Regional Command South

Kandahar Province | Helmand Province | Nimruz Province | Day Kundi Province | Uruzgan Province | Zabul Province

 

Demographics and Terrain

 

Regional Command South (RC South) is comprised of six provinces: Nimruz, Helmand, Kandahar, Zabol, Urozgan and Day Kundi. RC South spans roughly 78,000 square miles, making it slightly larger than Nebraska, and shares a 550-mile border with Pakistan. The terrain throughout southern Afghanistan is mostly flat and arid. Nimruz, Helmand and Kandahar are predominantly vast, flat, hard-packed desert. The provinces of Uruzgan and Zabol have mixed flat and mountainous terrain, while Day Kundi is mountainous. Helmand and Kandahar are the two largest and most populated provinces, and their population is concentrated along two major rivers, the Arghandab River and the Helmand River. Kandahar—Afghanistan’s second largest city with a population of half a million—is the political and economic center of the South.

The southern region of Afghanistan is predominantly ethnic Pashtun, but there are small minorities of Hazaras in the northern areas of Day Kundi, and Baluchis on the very southern edges of the region. Most of Afghanistan’s greatest leaders originated from the south. Ahmad Shah Durrani, regarded as the founder of present-day Afghanistan, established a kingdom in Kandahar province in 1747, although the capital was later relocated to Kabul.  The Durrani dynasty ruled Afghanistan until 1973.1  The province of Kandahar was also the birthplace of the Taliban in 1994.2  The strong, hierarchical tribal system in the south has typically hindered social, economic and political reforms in the region.

In Kandahar province, the Arghandab River flows south from the Afghan central mountains, passing just north of Kandahar City. Together with its various tributaries, the Arghandab irrigates the greater Kandahar area—including the Arghandab Valley, northern Panjwaii, Zhari and Maywand—before continuing westward to join the Helmand River immediately south of Lashkar Gah.  The Registan Desert lies south of Kandahar and the Arghandab. To the north, foothills and mountains of the Afghan central mountains separate Kandahar from Oruzgan province.  A highway runs southeast from Kandahar to the Spin Boldak-Chaman border crossing and thence to Quetta, Pakistan.  The Kandahar to Kabul section of the Afghan Ring Road stretches east and northeastward from Kandahar into Zabul and then Ghazni provinces.

The Helmand River is the longest river in Afghanistan, stretching over 1,000 kilometers. It descends from the Hindu Kush Mountains in Wardak Province, west of Kabul – passing through Bamyan, Uruzgan, Helmand, Nimruz and crossing into Sistan and Baluchistan Province of Iran. In Helmand Province, the Helmand River Valley stretches from the Kajaki dam and reservoir in the northeast to the river’s junction with the Arghandab below the provincial capital Lashkar Gah.  The Helmand River Valley in the central part of the province is characterized by irrigated, populated zones on either bank.  From north to south, the principal river towns are Kajaki, Sangin, Gereshk and Lashkar Gah.  In the northernmost districts of Helmand, where the terrain turns to foothills and mountains, the towns of Musa Qala and Naw Zad are situated further from the river, in tributary valleys.  The Afghan Ring Road, after departing Kandahar, runs westward to Gereshk on the Helmand and continues on to Delaram, situated at the Farah, Nimruz and Helmand tri-border area.

Below Lashkar Gah, the lower Helmand Valley continues from the Arghandab river junction south and then west toward Nimruz province; the extent of irrigated lands along the river’s banks decreases as it progresses into the Dasht-e Margo (Desert of Death) on its way toward the Sistan Basin in Iran.  The terrain transitions rapidly to desert on leaving the immediate river valley zone.

The Helmand River not only provides extensive water for agricultural use, but is the primary source of many hydroelectric dams in the region, most notably the Kajaki dam and Band-e Bughra reservoir in Helmand and Kamal Khan reservoir in Nimruz. The Kajaki Dam near Musa Qala district of Helmand Province was first built by the United States in the 1950s. Reconstruction and construction work on the dam resumed in 2006 with the help of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the British military.3  The Kajaki dam is a major generator of electricity for the population of northern Helmand and northern Kandahar. It also irrigates around 1,800 kilometers square of an otherwise arid land in the south. Some 4,000 Coalition forces cleared the way for the transfer of a powerful new turbine to the Kajaki Dam on September 2, 2008.4 

Waters of Helmand have long been a contentious issue between Afghanistan and Iran, as the river feeds into Lake Hamun in Iran’s eastern border with Afghanistan. Iran and Afghanistan signed an agreement in 1972, according to which Afghanistan must release 26 cubic meters of water a second to flow into Iran.5  Iran’s Vice President Parviz Davoodi on a visit to Kabul in February 2009 renewed the water-sharing agreement with his Afghan counterpart.6
 

Security

 

RC South is the stronghold of the Taliban, led by Mullah Omar and the Quetta Shura, and a center for the opium trade.  Insurgent activity in RC South was higher in 2008 than any year since the fall of the Taliban in 2001. Five of the six primary Taliban infiltration routes are located in the south because it shares the long border with Pakistan.7  The presence of Coalition and Afghan forces was insufficient in the south in 2008 and into 2009, and even non-existent along the borders.8  The unmonitored border allows the smuggling of opium to Pakistan and Iran and permits the flow of weapons, fighters, and leaders into Afghanistan. One main concern for ISAF forces in the region is the connection between the narcotics trade and networks responsible for launching attacks involving improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, which account for 70 percent of military casualties in the region.9

Out of 23,000 International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) troops stationed in the area in 2008, only a 300-strong British Royal Marines unit had the mobility to travel around the region to fight the Quetta Shura Taliban.10  Troops were concentrated in the main cities and towns. The Quetta Shura Taliban control many rural villages—not necessarily because they are strong or popular among the public, but because they are unchecked and operate in a power vacuum.11  According to President Hamid Karzai’s security advisor, Asadullah Wafa, the government controls three districts in Kandahar, whereas the Quetta Shura Taliban controls the districts of Ghorak and Miya Nishin. He also assessed that the government controlled only the district centers of twelve other districts in Kandahar province.12

Although the Quetta Shura Taliban is perceived to be the major security challenge in the region, illicit drug-trade, warlordism, highway robberies, and tribal feuds are other major security problems. Furthermore, appointment of corrupt or inefficient officials has contributed to worsening security and poor governance in the region. President Hamid Karzai’s brother, Ahmad Wali Karzai, is accused of involvement in drug trade.  He heads the Kandahar’s Provincial Council and remains an influential figure in the south.13  Kandahar governor, General Rahmatullah Raufi, was fired by Kabul in early December 2008 only four months after his appointment, over his alleged differences with Wali Karzai.14  Sher Mohammad Akhundzada remained the governor of Helmand Province from 2001 until December 2005, despite repeated allegations of his involvement in drug trade. In early June 2005, nine tons of opium was found in his office when counternarcotics agents raided it – though he was not removed from office until several months later.15 

Counternarcotics

 

RC South produced more than 80 percent of Afghanistan’s opium output in 2007. Helmand province alone accounted for 66 percent of total opium cultivation in Afghanistan.16  In 2008, five provinces – Helmand, Kandahar Uruzgan and Nimruz in the RC South and Farah in the RC West – produced 98 percent of all opium production in Afghanistan.17  The U.N. estimates the Taliban groups reap between $200 and $300 million from opium annually.18

ISAF and Afghan Forces

 

ISAF’s Regional Command South headquarters is based in the city of Kandahar.  Canada, Britain, and the Netherlands rotate command of RC South. The Netherlands currently command RC South, under the leadership of Major General Mart de Kruif.19  In 2009, a UK division headquarters, under the command of a British two-star general, will be installed at the Kandahar Air Field.

There are roughly 23,000 ISAF forces – primarily from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and the Netherlands–in RC South.20here are roughly 8,000 British troops in Helmand province and 2,700 Canadian forces in Kandahar. However, security progress has been limited. ISAF forces control about 60% of the populated areas in southern Afghanistan.21Military officers describe the situation in the region as a stalemate in early 2009, as they can keep their areas under control, but cannot gain more ground. Lt.-Gen. Andrew Leslie, Canada’s Chief of Land Staff in Kandahar called for a 10,000-strong troop build-up in Kandahar.22

 Approximately 19,000 Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) – Afghan National Army (ANA) and Afghan National Police (ANP) – are stationed in the region.23 The ANA’s 205th Corps operates RC South, with a brigade each in Helmand, Kandahar, Urozgan, and Zabul.

Most of the additional 21,000 U.S. troops that arrive in Afghanistan in 2009 will be deployed in southern Afghanistan, a plan aimed at securing the civilian population, gaining more ground, and isolating the enemy. The additional forces will bring the total of troops in the region to roughly 60,000 Coalition and Afghan Forces. Major General de Kruif has warned the arrival of fresh U.S. troops will trigger increased violence as they move into areas of Taliban control.24

There are four Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) in the south. They are in Kandahar City, Kandahar Province (led by Canada); Lashkar-Gah, Helmand (led by the United Kingdom); Tarin Kowt, Uruzgan (led by the Netherlands) and Qalat, Zabul (led by Romania and USA). There is no PRT in Nimruz.

 

Provinces

Kandahar Province | Helmand Province | Nimruz Province | Day Kundi Province | Uruzgan Province | Zabul Province 

 

Kandahar Province                                                                                                              Top

Governor: Tooryalai Wesa
Chief of police: Matiullah Qateh
Capital: Kandahar

Demographics and Terrain

Kandahar province lies in southern Afghanistan, bordering Pakistan to the east and south. Most of the province is flat or semi-flat desert, although the northern part of the province is mountainous. Kandahar province is divided into sixteen districts. The province has a population of over 1,000,000 people.25 Roughly 250,000 live in the provincial capital, Kandahar City.26  A majority of the population lives in rural areas. The province is overwhelmingly Pashtun and 98 percent of the population speaks Pashto. Of the Pashtun, the Durrani and Ghilzai tribes form the majority. Small numbers of Baluchis, Hazaras and Tajiks also live in Kandahar.

Security

Kandahar remains one of the most volatile provinces in Afghanistan, and some of the province is controlled by elements of the Quetta Shura Taliban. Kandahar is a strategically important province for the Taliban. The Taliban was created in Kandahar province in the early 1990's. They are now based in the nearby Pakistani city of Quetta, where their leaders meet in a Shura council. The favorable terrain allows for their preferred fighting tactics. Insurgents can easily transit across the desert routes and hide in the orchards, vineyards, and rocky terrain. The Taliban in Kandahar province conduct suicide attacks, roadside improvised explosive device and landmine attacks, and ambushes. The Taliban target ISAF, ANA and ANP Forces along the ring road. Endemic corruption and criminality fuels the insurgency and undermines the effectiveness of the security forces, particularly the local police.

The western districts of Panjawayi, Zherai and Maiwand are particularly problematic and therefore are a primary focus of ISAF Forces.27  Although themselves relatively more peaceful then the volatile western districts, Ghorak, Khakerez, Shah Wali Kot and Mianshit are unstable and provide transit routes for insurgent operations.

Arghandab district is one of the most troublesome in Kandahar because of the level of insurgency and insecurity. The Taliban have taken control partial of complete control of the strategic district as they see it as a gateway to the city of Kandahar. It is strategic terrain given its proximity to Kandahar city (it is only fifteen kilometers to the north). It also offers natural defenses. Insurgents can hide from the air attacks of the ISAF Forces in the district’s fruit orchards. 
 
Numerous tribal feuds continue to plague security in Kandahar province. The nomadic Achekzai tribe, which lives primarily in the Spin Boldak district, is one source of conflict. The Alizai tribe in Shah Wali Kowt district is divided into two clans, the Jalozai and the Hasanzai, that are at war with each other. The Barakzai tribe, found in Argistan and Maruf districts, is relatively more peaceful but is viewed by other tribes with envy and distrust for establishing the Afghanistan monarchy.28

Canada, which forms the largest contingent of ISAF Forces in the area, has suggested that it may withdraw its troops from Kandahar by 2011.

Economic Development and Counternarcotics

Kandahar remains one of the most undeveloped provinces. Only 27 percent of households have access to electricity, and only two percent of households in rural areas have electricity. Agriculture is the main source of income for a quarter of the population. Kandahar province produces tobacco, cotton, watermelons, grapes and nut trees, as well as opium. The province is the second largest opium poppy-producing province in Afghanistan, after Helmand.29  The province cultivated 14,623 hectares of opium in 2008, although a reduction is expected in 2009.

 

Helmand Province                                                                                                               Top

Governor: Gulab Mangal
Chief of police: Assadullah Sherzad
Capital: Lashkargah

Demographics and Terrain

Helmand province is located in south-west Afghanistan, with Pakistan’s Balochistan province to the south. More than two-thirds of the province is flat rocky desert. The northern region of the province is covered with arid hills or mountains. Helmand is divided into thirteen districts.30  Although it is the largest province in Afghanistan, Helmand province is one of the most sparsely populated. The provincial population is roughly 1,000,000.  The largest city, Lashkargah, is the capital of the province. Most of the population lives in rural areas.  Pashtuns form the majority of the population. There are smaller numbers of Balochis, Hazaras and Tajiks in the province. In the winter, roughly 100,000 Kuchi nomads migrate to the province.31 
 
Security

Helmand is unstable. The northern districts of Nawzad, Musa Qala, Sangin Qala, Baghran, Washeer and Kajaki were vulnerable to insurgent attacks targeting ISAF, ANA and ANP forces from 2006 onward. The attacks have resulted in a large number of casualties. ISAF and Afghanistan security forces lost control over these districts.32  Due to the lack of Coalition or Afghan forces, small militias function as reserve police in the northern part of the province.  The militias are said to be implicated in drug crimes, frequent lootings, and killings.33  There is currently no program to disarm these groups. The section of the Ring Road in the province is frequently targeted by insurgent attacks and bandits.34 Criminality is prevalent.

Five out of thirteen districts of Helmand are under virtual control of insurgents. Three others have only minimal presence of government and Coalition Forces.35  The Garm Ser district in the south has seen a large number of insurgent attacks during the past two years. ISAF and the government also lost and fought to regain control of the Garm Ser district several times. Fierce fighting between ISAF and insurgents is also common in the Greshk district. There have been many civilian casualties as a result of suicide bombings, but also ISAF airstrikes.

Musa Qala is another of the most volatile district in the province. The British handed over security of the district to tribal leaders in October 2006 – only to be overrun by the Taliban three months later. The Taliban established a shadow government and their own courts in the districts for almost ten months until thousands of British and U.S. forces recaptured the district with the ANA fighting in the front line. The district center is currently held by the Afghan government and ISAF, but insurgents still have presence in remote north and south of the district.36  Lashkargah has also seen suicide attacks. The enemy likewise seeks to destroy the Kajaki Dam to undercut confidence in the central government and ISAF. In Sangin district, the Taliban use landmines, ambushes, and suicide attacks. Civilian casualty numbers are very high in this district.37

Economic Development and Counternarcotics

Helmand was once the breadbasket of Afghanistan. Only 28 percent of people in the province have access to safe drinking water and only twenty one percent of households have electricity. Agriculture is the main source of income in the province.38 Opium poppy cultivation is a lucrative business, and the main source of income for nearly half of the population. The province produced 80 percent of the 8,200 tons of opium poppies cultivated in Afghanistan in 2008.39  There are clear linkages between the Taliban insurgency and the opium trade. According to the United Nations, the Taliban earn some $300 million annually from the opium trade in Afghanistan.40 

 

Nimruz Province                                                                                                                   Top

Capital: Zaranj
Provincial governor: Ghulam Dastagir Azad

Demographics and Terrain
 

Located in southwestern Afghanistan, Nimruz Province borders Iran’s Sistan and Baluchistan Province in the west and Pakistan’s Baluchistan Province in the south. The province has a population of about 200,000. The majority of the population is Baluch, although there is a significant Pashtun population. The sandy desert of Dasht-e Margo covers a large portion of the province and there are scanty natural resources, such as mines and forests. Agriculture and livestock have been severely damaged by perpetual droughts over the past seven years. Illiteracy and high unemployment have forced many residents to seek employment in Iran and Pakistan.

Three major rivers, the Helmand River, Khashrud River and Farahrud River, flow through the province and join together in Kang district. The lack of an effective irrigation system, however, has prevented the use of water from these rivers for agriculture or raising livestock. A major dam project designed in Charborjak district – Kamal Khan Dam – in the late 1970s was left half implemented after the Soviet invasion. If rebuilt, the dam could generate sufficient power and water for agriculture; however, its construction would require an agreement with Iran over the disputed waters of Helmand River.
 

In January 2008, President Hamid Karzai and Indian Foreign Minister Mr Pranab Mukherjee inaugurated a new road between Zaranj and Delaram, connecting Nimruz Province to Chabahar in Iran. The 215km highway, which was financed by India, was completed at the end of that year. The road has encouraged Afghan businessmen to shift their transit of goods from Karachi harbor of Pakistan to Chabahar port in southern Iran.41 Iran has encouraged this trade, granting Afghan exporters a 90% discount on port fees, a 50% discount on warehousing charges, and giving Afghan vehicles full transit rights on the Iranian road system. The lack of security in Zaranj-Kabul highway, which passes through the restive Kandahar, Zabul and Ghazni provinces, is a concern for the merchants. Nearly 130 Afghan policemen and 11 Indian engineers have been killed in enemy ambushes and attacks during the implementation of the project.42 

Security

There is no Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) presence in Nimruz. The ANA 205th Corps has minimal presence there. The lack of security forces has made the province an unchecked conduit route for insurgents infiltrating into Afghanistan from Pakistan or for those coming from Arab countries through Iran into Afghanistan. In 2008, Iran expelled tens of thousands of Afghan refugees into Nimruz, adding to the instability in the province.

Counternarcotics
 

Nimruz lies along the drug transit routes to Pakistan and Iran. According to the United Nations Office for Drugs and Crime (UNODC), 6,203 hectares of opium was cultivated in Nimruz in 2008. While a major eradication planned by the government in 2009 could decrease the cultivation level, the lack of development projects and alternative livelihood for the people could make the implementation of such a plan difficult.

 

Day Kundi                                                                                                                               Top

Governor: Sultan Ali Uruzgani
Chief of police: Kamin Khan
Capital: Nili

Demographics and Terrain

Day Kundi province was created in March 2004. The nine districts that make up Day Kundi used to form the northern part of Uruzgan province. Hazaras form the majority in Day Kundi province. Culturally and ethnically, Day Kundi is more closely related the province of Bamyan to its north (also inhabited by a majority of ethnic Hazaras) than its southern neighbors, Uruzgan and Helmand Province. Day Kundi is mountainous and receives slightly more rainfall than the rest of the south.

The province has a population of almost half of million. While Hazaras form the ethnic majority, the province also has small populations of Pashtun, Balochi and Sayeed. The Hazaras form distinct ethnic group descending from the Mongols. As Shiites, they are also a religious minority within Afghanistan. Because of these differences, they have been historic targets of discrimination and even repression (particularly under the Taliban); they are considered by many Afghans to form the traditional underclass of society.43

Security

The province is generally stable, although there are security problems in the southernmost districts of the province, Kirjan and Gizab.  The ANA 205th Corps does not maintain forces in Day Kundi, however.

Economics and Counternarcotics

The population is overwhelmingly rural and most residents are employed in agriculture. Wheat, corn, cotton, fruit, tobacco, and opium poppy are grown. Most of the opium poppy cultivation in the province takes place in southern district of Gizab. Opium poppy cultivation decreased from 7,000 hectares in 2006 to about 3,000 in 2007. While the governor, Sultan Ali Uruzgani, has a good reputation for poppy eradication, he has a poor relationship with the Kabul government. He has been critical of President Karzai for neglecting his province.44

The province is severely under-developed, with no public electricity available. Less than ten percent of roads are accessible yearlong. Only one paved road runs north to south through the province.

 

Uruzgan                                                                                                                                  Top

Governor: Asadullah Hamdan
Chief of police: General Mohammed Quasim
Capital: Terin Kowt

Demographics and Terrain

Uruzgan is a small province in southern Afghanistan. Roughly half of the terrain is mountainous The province is divided into five districts. Prior to 2006, the province had four districts; however, in 2006 a Pashtun-dominated district was annexed by Uruzgan province after it split from the mostly-Hazara Day Kundi province.45  The province has a population of about 320,000 and most live in rural areas. The largest ethnic group is the Durrani Pashtun, but there is a significant number of Hazaras as well.

Security

The Taliban currently control about 60 percent of Uruzgan province, particularly in the rural areas, whereas the government has some control in the cities.46  Extortion and roadside violence make transportation throughout the province very difficult. Most non-governmental organizations do not venture into any of the districts on account of the security situation.

Shahid-I Hassas district in the west and Khas Uruzgan district in the east are the most troublesome areas in the province. In Shahid-I Hassas, the terrain is hilly and the population sparse, making is an ideal spot for the Quetta Shura Taliban to hide. Additionally, the Hazaras and the Kuchi nomads in the area also engage in conflict over land. Khas Uruzgan district has been a traditional Taliban stronghold and has experienced anti-coalition attacks and regrouping of insurgents.47

Kamp Holland is the main ISAF military base in Uruzgan. The Netherlands is leading the ISAF forces in the province. Approximately 1,400 Dutch troops are stationed in Uruzgan. The Dutch forces are planned to remain in the province until 2010.48  The Dutch forces have been actively engaged in counterinsurgency operations in the South – unlike Germany, for example, which avoids combat action because of national caveats.

Economic Development

Farming and raising livestock are the main occupations in the province.49  The province has one of the least developed infrastructure system in the country. Only eight percent of the population has access to electricity.

There is one PRT in the province headquarted in the capital, Tarin Kowt. It is headed by the Netherlands. While the PRT has initiated numerous projects, the security situation has complicated its ability to follow through with projects.

 

Zabul Province                                                                                                                      Top

Governor: Dilbar Arman Shinwari
Chief of police: Abdul Rahman Furjung
Capital: Qalat
PRT Country Lead: Romania

Demographics and Terrain

Located in southeastern Afghanistan, Zabol province has a population of roughly 250,000. Zabol is sparsely populated and most residents live in rural areas. The province is divided into 10 districts and the capital is the city of Qalat. The terrain ranges from mountains to flatlands. The population is overwhelmingly Pashtun, although Kuchi nomads, which can be Pashtun or other ethnicities, are found throughout the province in small numbers.50

Security

While Zabol is safer than some of its neighboring provinces, security remains a serious concern.  Most security incidents are fueled by the Quetta Shura Taliban operating from across the border in Pakistan.51

The Shamalzai district shares an unsecure border with Pakistan. The mountainous, remote terrain is fairly inaccessible for ISAF, ANA, and ANP Forces. As a result, the smuggling of narcotics and weapons is widespread. The Mizan and Arghandab districts in the west have also seen rising levels of violence and insurgency in 2008.52

The Afghan Police and Army, as well as ISAF troops have kept Qalat relatively secure, however, throughout most of the province, the Taliban still pose security risks. Taliban groups target ISAF personnel and equipment in Qalat. They have also assassinated local religious leaders. Still, the local population is generally more sympathetic to the Taliban than to the central government and ISAF forces.53

Economic Development and Counternarcotics

The province suffers from an acute lack of human capital and skilled personnel, as most NGOs consider most of the province too unsafe to work. Agriculture is the main source of income. Crops include poppies for opium, wheat, corn, fruit, nuts and watermelons. Only two percent of the population has access to electricity.54

Although relative to neighboring provinces poppy cultivation is not a significant part in the economy, the trafficking of narcotics continues to plague the province. This fuels the Taliban insurgency in the province and throughout the region.55

ANSF and ISAF Force Presence

An American Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) stationed in the provincial capital of Qalat leads reconstruction work in the province. The United States Air Force Lt. Col. Bryce Brakman assumed command of the PRT from U.S. Army Lt. Col. James Bramble in March 2008. Personnel from the U.S. Army National Guard and Reserves, active-duty Army and Air Force, U.S. Department of State and Agriculture and U.S. Agency for International Development make the Zabul PRT.56

Forward Operating Base Lagman is stationed in Zabol Province. Soldiers from the Romanian 812th Infantry Regiment are actively engaged in counterinsurgency operations in Zabol, with a primary mission to patrol the Kabul-Kandahar highway that runs through the province.57 

Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) have made notable strides in the province. They have been carrying out joint counterinsurgency operations with the Coalition forces. In March 2008, the ANSF, with the support of Coalition forces, destroyed a secondary route used by insurgents to transport supplies and launch attacks. The move helped decrease the number of IED attacks and improve security in the province.58  In another operation, the ANSF killed 43 Taliban militants in the provincial capital of Qalat in October 2008.59  In February 2009, the ANSF forces destroyed an IED operating cell in the province. 60
 

-----------------------------

 Endnotes

1  Steve Coll, “Slowly, Slowly Sucked into It,” in Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001  (Penguin, 2004) 280. 
2  For Taliban’s emergence in Kandahar, see Ahmed Rashid, Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001). 
3  “One Step Closer to a Brighter Future,” United States Agency for International Development (USAID), December 30, 2008.
4  “One Step Closer to a Brighter Future,” United States Agency for International Development (USAID), December 30, 2008.
5  Bill Samii, “Iran/Afghanistan: Still No Resolution For Century-Old Water Dispute,” Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, September 7, 2005.
6  Report on Iranian Vice President’s trip to Afghanistan, February 21, 2009.
7  Dexter Filkins, “Taliban Fill NATO’s Big Gaps in Afghan South,” The New York Times, January 21, 2009.
8  Dexter Filkins, “Taliban Fill NATO’s Big Gaps in Afghan South,” The New York Times, January 21, 2009.  
9  John J. Kruzel, “Influx of U.S. Troops in Afghanistan to be Met With Rising Violence,” American Forces Press Service, March 20, 2009. 
10  Dexter Filkins, “Taliban Fill NATO’s Big Gaps in Afghan South,” The New York Times, January 21, 2009.  
11  Dexter Filkins, “Taliban Fill NATO’s Big Gaps in Afghan South,” The New York Times, January 21, 2009. 
12  “Karzai's Advisor Complains from Kandahar Administration,” Quqnoos News Agency, March 2, 2009. 
13  James Risen, “Reports Link Karzai’s Brother to Afghanistan Heroin Trade,” The New York Times, October 4, 2008.
14  Graeme Smith, “Kandahar governor said to be stepping down,” The Globe and Mail, December 3, 2008. 
15  Carlotta Gall, “Governor of Afghan Opium Capital Pushes for Crop Replacement,” The New York Times, October 4, 2008. 
16  Martin Patience, “UN reports Afghan opium decline,”  BBC News, August 26, 2008. 
17  Drew Brown, “Afghans Step Up Effort To Destroy Opium Fields,” Stars and Stripes, April 11, 2009. 
18  Peter Griffiths, “Afghan 2008 opium crop was second biggest,” Reuters UK, February 19, 2009.  
19  “ISAF Regional Command Structure,” International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) website, January 14, 2009. 
20  Ann Scott Tyson, “Allies 'Out Of Troops' In Afghan South,” The Washington Post, March 21, 2009. 
21  Ann Scott Tyson, “Allies 'Out Of Troops' In Afghan South,” The Washington Post, March 21, 2009. 
22  “Karzai's Advisor Complains from Kandahar Administration,” Quqnoos News Agency, March 2, 2009. 
23  Dexter Filkins, “Taliban Fill NATO’s Big Gaps in Afghan South,” The New York Times, January 21, 2009. 
24  “Violence to 'spike' in Afghanistan: Dutch general,” Agence France-Presse (AFP), March 20, 2009. 
25  United States Agency for International Development (USAID), "Afghanistan's Provinces,"  USAID: Afghanistan.
26  Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan, “Provincial Profile – Kandahar,” 1.
27  Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan, “Provincial Profile – Kandahar,” 11.
28  Naval Postgraduate School, “Kandahar Executive Summary,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies.
29 Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan, “Provincial Profile – Kandahar,” 12.
30  Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan, “Provincial Profile – Helmand,” 2.
31  Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan, “Provincial Profile – Helmand,” 2.
32  Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan,  “Provincial Profile – Helmand,” 11-12.
33  Tom Coghlan, ”Can Tribes Take on the Taliban?” BBC News, December 26, 2007.
34  Tom Coghlan, ”Can Tribes Take on the Taliban?” BBC News, December 26, 2007; Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of “Provincial Profile – Helmand."
35 “Afghanistan Remains World’s Largest Opium Producer,” Xinhua, March 28, 2009. 
36  Jonathon Burch, “Keeping An Eye on the Taliban,” Reuters, March 30, 2009. 
37  Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan,  “Provincial Profile – Helmand,” 11.
38  Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan,  “Provincial Profile – Helmand,” 7.
39  “Official: 70,000 addicts in Taliban hotbed of S Afghanistan,” Xinhua, April 13, 2009.
40  Dexter Filkins, “Taliban Fill NATO’s Big Gaps in Afghan South,” The New York Times, January 21, 2009.
41  “Afghan-Iran Highway Boosts Business,” Quqnoos News Agency, March 19, 2009.
42  “Afghan-Iran Highway Boosts Business,” Quqnoos News Agency, March 19, 2009.
43  Naval Postgraduate School, “Dai Kundi Executive Summary,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies, p. 4.
44  Naval Postgraduate School, “Dai Kundi Executive Summary,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies, p. 2; and Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan: Dai Kundy Provincial Profile.
45  Naval Postgraduate School, “Uruzgan Provincial Profile,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies.
46  Naval Postgraduate School, “Uruzgan Provincial Profile,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies.
47  Naval Postgraduate School, “Uruzgan Provincial Profile,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies.
48  “Kamp Holland hit by missile attack,” Radio Netherlands, April 6, 2009. 
49  Naval Postgraduate School, “Uruzgan Provincial Profile,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies, p. 1.
50  Naval Postgraduate School, “Zabul Executive Summary,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies, p. 1.
51  Naval Postgraduate School, “Zabul Executive Summary,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies, p. 6.
52  Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD) of Afghanistan, “Provincial Profile – Zabul,” 10. 
53Naval Postgraduate School, “Zabul Executive Summary,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies, p. 6.
54  Naval Postgraduate School, “Zabul Executive Summary,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies, p. 6.
55  Naval Postgraduate School, “Zabul Executive Summary,” Program for Culture and Conflict Studies, p. 6.
56  Jean Duggan, “Change of command for Zabul PRT,” Blackanthem Military News, March 22, 2008. 
57  Global Security.Org, “Forward Operating Base Lagman.”
58  "ANSF Destroy Insurgent Route in Zabul,” Combined Joint Task Force – 101 Public Affairs, March 22, 2008. 
59  “Combined Forces Kill 43 Militants in Zabul Province,” Soldier of Fortune, October 7, 2008.  
60“ANSF, Coalition Forces further disable IED cells in Khowst and Zabul,” United States Central Command Public Affairs, February 6, 2009.
 

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