UPDATED  ON:
Friday, July 30, 2010 
13:22 Mecca time, 10:22  GMT        Focus      Portrait of an occupied 
country      By Evan Hill  
In the days since whistleblower website Wikileaks _released more than 
90,000 military  reports_ (http://wardiary.wikileaks.org/) chronicling the war 
in 
Afghanistan from 2004 to  2009, journalists and commentators have written 
extensively about  the _deteriorating security  situation_ 
(http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2010/07/20107261513495682.html) they 
describe.

The mass of classified  communications has served to highlight _links 
between the Taliban and  Pakistan,_ 
(http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2010/07/201072691457502592.html) the 
spreading danger of improvised explosive  
devices and the _woeful discipline_ 
(http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2010/07/201072613456286509.html) of  
Afghan security forces. 
The flip side of the war effort, the attempt to rebuild a wartorn  country, 
has not caught the headlines. 
But thousands of newly released reports on meetings between Nato  and Aghan 
officials, discussing everything from village schools to  irrigation 
retaining walls, describe in day-to-day detail the  breadth and depth of Nato's 
influence in the country. 
The documents show an Afghan decision-making system almost  entirely 
dependent on foreign reconstruction teams and military  units to set the way 
forward. 
Decision makers 
In December 2006, the governor of the northeastern Afghan  province of 
Parwan approached a Nato military official with a  complaint. 
A taxation system viewed as corrupt by Nato that had filled the  coffers of 
150 local villages and influential elders was set to be  uprooted, subsumed 
into a single flow of income that would head  straight to the governor's 
office and be subject to only his  oversight. 
The new plan angered the elders. The governor, presumably the  highest 
authority in his own province, wanted it reversed. The  officer pointed out 
that 
elders and police officers had been abusing  the system to extort vendors 
to pay for personal cars and mobile  phones. 
An Afghan man accompanying the governor warned that there would  be unrest 
and protests. Another military officer spoke up: In that  case, he said, 
there won't be a bazaar or money to argue over  at all. 
The discussion was over, and more than 100 local power brokers  had lost a 
major source of income. The decision had not come from a  shura, or even the 
governor, but from Nato. 
On most occasions, provincial reconstruction teams (PRTs)  appeared to 
defer to and reinforce the authority of local governors  when Afghans raised 
disputes or made requests. 

But the  reliability and talent of Afghan officials was questioned just as  
often, occasionally prompting Nato efforts to have them removed. 
When a elder from a small farming village of 300 families made an  
unannounced visit one December to the Nuristan PRT to ask for help  to prepare 
for 
the upcoming winter, the PRT brushed him off. 
They told the man to take his case to the district governor and  that they 
would give supplies to the governor for distribution. 
The elder said he doubted that the governor would ever deliver  the goods 
to the neediest people. 
But the report of the meeting downplayed the significance of the  man's 
request, while admitting ignorance about who in the community  really needed 
help preparing for winter. 
"There has been a steady stream of individuals and groups coming  to the 
PRT over the last several weeks requesting [humanitarian  assistance]," it 
states. 
"None of the groups or individuals appear to be in dire need and  it is 
difficult to verify specific needs."

Bad  review 
On other occasions, foreign development officers appeared ready  and 
willing to contravene or work to remove Afghan officials  from power. 
In October 2006, the director of economy in the province of  Paktika earned 
a particularly bad review. 
"He has been in the position for one year and has no formal  background in 
economy, finance or business," one report says. "He  was not able to 
describe an economical development plan or a tax  plan that is in place and 
being 
implemented." 
After another fruitless meeting a week later, during which the  PRT took 
over even the basic responsibility of drafting a set of  economic goals for 
the province, the Americans decided on the  director's removal. 
"His lack of experience in his field continues to be a problem  which will 
make it nearly impossible for us to facilitate him  developing an economic 
plan for Paktika," the report says. "The  governor must appoint someone with 
experience to head this  department." 
Sometimes, Nato's decision on how to deal with an Afghan official  could be 
based on as little as the word of an interpreter. 
In November 2006, the superintendent of prisons in the city of  Gardez, a 
man named Colonel Fatah, visited the local PRT,  complimented them on the 
training they were providing, and then  asked for beds, jackets, fuel and 
vehicles for his men.   
"Colonel Fatah's main reason for building a good relation with  the PRT is 
to attain support," the report of his visit states. 
"If the motive of his request is truly honest, then this approach  is fine. 
However, information from a PRT interpreter is that Col  Fatah is not to be 
trusted; they've heard that he uses items for his  own benefit. The PRT 
should conduct a site assessment to identify if  the requested items are truly 
needed." 
Land dispute 
Even though Nato military and civilian officers may have  attempted to cede 
power to Afghan officials as often as possible,  Afghan civilians often 
seemed to treat the PRTs and foreign military  units as the true power in their 
country.       
In 2005, men of the Nasir tribe then living in Pakistan came to  the Zabul 
PRT, not the Afghan government, to seek help  returning to land along the 
border they said had been granted to  them decades before by the Afghan king. 
They had left after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979  and had 
attempted to return after the Taliban fell in 2001, but  found the land now 
occupied by another tribe, the Shamulzai. 
"They weren't too specific in what they wanted from me, but they  
approached us it seemed because the PRT had a certain level of  respect among 
the 
people in Zabul," an army reservist who served as  a Zabul civil affairs 
officer at the time wrote in an email. 
"We kind of acted as honest brokers for a while making sure that  each side 
was talking to as many people as possible. We also made it  clear that the 
US army was not in the business of taking sides in  tribal disputes." 
The Americans "generally" deferred to Afghan authorities, he  wrote, but 
the tribal land dispute, with its root in decades-old  Afghan history, was 
eventually addressed by a multi-day shura that  involved the local governor, 
the PRT and a US infantry  battalion. 
By the time he left the PRT, the civil affairs officer wrote, the  problem 
had not been totally resolved, and US forces would later  take a more active 
role again, becoming "very involved" in setting  up the shura. 
The only game in town 
In the reports obtained by Wikileaks, Nato's power in Afghanistan  upsets 
the local power brokers as often as it supplants them. 
In December 2006, Nato forces awarded a bridge-building  contract in the 
village of Pitigal to the local shura. The  provincial governor overruled Nato 
and picked another man for the  project. He promised to inform the shura, 
but never did. Unaware,  the shura spent its own money to hire an engineer to 
conduct an  estimate, survey the site and begin supervising construction. 
During a meeting the following January, after the shura realised  they had 
been shut out of the deal, they told Nato officials they  felt deceived. 
Nato made no apologies for the governor's decision  and refused to reimburse 
the shura for the work it had done. 
An attempt by the commanding American captain to "refocus" the  shura on 
other matters "was met with disinterest," the report  states. 
For the time being, at least, the Americans had lost the locals'  trust. 
The shura told the Americans "they have everything that they need  and will 
not pursue future assistance". 
The following January, in the Panjshir province, instead of  misleading the 
locals about a major project, the area PRT turned out  to be the only 
organisation capable of carrying out a major plan to  plant fruit tree seeds. 
Nato had awarded Panjshir a $500,000 "good performers grant" for  
eradicating poppy fields, but representatives from the ministry of  
counter-narcotics 
told the PRT they did not have vehicles to  distribute the seeds, the most 
significant aspect of the grant,  before the planting season. 
The provincial governor told the PRT that his own personal  credibility was 
on the line. It fell to Nato forces to carry out a  project the coalition 
itself had funded expressly to promote the  local government. 
Strangers in a strange land 
The Wikileaks reports also show the difficulties Nato faced  discerning who 
could be trusted to work with, who among the local  population was "good" 
or "bad," and whether a line could even be  drawn between the two. 
Though officers often lacked a detailed grasp of local politics,  their 
decisions still shaped the course of events. 
In 2006, a PRT in the Paktia province met Colonel Qadam Gul, the  chief of 
police. 
Gul, according to a report of the meeting, had earlier told  contractors 
that he had signed a non-aggression pact with the local  Taliban. 
During the meeting, Gul told the PRT that the Taliban were laying  low, 
waiting for coalition forces to leave. He accused another man,  a local shura 
member, of being a Taliban commander and receiving  support from Quetta, 
Pakistan, the reputed headquarters of Taliban  founder Mullah Mohammed Omar. 
"This is a decidedly unusual reference," the report states, but  it does 
not say whether Nato trusted Gul's information or acted  against the other 
man. 
That same year, in the Nangarhar province, the local PRT met with  the 
chairman of the provincial shura to respond to unrest after a  man named Zabid 
Zahir had been arrested. 
An officer told the shura chairman, Fazalhadi Muslimyar, that  Nato 
believed Zahir to be a "bad person". 

He told Muslimyar  that if the governor and the council released Zahir, "we 
will lose  all confidence in their claim that the [Afghan government] can  
sufficiently take responsibility for insurgents/criminals". 
Muslimyar seemed convinced. He "drew a link" between Zahir and  Zahir’s 
son, who had helped orchestrate a no-confidence  vote against Muslimyar in the 
shura. 
"After the information we provided him about Zahir, he no longer  believes 
Zahir is a good person," the report states. "As a result,  he fully agreed 
with what was being done." 
The following February, Muslimyar visited the PRT to discuss a  recent 
controversial nighttime raid by Afghan officers that had left  one man dead and 
five others arrested. Muslimyar told the PRT that  he would publicly support 
the raid if a local Taliban leader was  found to be among the six. 
"I asked how they would determine the [Taliban leader’s] true  identity and 
he said by talking to people," the report states. "This  could be an issue."

Working with them 
James Foley, a freelance journalist embedded with a US infantry  company in 
Afghanistan, said that the policy of his company and the  US military seems 
to favor working with former mujahidin who  maintain connections and 
influence with the Taliban. 
"It's better to work with them or  try to co-opt them, than to try to fight 
them and the Taliban," he  wrote in an email. 
In Wardak, the US military is currently trying to nudge a former  mujahidin 
named Nangali, a man deeply mistrusted by local Afghan  army and police, 
into a vacant district governor position, Foley  wrote. 
The Afghan army suspects that Nangali might have been behind an  explosion 
in June that killed five soldiers. 
At a Jagahtu district security meeting earlier this month  attended by 
Afghan army, police and US military representatives, the  willingness of Nato 
forces to back a powerful fighter in the face of  local opposition was on 
clear display. 
"A lot of people support Nangali. He has a wide area of influence  and can 
even talk to those who work with the Taliban," the company  commander said, 
according to Foley. 
"Even if he comes in, can you trust him?" asked an Afghan police  officer. 
"If he's willing to work with the government. It doesn't mean we  can trust 
him, it may mean he can make it peaceful," the commander  responded. 
Encouraging and bleak 
The window on Afghanistan provided by the Wikileaks documents is  limited 
and reflects Nato's perspective on the war. As _other commentators have  
noted,_ 
(http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/07/my-war-wikileaked-why-the-public-and-the-military-cant-count-on-those-battle-logs/)
 the dry, succinct 
military reports often do not do  justice to the reality of events on the 
ground. 
Still, the day-to-day communiques provide a previously unseen  glimpse into 
the thinking of Nato officers thrown into a hostile  environment and given 
the task of helping Afghans rebuild a country  that has experienced more 
than 30 years of near-continuous  conflict. 
The picture is at once encouraging and bleak. Problems seem  intractable, 
yet many Afghans and Nato officers appear energetically  devoted to improving 
the situation. 
"[Afghans] know that they lost an opportunity after the Soviets  left when 
reconstruction and development passed by because of the  civil war," the 
former army reservist and civil affairs officer  wrote. 
"They know that if they miss this chance the world will not be  back to 
help them for at least a generation." 
After serving on a PRT in Zabul from 2004 to 2005 and later in  the 
northeastern province of Kapisa, the former officer said he  is "very 
concerned" 
about what will happen when foreign forces leave  Afghanistan. 
He believes that Afghans, though able to support themselves  if need be, 
have developed a "level of dependency" on foreign  help. 
"Afghans have lost lots of knowledge over the years of fighting  and in 
many cases had very primitive agricultural techniques even  before the wars," 
he wrote. "Many villages are operating at below  subsistence levels in their 
agricultural production because of  climate change and drought." 
While corruption is "everywhere," and Afghans probably "pulled  the wool 
over my eyes several times," he found during his time as a  PRT officer that 
he could build trust "with experience, verification  and the establishment of 
processes that limit opportunities for  trickery". 
"If we try to operate only under conditions where we are 100 per  cent sure 
there is no corruption and with people we [are] 100 per  cent sure we can 
trust, we'll get nothing done.  You can't let  the perfect become the enemy 
of the good.” 
Ultimately, the fragmentary Wikileaks reports might say more  about the 
caprice of living in a warzone, the arbitrary loss of  money, property and 
life, than about the merits of  counterinsurgency, who is winning or losing, or 
the grand strategies  of Pakistan and Afghanistan. 
Afghanistan, the reports seem to show, is a place where the  citizens 
themselves have lost much of the ability to shape the  events of their own 
lives. 
During one meeting in 2006 between a PRT in the Laghman province  and the 
local director of refugees, the PRT members complained that  every time they 
visited a particular area, the Dawlat Shah district,  they were fired upon. 
The director claimed the attackers were paid fighters from  Pakistan. 
"I explained to him that if the villagers continue to allow the  bad guys 
[to] live in their village we will continue to rebuild  Afghanistan," the 
report states. "But not not in their  area."

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