Beschreibung:
In this book, the author discusses the sustainability of the Afghan National Army and Air Force.
The Afghan National Army (ANA) and Afghan National Air Force (AAF) stand today as products of the 2001 war and Western intervention in Afghanistan. This is not only because they were established in 2002 by the government brought to power by that intervention, but even more importantly because they were funded, designed and trained by the intervening forces. It was perhaps inevitable therefore that the question of their sustainability should arise.
IntroductionChapter 1 Afghan National Army, the United States, NATO and their Business of Torture and Humiliation in AfghanistanChapter 2 Kabul at War (1992-1996): State, Ethnicity and Social Classes by Gilles DorronsoroChapter 3 The Afghan National Army: Sustainability Challenges beyond Financial Aspects by Dr. Antonio Giustozzi with Peter QuentinChapter 4 Afghanistan: Background and U.S. Policy in Brief by Clayton ThomasChapter 5 A Tale of Two Afghan Armies Lemar by Alexander FarhadChapter 6 The Unintended Consequences of US Support on Militia Governance in Kunduz Province of Afghanistan by Toon DirkxChapter 7 The Afghan Territorial Force: Learning from the Lessons of the Past? by Kate ClarkChapter 8 CIA-Proxy Militias and CIA-Drones in Afghanistan: “Hunt and Kill” déjà vu. by Kate ClarkChapter 9 The Two Faces of the Fatemiyun: Revisiting the Male Fighters by Mohsen HamidiChapter 10 The Rise and fall of Taliban Regime (1994-2001) in Afghanistan: The Internal Dynamics by Dr. Qamar FatimaChapter 11 Private Military and Security Companies by Maria NebolsinaChapter 12 Prisoners Raped by Dogs, the ‘Modern’ Torture Techniques of the US by Kawa AzemChapter 13 The AIHRC Summary Report of the National Inquiry on the Protection of the Rights of Victims of Armed Conflict and TerrorismNotes and Reference to ChaptersBibliographyIndex