legitimate
alternatives to poppy cultivation is authorized. Afghan officials
support this provision as furthering their goal of combatting
narcotics by promoting alternative livelihoods.
! enhanced anti-corruption and legal reform programs would be
provided.
! a mandated cutoff of U.S. aid to any Afghan province in which the
Administration reports that the leadership of the province is
complicit in narcotics trafficking. This provision has drawn some
criticism from observers who say that the most needy in Afghanistan
might be deprived of aid based on allegations that are difficult to
judge precisely.
! $45 million per year for the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, the
Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission, and programs for
women and girls is authorized.
! $75 million per year is authorized specifically for enhanced power
generation, a key need in Afghanistan.
! a coordinator for U.S. assistance to Afghanistan is mandated.

CRS-53
! military drawdowns for the ANA and ANP valued at $300 million
per year (un-reimbursed) are authorized (versus the aggregate $550
million allowed currently).
! authorizes appointment of a special U.S. envoy to promote greater
Afghanistan-Pakistan cooperation.
! reauthorizes “Radio Free Afghanistan.”
! establishes a U.S. policy to encourage Pakistan to permit shipments
by India of equipment and material to Afghanistan.
International Reconstruction Pledges/Aid/Lending. Afghan leaders said
in 2002 that Afghanistan needs $27.5 billion for reconstruction for 2002-2010.
Including U.S. pledges, about $30 billion has been pledged at donors conferences in
2002 (Tokyo), Berlin (April 2004), Kabul (April 2005), the London conference
(February 2006), and since then. Of that, about half are non-U.S. contributions.
However, not all non-U.S. amounts pledged have been received, although
implementation appears to have improved over the past few years (amounts received
had been running below half of what was pledged). The Afghanistan Compact also
leaned toward the view of Afghan leaders that a higher proportion of the aid be
channeled through the Afghan government rather than directly by the donor
community. Only about $3.8 billion of funds disbursed have been channeled through
the Afghan government, according to the Finance Minister in April 2007. The
Afghan government is promising greater financial transparency and international
(United Nations) oversight to ensure that international contributions are used wisely
and effectively.
On June 12, 2008, Afghanistan formally presented its Afghan National
Development Strategy in Paris, asking for $50.1 billion during 2009-2014 from
international donors. Of that, $14 billion was requested to improve infrastructure,
including airports and to construct a railway. Another $14 billion would be to build
the ANSF, and about $4.5 billion would be for agriculture and rural development.
However, citing in part a relative lack of transparency in Afghan governance, donors
pledged about $21 billion, but that included $10.2 billion already committed by the
United States. Of the other major pledges, the Asian Development bank pledged $1.3
billion, the World Bank pledged $1.1 billion, Britain pledged $1.2 billion; France
pledged $165 million over two years; Japan pledged $550 million; Germany offered
$600 million over two years, and the European Union pledged $770 million.
Among multilateral lending institutions, in May 2002, the World Bank reopened
its office in Afghanistan after 20 years. On March 12, 2003, it announced a $108
million loan to Afghanistan, the first since 1979. In August 2003, the World Bank
agreed to lend Afghanistan an additional $30 million to rehabilitate the
telecommunications system, and $30 million for road and drainage rehabilitation in
Kabul. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has also been playing a major role in
Afghanistan, loaning (or granting) Afghanistan more than $450 million since
December 2002. One of its projects in Afghanistan was funding the paving of a road
from Qandahar to the border with Pakistan, and as noted above, it is contributing to
a project to bring electricity from Central Asia to Afghanistan.

CRS-54
Residual Issues from Past Conflicts
A few issues remain unresolved from Afghanistan’s many years of conflict, such
as Stinger retrieval and mine eradication.
Stinger Retrieval. Beginning in late 1985 following internal debate, the
Reagan Administration provided about 2,000 man-portable “Stinger” anti-aircraft
missiles to the mujahedin for use against Soviet aircraft. Prior to the U.S.-led war
against the Taliban and Al Qaeda, common estimates suggested that 200-300
Stingers remained at large, although more recent estimates put the number below
100.49 The Stinger issue resurfaced in conjunction with 2001 U.S. war effort, when
U.S. pilots reported that the Taliban fired some Stingers at U.S. aircraft during the
war. No hits were reported. Any Stingers that survived the anti-Taliban war are likely
controlled by Afghans now allied to the United States and presumably pose less of
a threat. However, there are concerns that remaining Stingers could be sold to
terrorists for use against civilian aircraft. In February 2002, the Afghan government
found and returned to the United States “dozens” of Stingers.50 In late January 2005,
Afghan intelligence began a push to buy remaining Stingers back, at a reported cost
of $150,000 each.51
In 1992, after the fall of the Russian-backed government of Najibullah, the
United States reportedly spent about $10 million to buy the Stingers back, at a
premium, from individual mujahedin commanders. The New York Times reported on
July 24, 1993, that the buy back effort failed because the United States was
competing with other buyers, including Iran and North Korea, and that the CIA
would spend about $55 million in FY1994 in a renewed Stinger buy-back effort. On
March 7, 1994, the Washington Post reported that the CIA had recovered only a
fraction (maybe 50 or 100) of the at-large Stingers.
The danger of these weapons has become apparent on several occasions. Iran
bought 16 of the missiles in 1987 and fired one against U.S. helicopters; some
reportedly were transferred to Lebanese Hizballah. India claimed that it was a
Stinger, supplied to Islamic rebels in Kashmir probably by sympathizers in
Afghanistan, that shot down an Indian helicopter over Kashmir in May 1999.52 It was
a Soviet-made SA-7 “Strella” man-portable launchers that were fired, allegedly by
Al Qaeda, against a U.S. military aircraft in Saudi Arabia in June 2002 and against
an Israeli passenger aircraft in Kenya on November 30, 2002. Both missed their
targets. SA-7s were discovered in Afghanistan by U.S. forces in December 2002.
Mine Eradication. Land mines laid during the Soviet occupation constitute
one of the principal dangers to the Afghan people. The United Nations estimates that
49 Saleem, Farrukh. “Where Are the Missing Stinger Missiles? Pakistan,” Friday Times.
August 17-23, 2001.
50 Fullerton, John. “Afghan Authorities Hand in Stinger Missiles to U.S.” Reuters, February
4, 2002.
51 “Afghanistan Report,” Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. February 4, 2005.
52 “U.S.-Made Stinger Missiles — Mobile and Lethal.” Reuters, May 28, 1999.

CRS-55
5 -7 million mines remain scattered throughout the country, although some estimates
are lower. U.N. teams have destroyed one million mines and are now focusing on de-
mining priority-use, residential and commercial property, including lands around
Kabul. As shown in the U.S. aid table for FY1999-FY2002 (Table 6), the U.S. de-
mining program was providing about $3 million per year for Afghanistan, and the
amount increased to about $7 million in the post-Taliban period. Most of the funds
have gone to HALO Trust, a British organization, and the U.N. Mine Action Program
for Afghanistan. The Afghanistan Compact adopted in London in February 2006
states that by 2010, the goal should be to reduce the land area of Afghanistan
contaminated by mines by 70%.

CRS-56
Table 5. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY1978-FY1998
($ in millions)
Econ.
Other
Fiscal
Devel.
Supp.
P.L. 480
(Incl. Regional
Year
Assist.
(ESF)
(Title I and II)
Military
Refugee Aid)
Total
1978
4.989

5.742
0.269
0.789
11.789
1979
3.074

7.195

0.347
10.616
1980

(Soviet invasion - December 1979)


1981






1982






1983






1984






1985
3.369




3.369
1986


8.9


8.9
1987
17.8
12.1
2.6


32.5
1988
22.5
22.5
29.9


74.9
1989
22.5
22.5
32.6


77.6
1990
35.0
35.0
18.1


88.1
1991
30.0
30.0
20.1


80.1
1992
25.0
25.0
31.4


81.4
1993
10.0
10.0
18.0

30.2
68.2
1994
3.4
2.0
9.0

27.9
42.3
1995
1.8

12.4

31.6
45.8
1996


16.1

26.4
42.5
1997


18.0

31.9a
49.9
1998


3.6

49.14b
52.74
Source: Department of State.
a. Includes $3 million for demining and $1.2 million for counternarcotics.
b. Includes $3.3 million in projects targeted for Afghan women and girls, $7 million in
earthquake relief aid, 100,000 tons of 416B wheat worth about $15 million, $2 million
for demining, and $1.54 for counternarcotics.

CRS-57
Table 6. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY1999-FY2002
($ in millions)
FY2002
FY1999
FY2000
FY2001
(Final)
U.S. Department of
42.0 worth of
68.875 for
131.0
198.12 (for
Agriculture (DOA)
wheat
165,000 metric
(300,000
food
and USAID Food For
(100,000
tons. (60,000
metric tons
commodities)
Peace (FFP), via
metric tons
tons for May
under P.L.480,
World Food
under “416(b)”
2000 drought
Title II, and
Program(WFP)
program.)
relief)
416(b))
State/Bureau of
16.95 for
14.03 for the
22.03 for
136.54 (to
Population, Refugees
Afghan
same purposes
similar
U.N. agencies)
and Migration (PRM)
refugees in
purposes
via UNHCR and
Pakistan and
ICRC
Iran, and to
assist their
repatriation
State Department/
7.0 to various
6.68 for
18.934 for
113.36 (to
Office of Foreign
NGOs to aid
drought relief
similar
various U.N.
Disaster Assistance
Afghans inside
and health,
programs
agencies and
(OFDA)
Afghanistan
water, and
NGOs)
sanitation
programs
State
2.615
3.0
2.8
7.0 to Halo
Department/HDP
Trust/other
(Humanitarian
demining
Demining Program)
Aid to Afghan
5.44 (2.789 for
6.169, of
5.31 for
Refugees in Pakistan
health, training
which $3.82
similar
(through various
- Afghan
went to similar
purposes
NGOs)
females in
purposes
Pakistan)
Counter-Narcotics
1.50
63.0
USAID/
0.45 (Afghan
24.35 for
Office of Transition
women in
broadcasting/
Initiatives
Pakistan)
media
Dept. of Defense
50.9 ( 2.4
million
rations)
Foreign Military
57.0 (for
Financing
Afghan
national army)
Anti-Terrorism 36.4
Economic Support
105.2
Funds (E.S.F)
Peacekeeping
24.0
Totals
76.6 113.2 182.6
815.9

CRS-58
Table 7. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2003
($ in millions, same acronyms as Table 6)
FY2003 Foreign Aid Appropriations (P.L. 108-7)
Development/Health
90
P.L. 480 Title II (Food Aid)
47
Peacekeeping
10
Disaster Relief
94
ESF
50
Non-Proliferation, De-mining, Anti-Terrorism (NADR)
5
Refugee Relief
55
Afghan National Army (ANA) train and equip (FMF)
21
Total from this law:
372
FY2003 Supplemental (P.L. 108-11)
Road Construction (ESF, Kabul-Qandahar road)
100
Provincial Reconstruction Teams (ESF)
10
Afghan government support (ESF)
57
ANA train and equip (FMF)
170
Anti-terrorism/de-mining
28
(NADR, some for Karzai protection)
Total from this law:
365
Total for FY2003
737

CRS-59
Table 8. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2004
($ in millions, same acronyms as previous tables)
FY2004 Supplemental (P.L. 108-106)
Disarmament and Demobilization (DDR program) (ESF)
30
Afghan government (ESF) $10 million for customs collection
70
Elections/democracy and governance (ESF)
69
Roads (ESF)
181
Schools/Education (ESF)
95
Health Services/Clinics (ESF)
49
Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs)
58
Private Sector/Power sector rehabilitation
95
Water Projects
23
Counter-narcotics/police training/judiciary training (INCLE)
170
Defense Dept. counter-narcotics support operations
73
Afghan National Army (FMF)
287
Anti-Terrorism/Afghan Leadership Protection (NADR)
35
U.S. Embassy expansion and security/AID operations
92
Total from this law:
1,327
(of which $60 million is to benefit Afghan women and girls)
FY2004 Regular Appropriations (P.L. 108-199)
Development/Health
171
Disaster Relief
35
Refugee Relief
72
Afghan women (ESF)
5
Judicial reform commission (ESF)
2
Reforestation (ESF)
2
Aid to communities and victims of U.S. military operations (ESF)
2
Other reconstruction (ESF). (Total FY2004 funds spent by
64
USAID for PRT-related reconstruction = $56.4 million)
ANA train and equip (FMF)
50
Total from this law:
403
Other: P.L. 480 Title II Food Aid
.085
Total for FY2004
1,727

CRS-60
Table 9. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2005
($ in millions)
FY2005 Regular Appropriations (P.L. 108-447)
Assistance to Afghan governing institutions (ESF)
225
Train and Equip ANA (FMF)
400
Assistance to benefit women and girls
50
Agriculture, private sector investment, environment, primary
education, reproductive health, and democracy-building
300
Reforestation
2
Child and maternal health
6
Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission
2
Total from this law
985
Second FY2005 Supplemental (P.L. 109-13)
Other ESF: Health programs, PRT programs, agriculture,
alternative livelihoods, government capacity building, training
for parliamentarians, rule of law programs (ESF). (Total FY2005
1,073.5
funds spent by USAID for PRT-led reconstruction = $87.89
million.)
Aid to displaced persons (ESF)
5
Families of civilian victims of U.S. combat ops (ESF)
2.5
Women-led NGOs (ESF)
5
DOD funds to train and equip Afghan security forces. Of the
funds, $34 million may go to Afghan security elements for that
1,285
purpose. Also, $290 million of the funds is to reimburse the U.S.
Army for funds already obligated for this purpose.
DOD counter-narcotics support operations
242
Counter-narcotics (INCLE)
220
Training of Afghan police (INCLE)
400
Karzi protection (NADR funds)
17.1
DEA operations in Afghanistan
7.7
Operations of U.S. Embassy Kabul
60
Total from this law
3,317
Other: P.L. 480 Title II Food Aid
56.95
Total 4,359

CRS-61
Table 10. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2006
($ in millions)
FY2006 Regular Foreign Aid Appropriations (P.L. 109-102)
ESF
430
(ESF over $225 million subject to
(Mostly for reconstruction, governance,
certification that Afghanistan is
and democracy-building;
cooperating with U.S. counter-narcotics)
Includes $20 million for PRTs)
Peacekeeping (ANA salaries)
18
Counter-narcotics (INCLE)
235
(Includes $60 million to train ANP)
Karzai protection (NADR funds)
18
Child Survival and Health (CSH)
43
Reforestation
3
Afghan Independent Human Rights
2
Commission
Aid to civilian victims of U.S. combat
2
operations
Programs to benefit women and girls
50
Development Assistance
130.4
Total from this law:
931.4
FY2006 Supplemental Appropriation (P.L. 109-234)
Security Forces Fund
1,908
ESF
43
(Includes $11 million for debt relief costs,
$5 million for agriculture development,
and $27 million for Northeast
Transmission electricity project)
Embassy operations
50.1
DOD Counter-narcotics operations
103
Migration and Refugee aid
3.4
DEA counter-narcotics operations
9.2
Total from this law
2,116.7
Other: P.L. 480 Title II Food Aid
60
Total for FY2006
3,108.1

CRS-62
Table 11. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2007
($ in millions)
Regular Appropriation
(In accordance with Continuing Appropriation P.L. 110-5)

ESF
479 (USAID plans $42 million for PRTs)
Counter-narc
209.7
(INCLE)
Child Survival
and Health
100.77
(CSH)
Development
166.8
Assistance (DA)
IMET
1.138
NADR
21.65
Total This Law
979
DOD Appropriation (P.L. 109-289)
Security Forces
1,500
train and equip
DOD Counter-
100
narcotics support
Total
Appropriated for
2,539.77
FY2007 to date
FY2007 Supplemental (H.R. 2206/P.L. 110-28)
$653 million request/$737 in final law
(of which in law: 174 for PRTs; 314 for roads; 40 for power; 155
ESF
for rural development; 19 for agriculture (latter two are
alternative livelihoods to poppy cultivation); 25 for governance;
and 10 for the “civilian assistance program”
30 million
also provides $16 million in Migration and Refugee aid for
P.L. 480 Title II
displaced persons near Kabul, and $16 million International
Food Aid
Disaster and Famine Assistance
U.S. Embassy
47.2 million requested/79 in final version
security
5.900 billion requested/5.9064 in final version
Security Forces
(includes 3.2 billion for equipment and transportation; 624
train and equip
million for ANP training; 415 for ANA training; 106 for
commanders emergency response, CERP; plus other funds )
no request/47 million in agreement;
INCLE
plus 60 million in DOD aid to counter-narcotics forces in
Afghanistan and Pakistan, plus 12 million DEA
FY2007 supp.
6.870 billion in final version
FY2007 Total
10.388 billion (all programs)

CRS-63
Table 12. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan,
FY2008 Request/Action
Regular FY2008 Appropriation (H.R. 2764, P.L. 110-161)
ESF
$543 million total. Of this: $126 million for
emergency request (see below); $75 million to benefit
women and girls; $20 million for agriculture. $300
million limit subject to counter-narcotics cooperation
certification. Regular ESF request was for $693
million
INCLE
274.8 m., forbids use for aerial spraying
IMET
1.7 m.
Child Survival and Health (CSH)
$65.9 m.
(incl. $5.9 million for child and maternal clinics)
NADR (Karzai protection)
21.65
Radio Free Afghanistan
3.98
Afghan Security Forces Funding
1,350
(For emergency request below)
Total appropriated in P.L.
2,261
110-161
FY2008 Supplemental (Global War on Terrorism), P.L. 110-252
ESF
834 m. request (additional 495 beyond 339 original
supplemental request)
(Of the additional $495, $325 is for provincial
governance, National Solidarity program, election
support; $170 is for economic growth, including
$115 for power. Another $50 for roads, and another
$5 is for Reconstruction Opportunity Zones). Fully
funded in H.R. 2642
USAID operations
16
Security Forces equip and train
2,700
($1.71 billion for ANA/$980 million for ANP)
(1,400 provided in H.R. 2642, completes funding
the full request)
U.S. Embassy construction,
160
maintenance
(76.7 provided in H.R. 2642)
NADR
5
Total FY2008 appropriated
4.59 billion
Other funding
2 million for Special Inspector General for Afghan
Reconstruction

CRS-64
Table 13. U.S. Assistance to Afghanistan, FY2009
($ in millions)
Regular Request
ESF
707
(includes 120 for alternative livelihoods,
248 for democracy and governance, 226
for econ. growth, 74 for PRT programs)
Child Survival and Health
52
(Plus 57 more of ESF for health and
education)
International Counter-Narcotics and Law
250
Enforcement (INCLE)
International Military Education and
1.4
Training (IMET)
Other non-military accounts
44
(incl. 12 m. in non-emergency food aid)
Embassy security and maintenance
41.3
appropriated in H.R. 2642
Afghan National Security Forces Funding
2,000
(DOD funds)
(provided in H.R. 2642, FY2009 bridge)
Total Regular Request
$3.054 billion
Supplemental Request/H.R. 2642 (P.L. 110-252) FY2009 Supplemental
ESF
749.9
(455 provided in H.R. 2642)
INCLE
175
(funded by H.R. 2642)
Total Supplemental Request
924.9
(730 funded)
Other funds
$5 million for Special Inspector General
for Afghan Reconstruction

CRS-65
Table 14. USAID Obligations FY2002-FY2008
($ millions)
Sector
FY
FY
FY
FY
FY
FY2007
FY
FY2002-
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
(reg. +
2008
FY2008
supp)
(reg +
supp)
Agriculture
27
56
50
77
27
67
31
335
Alternative
3
1
5
185
121
229
121
665
Livelihoods
Roads
51
142
354
276
250
365
398
1836
Power
3
77
286
66
195
203
830
Water
2
1
27
21
1
2
1
54
Econ. Growth
21
12
84
91
46
69
61
383
Education
19
21
104
86
51
63
53
397
Health
8
56
83
111
52
113
66
489
Afghan
38
40
67
87
45
46
45
368
Reconstruction
Trust Fund
Support to
3
36
31
15
15
17
117
Afghan Gov’t
Democracy
22
34
132
88
17
134
17
444
Rule of Law
4
8
21
15
6
10
4
68
PRT Programs
11
56
85
20
126
30
328
Program Suppt
5
6
17
16
4
35
15
98
Internally
108
23
10
-
141
Displaced
Persons
Food Aid
159
51
49
57
60
-
10
386
Civilian
10
10
Assistance
Totals
471
462
1171
1510
779
1478
1108
6979

CRS-66
Table 15. NATO/ISAF Contributing Nations
(As of June 10, 2008, press reports [http://www.nato.int/isaf/docu/epub/pdf/isaf
_placemat.pdf])
NATO Countries
Non-NATO Partner Nations
Belgium
375
Albania
140
Bulgaria
420
Austria
2
Canada
2500
Australia
1100
Czech Republic
370
Azerbaijan
45
Denmark
690
Croatia
210
Estonia
120
Finland
65
France
1670
Georgia
1
Germany
3370
Ireland
7
Greece
150
Jordan
90
Hungary
205
Macedonia 140
Iceland
10
New Zealand
160
Italy
2350
Singapore 2
Latvia
75
Sweden 250
Lithuania
200
Ukraine
3
Luxemburg
9
Total ISAF force (approx.)
43,450
Netherlands 1770
(based on DoD figures for
number of US troops in ISAF.
Norway
580
NATO/ISAF website asserts
23,550 U.S. troops are in
Poland
1140
ISAF, which would bring the
ISAF force to about 52,700)
Portugal
165
Romania
570
Slovakia
70
Slovenia
70
Spain
800
Turkey
760
United Kingdom
8530
United States
14,300
(Figures from
DoD)

CRS-67
Table 16. Provincial Reconstruction Teams
(RC=Regional Command)
Location (City)
Province/Command
U.S.-Lead (all under ISAF banner)
Gardez
Paktia Province (RC-East, E)
Ghazni
Ghazni (RC-E). with Poland.
Bagram A.B.
Parwan (RC-C, Central)
Jalalabad
Nangarhar (RC-E)
Khost
Khost (RC-E)
Qalat
Zabol (RC-South, S). with Romania.
Asadabad
Kunar (RC-E)
Sharana
Paktika (RC-E). with Poland.
Mehtarlam
Laghman (RC-E)
Jabal o-Saraj
Panjshir Province (RC-E), State Department lead
Qala Gush
Nuristan (RC-E)
Farah
Farah (RC-W)
Partner Lead (all under ISAF banner)
PRT Location
Province
Lead Force/Other forces
Qandahar
Qandahar (RC-S)
Canada
Lashkar Gah
Helmand (RC-S)
Britain. with Denmark and Estonia
Netherlands. With Australia and 40
Tarin Kowt
Uruzgan (RC-S)
Singaporean military medics and others
Herat
Herat (RC-W)
Italy
Qalah-ye Now
Badghis (RC-W)
Spain
Mazar-e-Sharif Balkh
(RC-N)
Sweden
Konduz
Konduz (RC-N)
Germany
Faizabad
Badakhshan (RC-N)
Germany. with Denmark, Czech Rep.
Meymaneh
Faryab (RC-N)
Norway. with Sweden.
Chaghcharan
Ghowr (RC-W)
Lithuania. with Denmark, U.S., Iceland
Pol-e-Khomri
Baghlan (RC-N)
Hungary
Bamiyan
Bamiyan (RC-E)
New Zealand (not NATO/ISAF). 10
Singaporean engineers
Maidan Shahr
Wardak (RC-C)
Turkey
Pul-i-Alam
Lowgar (RC-E)
Czech Republic

CRS-68
Table 17. Major Factions/Leaders in Afghanistan
Party/
Ideology/
Regional
Leader
Leader
Ethnicity
Base
Taliban
Mullah (Islamic cleric) Muhammad Umar (still at
ultra-
Insurgent
large possibly in Afghanistan)/Jalaludin and Siraj
orthodox
groups, mostly
Haqqani.
Islamic,
in the south
Pashtun
and east, and
in Pakistan
Islamic
Burhannudin Rabbani/ Yunus Qanooni (speaker of moderate
Much of
Society
lower house)/Muhammad Fahim/Dr. Abdullah Islamic,
northern and
(leader of
Abdullah (Foreign Minister 2001-2006). Ismail Khan, mostly
western
“Northern
a so-called “warlord,” heads faction of the grouping Tajik
Afghanistan,
Alliance”)
in Herat area. Khan, now Minister of Energy and
including
Water, visited United States in March 2008 to sign
Kabul
USAID grant for energy projects
National
Abdul Rashid Dostam. Best known for March 1992 secular,
Mazar-e-
Islamic
break with Najibullah that precipitated his overthrow. Uzbek
Sharif,
Movement
Subsequently fought Rabbani government (1992-
Shebergan,
of
1995), but later joined Northern Alliance.
and environs
Afghanistan
Commanded about 25,000 troops, armor, combat
aircraft, and some Scud missiles, but was unable to
hold off Taliban forces that captured his region by
August 1998. During OEF, impressed U.S.
commanders with horse-mounted assaults on Taliban
positions at Shulgara Dam, south of Mazar-e-Sharif,
leading to the fall of that city and the Taliban’s
subsequent collapse. Karzai rival in October 2004
presidential election, now his top “security adviser.”
Hizb-e-
Karim Khalili is Vice President, but Mohammad
Shiite,
Bamiyan
Wahdat
Mohaqiq is Karzai rival in presidential election and Hazara
province
parliament. Generally pro-Iranian. Was part of
tribes
Rabbani 1992-1996 government, and fought
unsuccessfully with Taliban over Bamiyan city.
Pashtun
Various regional governors; central government led Moderate
Dominant in
Leaders
by Hamid Karzai.
Islamic,
southern,
Pashtun
eastern
Afghanistan
Hizb-e-
Mujahedin party leader Gulbuddin Hikmatyar. Lost orthodox
Small groups
Islam
power base around Jalalabad to the Taliban in
Islamic,
around
Gulbuddin
1994, and fled to Iran before being expelled in
Pashtun
Jalalabad,
(HIG)
2002. Still allied with Taliban and Al Qaeda in
Nuristan and
operations east of Kabul, but may be open to ending
in southeast
militant activity. Leader of a rival Hizb-e-Islam
faction, Yunus Khalis, the mentor of Mullah Umar,
died July 2006.
Islamic
Abd-I-Rab Rasul Sayyaf. Islamic conservative,
orthodox
Paghman
Union
leads a pro-Karzai faction in parliament. Lived
Islamic,
(west of
many years in and politically close to Saudi Arabia, Pashtun
Kabul)
which shares his “Wahhabi” ideology. During anti-
Soviet war, Sayyaf’s faction, with Hikmatyar, was a
principal recipient of U.S. weaponry. Criticized the
U.S.-led war against Saddam Hussein after Iraq’s
invasion of Kuwait.

CRS-69
Appendix. U.S. and International Sanctions Lifted
Virtually all U.S. and international sanctions on Afghanistan, some imposed during the
Soviet occupation era and others on the Taliban regime, have now been lifted.
! On January 10, 2003, President Bush signed a proclamation making
Afghanistan a beneficiary of the Generalized System of Preferences
(GSP), eliminating U.S. tariffs on 5,700 Afghan products.
Afghanistan was denied GSP on May 2, 1980, under Executive
Order 12204 (45 F.R. 20740). This was done under the authority of
Section 504 of the Trade Act of 1974 [19 U.S.C. § 2464].
! On April 24, 1981, controls on U.S. exports to Afghanistan of
agricultural products and phosphates were terminated. Such controls
were imposed on June 3, 1980, as part of the sanctions against the
Soviet Union for the invasion of Afghanistan, under the authority of
Sections 5 and 6 of the Export Administration Act of 1979 [P.L. 96-
72; 50 U.S.C. app. 2404, app. 2405].
! In mid-1992, the George H.W. Bush Administration determined that
Afghanistan no longer had a “Soviet-controlled government.” This
opened Afghanistan to the use of U.S. funds made available for the
U.S. share of U.N. organizations that provide assistance to
Afghanistan.
! On March 31, 1993, after the fall of Najibullah in 1992, President
Clinton, on national interest grounds, waived restrictions provided
for in Section 481 (h) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961
mandating sanctions on Afghanistan including bilateral aid cuts and
suspensions, including denial of Ex-Im Bank credits; the casting of
negative U.S. votes for multilateral development bank loans; and a
non-allocation of a U.S. sugar quota. Discretionary sanctions
included denial of GSP; additional duties on country exports to the
United States; and curtailment of air transportation with the United
States. Waivers were also granted in 1994 and, after the fall of the
Taliban, by President Bush.
! On May 3, 2002, President Bush restored normal trade treatment to
the products of Afghanistan, reversing the February 18, 1986
proclamation by President Reagan (Presidential Proclamation 5437)
that suspended most-favored nation (MFN) tariff status for
Afghanistan (51 F.R. 4287). The Foreign Assistance Appropriations
for FY1986 [Section 552, P.L. 99-190] had authorized the President
to deny any U.S. credits or most-favored-nation (MFN) tariff status
for Afghanistan.
! On July 2, 2002, the State Department amended U.S. regulations (22
C.F.R. Part 126) to allow arms sales to the new Afghan government,
reversing the June 14, 1996 addition of Afghanistan to the list of
countries prohibited from receiving exports or licenses for exports

CRS-70
of U.S. defense articles and services. Arms sales to Afghanistan had
also been prohibited during 1997-2002 because Afghanistan had
been designated under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty
Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-132) as a state that is not cooperating with
U.S. anti-terrorism efforts.
! On July 2, 2002, President Bush formally revoked the July 4, 1999,
declaration by President Clinton of a national emergency with
respect to Taliban because of its hosting of bin Laden. The Clinton
determination and related Executive Order 13129 had blocked
Taliban assets and property in the United States, banned U.S. trade
with Taliban-controlled areas of Afghanistan, and applied these
sanctions to Ariana Afghan Airlines, triggering a blocking of Ariana
assets (about $500,000) in the United States and a ban on U.S.
citizens’ flying on the airline. (The ban on trade with Taliban-
controlled territory had essentially ended on January 29, 2002 when
the State Department determination that the Taliban controls no
territory within Afghanistan.)
! U.N. sanctions on the Taliban imposed by Resolution 1267 (October
15, 1999), Resolution 1333 (December 19, 2000),and Resolution
1363 (July 30, 2001) have now been narrowed to penalize only Al
Qaeda (by Resolution 1390, January 17, 2002). Resolution 1267
banned flights outside Afghanistan by its national airline (Ariana),
and directed U.N. member states to freeze Taliban assets. Resolution
1333 prohibited the provision of arms or military advice to the
Taliban (directed against Pakistan); directing a reduction of Taliban
diplomatic representation abroad; and banning foreign travel by
senior Taliban officials. Resolution 1363 provided for monitors in
Pakistan to ensure that no weapons or military advice was provided
to the Taliban.
! P.L. 108-458 (December 17, 2004, referencing the 9/11 Commission
recommendations) repeals bans on aid to Afghanistan outright,
completing a pre-Taliban effort by President George H.W. Bush to
restore aid and credits to Afghanistan. On October 7, 1992, he had
issued Presidential Determination 93-3 that Afghanistan is no longer
a Marxist-Leninist country, but the determination was not
implemented before he left office. Had it been implemented, the
prohibition on Afghanistan’s receiving Export-Import Bank
guarantees, insurance, or credits for purchases under Section 8 of the
1986 Export-Import Bank Act, would have been lifted. In addition,
Afghanistan would have been able to receive U.S. assistance because
the requirement would have been waived that Afghanistan apologize
for the 1979 killing in Kabul of U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan
Adolph “Spike” Dubs. (Dubs was kidnapped in Kabul in 1979 and
killed when Afghan police stormed the hideout where he was held.)


CRS-71
Figure 1. Map of Afghanistan