US military equipment may be seized by Taliban after American troops withdraw from Afghanistan
May 23, 2021
Kabul [Afghanistan], May 23 : Taliban may grab US military equipment as American troops are set to leave Afghanistan by September 2021.
On Thursday Afghanistan Defense Department officials acknowledged that thousands of vehicles, weapons and other military items from Afghanistan will be in danger of being seized by the Taliban, reported The Frontier Post.
But military planners said they are using the time left until the pull-out is completed to minimize that threat, while doing as much as they can to leave Afghan partners with tools to continue the fight.
"We will be transferring facilities, some vehicles and other equipment that the Afghan national defense forces can utilize in their on-going efforts to secure the country," Brig Gen Matthew Trollinger, Deputy Director of politico-military affairs for the Joint Staff, told Senate lawmakers during a hearing on Afghanistan.
"We will be retrograding equipment that we're able to bring back to bases and stations in the continental United States as well as elsewhere, and then we'll be disposing of equipment that essentially is either obsolete, inoperable or legally we're not able to transfer to Afghanistan."
But when pressed for a guarantee that enemy fighters in the region won't steal some of that abandoned and gifted equipment, Trollinger said "there aren't any guarantees", reported The Frontier Post.
The comments came amid concerns from a number of Senate Armed Services Committee members who questioned the security state of Afghanistan after the United States ends its nearly 20-year military presence in the country later this fall.
Earlier this week, officials from US Central Command said the drawdown is between 13 per cent and 20 per cent completed already. They have not released specifics on troop total or equipment moves, reported The Frontier Post.
Lawmakers have voiced concerns about the lack of detail on what comes after the withdrawal, including the fate of Afghan interpreters being left behind, the ability of the US military to conduct counter-terrorism missions in the region, and the potential of American assets being used against allies in the future.
Defense officials came under heavy scrutiny in the years after the withdrawal of troops from Iraq for US vehicles and weapons which ended up in the hands of Islamic State terrorists fighting in the Middle East.
David Helvey, acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Indo-Pacific affairs, said with this withdrawal, military leaders are working closely to try and prevent similar logistics breakdowns with the Afghan security forces.
"We're going to continue to maintain contact with our partners to determine what we can from outside the country, and maintain good situational awareness of their current capabilities," he said. "And we're looking at any areas where they may be challenged and we may be able to help them."
But he acknowledged that "corruption is a problem in Afghanistan" and that securing any functional equipment left behind will be a challenge, reported The Frontier Post.
As of 2014, when there were about 10,000 US troops stationed in Afghanistan, American military forces boasted about USD 36 billion worth of equipment in the country.
US President Joe Biden announced plans for the full withdrawal of troops in May, about 2,500 troops were stationed there.