THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

Karzai OK’s local police plan

Afghans will oversee the initiative

By Deb Riechmann
Associated Press / July 15, 2010

E-mail this article

Invalid E-mail address
Invalid E-mail address

Sending your article

Your article has been sent.

Text size +

KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his national security team endorsed a US-backed plan yesterday to set up local police forces around the country, allowing villagers to protect themselves in areas where international and Afghan forces can’t be spared.

Eight American troops killed in Afghanistan. A9.

The new Local Police Force initiative will be overseen by the Afghan government. That was a key demand of Karzai who fears that simply arming villagers without government oversight would essentially create local militias that could undermine his administration and possibly fuel a new civil war.

Karzai’s office offered no details about the plan, other than a statement released yesterday saying the Local Police Force would be under the direct supervision of the Interior Ministry.

NATO officials declined to comment on the program, even though NATO Commander General David Petraeus has been intimately involved in discussions about it recently at the presidential palace. However, a coalition official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed US backing for the plan.

“The challenge we’ve got is that we’ve got a huge area,’’ British Major General Nick Carter, a NATO commander of troops in southern Afghanistan, said earlier this week. “We’ve got a large quantity of population and we can’t be everywhere. And what the village stability operations allow us is the opportunity to give the Afghans the courage to take protection into their own hands so we don’t have to put conventional forces there.’’

Carter said local police forces have to be set up cautiously.

“What you don’t want to do is disconnect those population centers from the government,’’ Carter said. “What we’re trying to do throughout everything we do in this campaign is connect the government to the population.’’

There have been several local defense initiatives tried around the country, now, the statement said, these forces would be swept into the Local Police Force.

The local policing plan in Afghanistan is somewhat akin to the Awakening Councils in Iraq where Petraeus, the former top commander in Iraq, reached out to Sunni sheiks — a move credited for helping oust militants from key areas and sharply decreasing attacks.

In Afghanistan, however, there are fears that local police forces will fall under the control of local warlords. Critics question the wisdom of handing out weapons to Afghans in the middle of a war. And they fear the plan could stoke rivalries between ethnic groups in a country that has been in conflict for 30 years.

Earlier reports hinted at friction between Karzai and Petraeus over the issue, although the coalition denounced the reports as being untrue.

“There is no rift,’’ NATO spokesman Josef Blotz said Sunday when the meetings were ongoing.

A military source in Kabul, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to share information about NATO’s discussions with the government, said Karzai and Petraeus had been “forthright’’ with each other about their concerns over certain aspects of the local defense initiative.

At Karzai’s request, advisers for both the president and the commander met to discuss ways to address “very understandable issues’’ associated with local security initiatives, the source said. NATO officials have been working with the ministers for the past week to resolve the issues, he said.

The NATO official said not all the Afghan officials back the idea for Local Police Forces. He said the past few days of discussions have been about building a consensus on how the program would work since the main strategy of both the Afghan government and the international community continues to be the buildup of more formal Afghan army and police forces.

Boston.com top stories on Twitter

    waiting for twitterWaiting for Twitter to feed in the latest...