How the U.S. Funds the Taliban in Afghanistan
By A Khokar • Nov 15th, 2009 • Category: Politics, Worth A Second Look • 12 CommentsOn October 29, 2001, while the Taliban’s rule over Afghanistan was under assault, the regime’s ambassador in Islamabad gave a chaotic press conference in front of several dozen reporters sitting on the grass. On the Taliban diplomat’s right sat his interpreter, Ahmad Rateb Popal, a man with an imposing presence. Like the ambassador, Popal wore a black turban, and he had a huge bushy beard. He had a black patch over his right eye socket, a prosthetic left arm and a deformed right hand, the result of injuries from an explosives mishap during an old operation against the Soviets in Kabul.
But Popal was more than just a former mujahedeen. In 1988, a year before the Soviets fled Afghanistan, Popal had been charged in the United States with conspiring to import more than a kilo of heroin. Court records show he was released from prison in 1997.
Flash forward to 2009, and Afghanistan is ruled by Popal’s cousin President Hamid Karzai. Popal has cut his huge beard down to a neatly trimmed one and has become an immensely wealthy businessman, along with his brother Rashid Popal, who in a separate case pleaded guilty to a heroin charge in 1996 in Brooklyn. The Popal brothers control the huge Watan Group in Afghanistan, a consortium engaged in telecommunications, logistics and, most important, security. Watan Risk Management, the Popals’ private military arm, is one of the few dozen private security companies in Afghanistan. One of Watan’s enterprises, key to the war effort, is protecting convoys of Afghan trucks heading from Kabul to Kandahar, carrying American supplies.
Welcome to the wartime contracting bazaar in Afghanistan. It is a virtual carnival of improbable characters and shady connections, with former CIA officials and ex-military officers joining hands with former Taliban and mujahedeen to collect US government funds in the name of the war effort.
In this grotesque carnival, the US military’s contractors are forced to pay suspected insurgents to protect American supply routes. It is an accepted fact of the military logistics operation in Afghanistan that the US government funds the very forces American troops are fighting. And it is a deadly irony, because these funds add up to a huge amount of money for the Taliban. “It’s a big part of their income,” one of the top Afghan government security officials told The Nation in an interview. In fact, US military officials in Kabul estimate that a minimum of 10 percent of the Pentagon’s logistics contracts–hundreds of millions of dollars–consists of payments to insurgents.
Understanding how this situation came to pass requires untangling two threads. The first is the insider dealing that determines who wins and who loses in Afghan business, and the second is the troubling mechanism by which “private security” ensures that the US supply convoys traveling these ancient trade routes aren’t ambushed by insurgents.
A good place to pick up the first thread is with a small firm awarded a US military logistics contract worth hundreds of millions of dollars: NCL Holdings. Like the Popals’ Watan Risk, NCL is a licensed security company in Afghanistan.
What NCL Holdings is most notorious for in Kabul contracting circles, though, is the identity of its chief principal, Hamed Wardak. He is the young American son of Afghanistan’s current defense minister, Gen. Abdul Rahim Wardak, who was a leader of the mujahedeen against the Soviets. Hamed Wardak has plunged into business as well as policy. He was raised and schooled in the United States, graduating as valedictorian from Georgetown University in 1997. He earned a Rhodes scholarship and interned at the neoconservative think tank the American Enterprise Institute. That internship was to play an important role in his life, for it was at AEI that he forged alliances with some of the premier figures in American conservative foreign policy circles, such as the late Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick.
Wardak incorporated NCL in the United States early in 2007, although the firm may have operated in Afghanistan before then. It made sense to set up shop in Washington, because of Wardak’s connections there. On NCL’s advisory board, for example, is Milton Bearden, a well-known former CIA officer. Bearden is an important voice on Afghanistan issues; in October he was a witness before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where Senator John Kerry, the chair, introduced him as “a legendary former CIA case officer and a clearheaded thinker and writer.” It is not every defense contracting company that has such an influential adviser.
But the biggest deal that NCL got–the contract that brought it into Afghanistan’s major leagues–was Host Nation Trucking. Earlier this year the firm, with no apparent trucking experience, was named one of the six companies that would handle the bulk of US trucking in Afghanistan, bringing supplies to the web of bases and remote outposts scattered across the country.
At first the contract was large but not gargantuan. And then that suddenly changed, like an immense garden coming into bloom. Over the summer, citing the coming “surge” and a new doctrine, “Money as a Weapons System,” the US military expanded the contract 600 percent for NCL and the five other companies. The contract documentation warns of dire consequences if more is not spent: “service members will not get food, water, equipment, and ammunition they require.” Each of the military’s six trucking contracts was bumped up to $360 million, or a total of nearly $2.2 billion. Put it in this perspective: this single two-year effort to hire Afghan trucks and truckers was worth 10 percent of the annual Afghan gross domestic product. NCL, the firm run by the defense minister’s well-connected son, had struck pure contracting gold.
Host Nation Trucking does indeed keep the US military efforts alive in Afghanistan. “We supply everything the army needs to survive here,” one American trucking executive told me. “We bring them their toilet paper, their water, their fuel, their guns, their vehicles.” The epicenter is Bagram Air Base, just an hour north of Kabul, from which virtually everything in Afghanistan is trucked to the outer reaches of what the Army calls “the Battlespace”–that is, the entire country. Parked near Entry Control Point 3, the trucks line up, shifting gears and sending up clouds of dust as they prepare for their various missions across the country.
The real secret to trucking in Afghanistan is ensuring security on the perilous roads, controlled by warlords, tribal militias, insurgents and Taliban commanders. The American executive I talked to was fairly specific about it: “The Army is basically paying the Taliban not to shoot at them. It is Department of Defense money.” That is something everyone seems to agree on.
Mike Hanna is the project manager for a trucking company called Afghan American Army Services. The company, which still operates in Afghanistan, had been trucking for the United States for years but lost out in the Host Nation Trucking contract that NCL won. Hanna explained the security realities quite simply: “You are paying the people in the local areas–some are warlords, some are politicians in the police force–to move your trucks through.”
Hanna explained that the prices charged are different, depending on the route: “We’re basically being extorted. Where you don’t pay, you’re going to get attacked. We just have our field guys go down there, and they pay off who they need to.” Sometimes, he says, the extortion fee is high, and sometimes it is low. “Moving ten trucks, it is probably $800 per truck to move through an area. It’s based on the number of trucks and what you’re carrying. If you have fuel trucks, they are going to charge you more. If you have dry trucks, they’re not going to charge you as much. If you are carrying MRAPs or Humvees, they are going to charge you more.”
Hanna says it is just a necessary evil. “If you tell me not to pay these insurgents in this area, the chances of my trucks getting attacked increase exponentially.”
Whereas in Iraq the private security industry has been dominated by US and global firms like Blackwater, operating as de facto arms of the US government, in Afghanistan there are lots of local players as well. As a result, the industry in Kabul is far more dog-eat-dog. “Every warlord has his security company,” is the way one executive explained it to me.
In theory, private security companies in Kabul are heavily regulated, although the reality is different. Thirty-nine companies had licenses until September, when another dozen were granted licenses. Many licensed companies are politically connected: just as NCL is owned by the son of the defense minister and Watan Risk Management is run by President Karzai’s cousins, the Asia Security Group is controlled by Hashmat Karzai, another relative of the president. The company has blocked off an entire street in the expensive Sherpur District. Another security firm is controlled by the parliamentary speaker’s son, sources say. And so on.
In the same way, the Afghan trucking industry, key to logistics operations, is often tied to important figures and tribal leaders. One major hauler in Afghanistan, Afghan International Trucking (AIT), paid $20,000 a month in kickbacks to a US Army contracting official, according to the official’s plea agreement in US court in August. AIT is a very well-connected firm: it is run by the 25-year-old nephew of Gen. Baba Jan, a former Northern Alliance commander and later a Kabul police chief. In an interview, Baba Jan, a cheerful and charismatic leader, insisted he had nothing to do with his nephew’s corporate enterprise.
But the heart of the matter is that insurgents are getting paid for safe passage because there are few other ways to bring goods to the combat outposts and forward operating bases where soldiers need them. By definition, many outposts are situated in hostile terrain, in the southern parts of Afghanistan. The security firms don’t really protect convoys of American military goods here, because they simply can’t; they need the Taliban’s cooperation.
One of the big problems for the companies that ship American military supplies across the country is that they are banned from arming themselves with any weapon heavier than a rifle. That makes them ineffective for battling Taliban attacks on a convoy. “They are shooting the drivers from 3,000 feet away with PKMs,” a trucking company executive in Kabul told me. “They are using RPGs [rocket-propelled grenades] that will blow up an up-armed vehicle. So the security companies are tied up. Because of the rules, security companies can only carry AK-47s, and that’s just a joke. I carry an AK–and that’s just to shoot myself if I have to!”
The rules are there for a good reason: to guard against devastating collateral damage by private security forces. Still, as Hanna of Afghan American Army Services points out, “An AK-47 versus a rocket-propelled grenade–you are going to lose!” That said, at least one of the Host Nation Trucking companies has tried to do battle instead of paying off insurgents and warlords. It is a US-owned firm called Four Horsemen International. Instead of providing payments, it has tried to fight off attackers. And it has paid the price in lives, with horrendous casualties. FHI, like many other firms, refused to talk publicly; but I’ve been told by insiders in the security industry that FHI’s convoys are attacked on virtually every mission.
For the most part, the security firms do as they must to survive. A veteran American manager in Afghanistan who has worked there as both a soldier and a private security contractor in the field told me, “What we are doing is paying warlords associated with the Taliban, because none of our security elements is able to deal with the threat.” He’s an Army veteran with years of Special Forces experience, and he’s not happy about what’s being done. He says that at a minimum American military forces should try to learn more about who is getting paid off.
“Most escorting is done by the Taliban,” an Afghan private security official told me. He’s a Pashto and former mujahedeen commander who has his finger on the pulse of the military situation and the security industry. And he works with one of the trucking companies carrying US supplies. “Now the government is so weak,” he added, “everyone is paying the Taliban.”
To Afghan trucking officials, this is barely even something to worry about. One woman I met was an extraordinary entrepreneur who had built up a trucking business in this male-dominated field. She told me the security company she had hired dealt directly with Taliban leaders in the south. Paying the Taliban leaders meant they would send along an escort to ensure that no other insurgents would attack. In fact, she said, they just needed two armed Taliban vehicles. “Two Taliban is enough,” she told me. “One in the front and one in the back.” She shrugged. “You cannot work otherwise. Otherwise it is not possible.”
Which leads us back to the case of Watan Risk, the firm run by Ahmad Rateb Popal and Rashid Popal, the Karzai family relatives and former drug dealers. Watan is known to control one key stretch of road that all the truckers use: the strategic route to Kandahar called Highway 1. Think of it as the road to the war–to the south and to the west. If the Army wants to get supplies down to Helmand, for example, the trucks must make their way through Kandahar.
Watan Risk, according to seven different security and trucking company officials, is the sole provider of security along this route. The reason is simple: Watan is allied with the local warlord who controls the road. Watan’s company website is quite impressive, and claims its personnel “are diligently screened to weed out all ex-militia members, supporters of the Taliban, or individuals with loyalty to warlords, drug barons, or any other group opposed to international support of the democratic process.” Whatever screening methods it uses, Watan’s secret weapon to protect American supplies heading through Kandahar is a man named Commander Ruhullah. Said to be a handsome man in his 40s, Ruhullah has an oddly high-pitched voice. He wears traditional salwar kameez and a Rolex watch. He rarely, if ever, associates with Westerners. He commands a large group of irregular fighters with no known government affiliation, and his name, security officials tell me, inspires obedience or fear in villages along the road.
It is a dangerous business, of course: until last spring Ruhullah had competition–a one-legged warlord named Commander Abdul Khaliq. He was killed in an ambush.
So Ruhullah is the surviving road warrior for that stretch of highway. According to witnesses, he works like this: he waits until there are hundreds of trucks ready to convoy south down the highway. Then he gets his men together, setting them up in 4×4s and pickups. Witnesses say he does not limit his arsenal to AK-47s but uses any weapons he can get. His chief weapon is his reputation. And for that, Watan is paid royally, collecting a fee for each truck that passes through his corridor. The American trucking official told me that Ruhullah “charges $1,500 per truck to go to Kandahar. Just 300 kilometers.”
It’s hard to pinpoint what this is, exactly–security, extortion or a form of “insurance.” Then there is the question, Does Ruhullah have ties to the Taliban? That’s impossible to know. As an American private security veteran familiar with the route said, “He works both sides… whatever is most profitable. He’s the main commander. He’s got to be involved with the Taliban. How much, no one knows.”
Even NCL, the company owned by Hamed Wardak, pays. Two sources with direct knowledge tell me that NCL sends its portion of US logistics goods in Watan’s and Ruhullah’s convoys. Sources say NCL is billed $500,000 per month for Watan’s services. To underline the point: NCL, operating on a $360 million contract from the US military, and owned by the Afghan defense minister’s son, is paying millions per year from those funds to a company owned by President Karzai’s cousins, for protection.
Hamed Wardak wouldn’t return my phone calls. Milt Bearden, the former CIA officer affiliated with the company, wouldn’t speak with me either. There’s nothing wrong with Bearden engaging in business in Afghanistan, but disclosure of his business interests might have been expected when testifying on US policy in Afghanistan and Pakistan. After all, NCL stands to make or lose hundreds of millions based on the whims of US policy-makers.
It is certainly worth asking why NCL, a company with no known trucking experience, and little security experience to speak of, would win a contract worth $360 million. Plenty of Afghan insiders are asking questions. “Why would the US government give him a contract if he is the son of the minister of defense?” That’s what Mahmoud Karzai asked me. He is the brother of President Karzai, and he himself has been treated in the press as a poster boy for access to government officials. The New York Times even profiled him in a highly critical piece. In his defense, Karzai emphasized that he, at least, has refrained from US government or Afghan government contracting. He pointed out, as others have, that Hamed Wardak had little security or trucking background before his company received security and trucking contracts from the Defense Department. “That’s a questionable business practice,” he said. “They shouldn’t give it to him. How come that’s not questioned?”
I did get the opportunity to ask General Wardak, Hamed’s father, about it. He is quite dapper, although he is no longer the debonair “Gucci commander” Bearden once described. I asked Wardak about his son and NCL. “I’ve tried to be straightforward and correct and fight corruption all my life,” the defense minister said. “This has been something people have tried to use against me, so it has been painful.”
Wardak would speak only briefly about NCL. The issue seems to have produced a rift with his son. “I was against it from the beginning, and that’s why we have not talked for a long time. I have never tried to support him or to use my power or influence that he should benefit.”
When I told Wardak that his son’s company had a US contract worth as much as $360 million, he did a double take. “This is impossible,” he said. “I do not believe this.”
I believed the general when he said he really didn’t know what his son was up to. But cleaning up what look like insider deals may be easier than the next step: shutting down the money pipeline going from DoD contracts to potential insurgents.
Two years ago, a top Afghan security official told me, Afghanistan’s intelligence service, the National Directorate of Security, had alerted the American military to the problem. The NDS delivered what I’m told are “very detailed” reports to the Americans explaining how the Taliban are profiting from protecting convoys of US supplies.
The Afghan intelligence service even offered a solution: what if the United States were to take the tens of millions paid to security contractors and instead set up a dedicated and professional convoy support unit to guard its logistics lines? The suggestion went nowhere.
The bizarre fact is that the practice of buying the Taliban’s protection is not a secret. I asked Col. David Haight, who commands the Third Brigade of the Tenth Mountain Division, about it. After all, part of Highway 1 runs through his area of operations. What did he think about security companies paying off insurgents? “The American soldier in me is repulsed by it,” he said in an interview in his office at FOB Shank in Logar Province. “But I know that it is what it is: essentially paying the enemy, saying, ‘Hey, don’t hassle me.’ I don’t like it, but it is what it is.”
As a military official in Kabul explained contracting in Afghanistan overall, “We understand that across the board 10 percent to 20 percent goes to the insurgents. My intel guy would say it is closer to 10 percent. Generally it is happening in logistics.”
In a statement to The Nation about Host Nation Trucking, Col. Wayne Shanks, the chief public affairs officer for the international forces in Afghanistan, said that military officials are “aware of allegations that procurement funds may find their way into the hands of insurgent groups, but we do not directly support or condone this activity, if it is occurring.” He added that, despite oversight, “the relationships between contractors and their subcontractors, as well as between subcontractors and others in their operational communities, are not entirely transparent.”
In any case, the main issue is not that the US military is turning a blind eye to the problem. Many officials acknowledge what is going on while also expressing a deep disquiet about the situation. The trouble is that–as with so much in Afghanistan–the United States doesn’t seem to know how to fix it.
Article by Aram Roston
link Reference: Adab- Arez.co.uk
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@khokar!
try to write your own article. This is a bad habit of including others articles under your name and that too in a blog. If you dont’ feel comfortable writing in english you can always ask nazia who writes beautiful english to help you in your work.
will love to see if there is any article like the one you copy here solely written by you.
take care.
Indian
You are very a bad guy
why are you taunting me on my language skills for hitting Khokar
did I ever force my competency as author of English writings to you people?
Very bad sense of humor.
Attack khokar without taking me as your shield and with your courage level, ok
IndianCurrents
Thank you very much for your kind visit here on the TPS and happy to know that you have gone through this article written by Aram Roston of daily Nation USA.
But I think you haven’t read the end part of the article. Aram Roston name is very much given there. Please see it again; you will find at the end:
[…………………….The trouble is that–as with so much in Afghanistan–the United States doesn’t seem to know how to fix it.
Article by Aram Roston
Link Reference: Adab- Arez.co.uk]
Ooh you missed it—–!
Any how—– your name comes because you have submitted an item that you have came across and thought that it must be published on TPS that it contains information that all the readers who come here must also know it. In any case to have your name published there or not—- is not the criteria.
I do try to write and have written many items. Only you might have not come across. On TPS usually my submissions contain the truth matter about Indian onslaught and her savage covert actions that she has joined hand with another oppressor USA sitting on our western border—and they are both found busy leveling all the evil designs up against Pakistan.
And—— I hope Nazia will certainly be happy to know that————she finds another fan of her. I keep on telling her the same that she has got many fans out there on the other side of our borders especially our Janum Janum ka saathi——- eastern neighbour—— India.
Oap the typo
After: Ooh you missed it—–!
In the first sentence please omit ‘have’ before ‘came across and thought….’
Thanks
Khokar
If you see the things in reality than you must know the bitter facts of history that in Taliban funding Pakistan army played a main role just like a broker and our generals fill the place of pimps who took these US officials toward more aggressive and greedy warriors of mountains.Some time they picked the drug paddlers for supplying smooth arms supply to these genetic warriors.
This has been already discussed in detail wiht same dates you mentioned in Mr Dan Tow article,
As an ex army officers you shouldn’t deny this cruel fact that internal suicidal bombing on army vehicles and its setup and then toward civilians are actually by product of failure of deals of our generals and these paid warriors,Once they started this for which they got training from ISI camps they followed same tactics as no body in our weak civilian set up can plan to stop them.Now they have indulged themselves this deadly shows as pieces of routine harassment.This is all representation of their acute senseless attitude and shows us that how beastly characters were trained under our boundaries and had joint ventures with our army in many fronts.
For your latest updated I know very well that I have no fans in TPS but all are hidden fan blades who start action when charged by my high voltage generated comments,
Nazia,
Everybody has a thing unique to their personality. A unique quality, a distinguishing characteristic that defines the person and you are a person who got a keen eye and had previously set up your observation post especially to be on watch on the ludicrous affairs of the past—— when Army was in its full bloom of their command and control of Pakistan especially during Mush and brothers era espacially his infamous U-turn.
But—-Mush or no Mush; I don’t think so that Pakistan could have escaped the onslaught of exterminator America when after 911 Bush demanded of every body in the world that either ‘you are with us or with the terrorists’ and every body including the high minded forces of Europe and Asia——– very humbly and without an exception submitted to his lordship. If there was any other government in Pakistan———-they could have not done any different. You are well aware of it that now we have got— Miss Democracy in Pakistan and is in its blooms since long but it is said that——– rather after the dawn of democracy we are being counted as the loyal slaves of America.
Nazia, I have been pointing this thing since long that although Pakistan and its ISI have trained the rouge FATA elements to fight the soviets occupation but they were abandoned and left to loiter around after taht war. They were furious that not only American but the Pakistan also left them.
In the prevalent situ that when American landed in the area after 911; they found this force loitering about in the dens along Pak-afghan border. They sensed their potential as traitors and their willingness that they would work as mercenaries for any body and for any thing— on price. CIA simply picked them up and paid their price to work. Now this faithless creature is working and busy unleashing havoc on the streets of Pakistan.
No doubt Pakistan has to get rid of them and any body else who happens to be their sympathizer.
s
Khokar
You have taken some pieces of Past in which some people and groups are highlighted mostly from Karzai family who got commission from US govt for passing their supplies to their forces.I have just reacted in the same tone as I am still on my points that it was not past but presently our few icons of military establishment are still there to protect these paid warriors.It is sure now army has been divided on this issue but Musharraf’s group is still playing double games with US management.That is the reason US are neither trusting them any more nor interested in funding them directly so far.
You think commencement of swat war was as simple as people are thinking.Some talibanic group came to Bonair and forceful action started without considering the vastness of huge number of civilians in that area.
Our army with full artillery waited long for more than a month on the border of waiziristan showing the whole world that they are planning for tactical attacks on this critical tribal belt.
is this is the standard way to ambush the enemy that you give free time to secure their life and arms in all ways.?
You think that Hillary Clinton and her team of 50 to 60 officials are fool characters who deeply mingled with social groups of Pakistan.Not a single time they accepted the presence of high profile military marines in very sensitive areas of Pakistan.
Capt ali zaidi had all official letters of importing specific guns from Interior ministry and US embassy so why he was removed from he scene when guns were found in the tribal areas of Bannu.
Afghanistan and Iran faced the worst kind of terrorism via Pakistan.Pakistani officials accepted all blames so how these insurgent crossed this border which is under vigilance by NATO forces, US defense system via satellite and through drones which are operating from Pakistan bases.
Dont blame Indian and paid karzai family as we are looking and talking about our internal anarchy.
The destruction of swat, operation of drones and movement of para military staff of US in our areas are explaining us something that is not fair enough to justified as you are trying in favor of army and also not matching with your perceptions.
Without the permission of GHQ, nothing can be done like that what is happening around us as part of daily routines.
I had already told you some details of involvement of senior army officials In NATO supply service.Here there role was same as you found the character of Ahmed ratab popal in above report a double agent or a national pimp.
You know in last days group of crook working generals and their under officers cleverly requested Harvard University for sending them invitations for coming to US so that they would start this type project in Pakistani DHAs.This way the group of almost hundred of officers along with their families have got visa of US for next 5 years and all this was done under the letter pad of DHAs and with full GHQ consent.Now in coming months they would move their assets and kids to safe heaven as now this terrorized city has become quite insecure for their love ones and unaccounted wealth which they earned through war and terror funds.
Dear nazia,
Whereas I totally in agreement in your general resolve of the case but some of your allegations are ludicrous, fake and base less like of Ayesha Siddiqa Agha when she gave her insight into perks that military personnel receive in an event held at Stanford University which was arranged by the Center for South Asia in association with Pakistanis at Stanford and Friends of South Asia in USA and at Union City library.
She said that “Officers get 50-75 acres of land, and soldiers are given roughly 12.5 acres each, but soldiers don’t get other subsidies? Land without water and accessible roads does not mean much, Ayesha Siddiqa said. Officers get these benefits, but soldiers don’t.”
This is totally made up and sheer nonsence.
Khokar
you dont want to say something but all come out of your black and white writing.
It is all true what I mentioned.
This nonsense has been done and I have no doubt about it.
What benefit comes in your fuaji damagh I would gain by such revelation.
You deny what I say but I am still on my words,
Nazia you say that;
# 5, 9
[This nonsense has been done and I have no doubt about it.]
If this is the case then you must be having the evidences also—– then what is the hindrance that you don’t you get cases registered against the culprits. What is stopping you?
Or at least you can reduce all the evidence or the stories that you have got— in writing. Commenting on other peoples written articles is one thing and probably you like the most but I believe that you can write very well.
Regards
Well while reading all accounts and specifically letter have opened my mind. Now I understood American Game and and particularly Pakistani role into it better and why millions of acres of land have been acquired near Kahuta under the grab of Bahrya town.
We should just warn civilians that whoever puts himself near a terrorist puts himself in danger.
Can’t keep fighting like we do.. they figured it out and now they take advantage of our morality.