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Rand Report: Securing Afghanistan Getting on Track

Rand Report: Securing Afghanistan Getting on Track, January 23, 2009

  • “This Working Paper examines the security environment in Afghanistan, assesses the programs put in place to address these threats, identifies existing gaps, and offers possible solutions. The report was vetted by top experts on Afghanistan in an extensive review process. The authors are C. Christine Fair and Seth Jones of the RAND Corporation. [United States Institute of Peace] USIP’s Afghanistan Security Assistance Mapping Project was directed by Beth Ellen Cole, a senior program officer in the Institute’s Center for Peace and Stability Operations…More than seven years after U.S. forces entered Afghanistan, important gains made in bringing stability and democracy to Afghanistan are imperiled. While there have been some positive developments in such areas as economic growth, the Taliban and other insurgent groups have gained some ground in the country and in neighboring Pakistan, the drug trade remains a significant problem, and corruption has worsened in the Afghan government. According to United Nations data, insurgent incidents have increased every year since the 2001 overthrow of the Taliban regime. The situation in parts of Afghanistan’s south and east is particularly concerning because of the twin menace of insurgent and criminal activity. Despite these challenges, the insurgency remains deeply fractured among a range of groups, and most have little support among the Afghan population. This presents an opportunity for Afghans and the international community to turn the situation around.”
  • Getting Granular: USIP Analyzes Specific Weaknesses In Afghan Security Environment – “A lack of focus on long-term sustainability, an inability to map the entirety of donor nations’ security assistance programs and the subsequent failure on the part of the international community to understand precisely what is needed in Afghanistan are among the leading reasons why international stabilization efforts in the country have not been more successful over the last seven years, says a new report from the United States Institute of Peace”
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