Archive for May, 2017

20 Guard soldiers come home from Afghanistan – St. Cloud Times

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TIMES STAFF REPORT 9:58 a.m. CT May 18, 2017

The Massachusetts National Guard conduct a flyover to help kick off the Boston Marathon. VPC

Minnesota National Guard logo(Photo: Submitted image)

Twenty members of the Minnesota National Guard will be recognized Saturday in St. Cloud for their service in Afghanistan.

Members of Company B, 2-211th General Support Aviation Battalion, were deployed for nine months as part ofthe Resolute Support Mission in Afghanistan.

"Im proud of the work theyve done and grateful to have them safely back home with their families,Col. Shawn Manke, commander of the 34th Combat Aviation Brigade, said in a statement released Thursday.

Missions includedcargo movement, passenger movement andhelicopter assault missions. The company flew over 3,000 aircraft hours and executed over 300 combat missions across Afghanistan, according to a news release from the Minnesota National Guard. They moved more than 1 million pounds of cargo.

The return ceremony is scheduled for Saturday morning at Rivers Edge Convention Center.

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20 Guard soldiers come home from Afghanistan - St. Cloud Times

US to provide Afghanistan with up to 159 Black Hawks to help break … – Military Times

As part of Afghanistans four-year road map to double its 17,000-strong special forces unit and bolster the Afghan Air Force, the U.S. plans to provide Afghanistan with up to 159 refurbished UH-60A Black Hawks to replace its aging fleet of Russian Mi-17 transport helicopters, according to Afghan and U.S. defense officials.

Ahmad Shah Katawazai, defense liaison and security expert at the Embassy of Afghanistan in Washington, D.C., told Military Times that the addition of Black Hawks to the Afghan fleet is vital for giving the security forces leverage needed to end the stalemate.

We are in the midst of an insurgency where the enemy is getting tacit support from neighboring countries. Our security forces are under immense pressure as they are fighting each day, on several fronts, with more than 20 terrorist organizations.

The development comes after Gen. John Nicholson, the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee in February, saying more U.S. troops were needed to help break the "stalemate" against terrorists groups fighting there. The Trump administration is evaluating how many additional personnel it may deploy.

There is $814 million designated this year to bolster Afghanistans air force, including enough funding for 53 of the 159 Black Hawks, a defense official told Military Times. Each year, the Defense Department will have to request additional funding for the remainder. Officials expect to deliver 30 a year. The first delivery is expected in about 21 months.

Given that it takes substantial U.S. support to maintain the airframes that the Afghan Air Force has already, it doesn't seem feasible that they would be able to support that many Black Hawks without a significant contribution from NATO, Dr. Matthew Archibald, an independent researcher and consultant on South Asian issues, told Military Times.

Afghanistan has had considerable problems with maintaining its current fleet of aircraft. The 2016 Mi-17 crash that injured top Afghan military officials and killed Afghan Army CommanderGen. Muhayuddin Ghori was determined to be caused by a mechanical failure resulting from lack of maintenance.

According to latest estimates from the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction , roughly 18 of AfghanistansRussian Mi-17s are unusable, two of the four C-130s are undergoing serious repair and one MD-530 crashed as a result of mechanical failure. Though the report acknowledges that most of the issues with the Mi-17 stem from their overuse, as Afghanistan heavily relies on the lumbering helicopter for troop transport, air assault operations and, at times, for offensive ground air support.

The replacement of the Mi-17 with the UH-60 has the potential to degrade Afghanistans total lift capacity and offensive firing capabilities, according to Archibald. The Black Hawk doesn't bring nearly the amount of close air support capability that the Mi-17 does, he said. In 2016, the Mi-17 fired its rocket pods over 600 times in support of ground operations in Afghanistan, a similar rate to its primary ground attack platform the MD-530.

U.S. defense officials push back on that claim. Pentagon spokesman Adam Stump said that although 63 Mi-17s were equipped with the ability to fire rockets, not all of them are actually armed and very few of these aircraft have been outfitted with rockets because their primary role is to perform lift, air assaults and medevac missions rather than aerial fires missions."

Stump also said some of the Black Hawks will be equipped with rocket pods and additional offensive aerial platforms are being added to Afghanistans air force, which will make up for any loss in offensive capabilities with the switch.Afghanistan is also set to receive an additional armed 30 MD-530 Cayuse Warrior ground attack helicopters, six more A-29 fixed wing close attack aircraft, and five armed AC-208 fixed wing aircraft, he said.

American security detail watches while an Afghan MD-530 Cayuse Warrior takes off from Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul on Sept. 27, 2015. Photo Credit: Staff Sgt. Sandra Welch/Air Force As for a loss in total lift capacity, the Black Hawks are receiving a new engine designed to handle Afghanistans punishing terrain and will be able to perform almost all of the same missions that the current Mi-17 fleet has been conducting in terms of number of people and cargo typically carried, Stump said. And then there's the question of timing and whether it will take too long to train pilots and deliver the helicopters in time to make a difference on the ground.

U.S. defense officials say it will only take 12 weeks to train Afghan pilots on the Black Hawk.For new pilots, training could take nine to 13 months depending on the English proficiency of the student.But according to a recent SIGAR report on Afghanistan, there are 68 Mi-17 pilots and 35 of them are instructor pilots, meaning Afghanistan could have to send almost hundred new pilots through entry-level training, taking up to a year to complete.

The nearly two-year time frame before the first UH-60's arrive may not be realistic or beneficial to Afghanistan, according to Franz-Stefan Gaddy, a senior fellow at the East-West Institute. "TheAfghan military just does not have the luxury to wait a couple of years for the Black Hawks to arrive...these aircraft will certainly not be available by the time the AAF [Afghan Air Force] needs to retire its Mi-17 fleet next year," he said.

The procurement process to get the first batch of A-29 Super Tucanos took almost half a decade, and the entire fleet is still not operational, Gady explained. "From a tactical and operational perspective, acquiring the Black Hawk would be a bad decision for the Afghan military."

Training is expected to begin almost immediately according to an Afghan defense official. Four UH-60s slated for training purposes are expected to arrive in Afghanistan later this fall, the official told Military Times, speaking on condition of anonymity because the plan is still in initial stages. Officials at the Pentagon would not confirm the time or place of the training because the issues were still pre-decisional.

President Donald Trump is headed to the NATO summit in Brussels this week where the war in Afghanistan will be high on the agenda. Nicholson submitted his recommendation in April calling for an additional 3,000 to 5,000 more U.S. troops to assist with the "train and advise" mission called Operation Resolute Support. NATO allies are also considering a a troop increase in the war-torn country.

Shawn Snow is a Military Times staff writer and editor of the Early Bird Brief. On Twitter:@SnowSox184. Mackenzie Wolf is a Military Times editorial intern. On Twitter:@Coffeeshopjihad.

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US to provide Afghanistan with up to 159 Black Hawks to help break ... - Military Times

Blackwater Founder Erik Prince: "We Should Fight" In Afghanistan With Armies Run By Companies – Media Matters for America


Media Matters for America
Blackwater Founder Erik Prince: "We Should Fight" In Afghanistan With Armies Run By Companies
Media Matters for America
TUCKER CARLSON (HOST): So, Afghanistan, the president apparently is considering sending more US troops there. You've spent a lot of time there and in that region, and you have an idea for what we should do with Afghanistan. What is it? ERIK PRINCE: ...

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Blackwater Founder Erik Prince: "We Should Fight" In Afghanistan With Armies Run By Companies - Media Matters for America

US: Improve Civilian Protection in Afghanistan – Human Rights Watch

Afghans perform prayers at the funeral for the victims killed by an air strike called in to protect Afghan and US forces during a raid on suspected Taliban militants, in Kunduz, Afghanistan November 4, 2016.

(Washington, DC) The US Defense Department should promptly adopt measures to better protect civilians in the Afghanistan armed conflict, Human Rights Watch said in a letter to Defense Secretary James Mattis. The US government is currently conducting a review of its Afghanistan strategy and support to the Afghan government in its efforts against the Taliban, Al-Qaeda, and Islamic State-affiliated armed groups.

Increasing numbers of civilian deaths and injuries from US airstrikes in Afghanistan raise concerns that the procedures for vetting airstrikes are inadequate, said Brad Adams, Asia director. The US review of its Afghan strategy is a crucial opportunity for adopting changes to minimize civilian casualties.

Asia Director

Civilian casualties in Afghanistan have steadily risen in recent years, with 2016 seeingthe highest toll recorded since 2008 with a total of 11,418 (3,498 deaths and 7,920 injured), according to the United Nations Assistance Mission to Afghanistan (UNAMA). While the Taliban and other insurgent forces have caused most of these casualties through deliberate and indiscriminate attacks on civilians, casualties caused by US and Afghan forces have also been on the rise.

A recent UNAMA report shows that in 2016, aerial operations by US and Afghan government forces resulted in the deaths of 250 civilians and injuries to 340 others, which is nearly double the total from the previous year. Aerial operations remained the second leading cause of civilian casualties by Afghan government forces in 2016, causing 43 percent of civilian casualties.

Most support for Afghan air operations has come from the US military, though Afghan civilian casualty tracking and mitigation measures are significantly lacking. NATO has provided guidance to the Afghan government in developing its own civilian casualty mitigation policy, which reportedly remains under review by Afghan authorities.

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US: Improve Civilian Protection in Afghanistan - Human Rights Watch

Iran Has Its Own Hard-Line Populist, and He’s on the Rise – New York Times


New York Times
Iran Has Its Own Hard-Line Populist, and He's on the Rise
New York Times
TEHRAN For months now, a black-turbaned cleric from eastern Iran has been campaigning in provincial cities, presenting himself as an anticorruption hero as he rallies support among the poor and the pious in an underdog effort to win the presidency ...
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Iran Has Its Own Hard-Line Populist, and He's on the Rise - New York Times