April 30, 2007:
Casualties in Afghanistan are, so
far, lower, by about 30 percent, than they were last year. So far this year,
about 320 Afghan civilians and security personnel have been killed, along with
at least 680 Taliban and 39 U.S. and NATO troops. The fighting forces involve
about 20,000 American and NATO troops, about the same number of Afghan security
forces, and about four thousand Taliban. The Taliban are trying to stay out of
sight, until they actually attack someone. The government and foreign forces
are trying to track down the Taliban, while also protecting several million
civilians in southern Afghanistan.
There are actually about 50,000 U.S. and NATO
troops in Afghanistan, but not all are involved in combat operations in the
south, where the Taliban are concentrated. Same situation with Afghan security
forces, which are spread throughout the country. Afghanistan does send many of
its best trained units to the south, but most of the fighting falls on soldiers
and police recruited locally. These guys know the territory, and are defending
their own (clan and tribe, for the most part.)
Another force to be reckoned with are the gunmen
working for the drug gangs. Some of these are actually Taliban, as the drug
gangs have found a home among some of the pro-Taliban tribes. However, most of
the drug gangs want no part of fighting government or foreign troops. The drug
gangs are all about making lots of money. For this reason, the government has
tried to keep anti-drug operations separate from those waged against the
Taliban. Sometimes this works, sometimes it doesn't.