Departure Of U.S. Contractors Crippling The Afghan Military

An Afghan Air Force helicopter lands at Camp Shorabak, Afghanistan, May 11, 2021. (Jim Huylebroek/The New York Times)  

New York Times: Departure of U.S. Contractors Poses Myriad Problems for Afghan Military 

KABUL, Afghanistan — An Afghan Air Force UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter, shelled while on the ground by the Taliban on Wednesday, sat helpless at a small outpost in the country’s southeast, its burning and damaged airframe displayed in a video on Twitter. 

Even if it could get to the chopper to try to service it, the Afghan military would face another escalating problem: It is heavily reliant on American and other foreign contractors for repairs, maintenance, fueling, training and other jobs necessary to keep their forces operating, and those contractors are now departing along with the U.S. military, leaving a void that leaders on both sides say could be crippling to Afghan forces as they face the Taliban alone. 

The problem is especially acute for the Afghan Air Force. Not only does the small but professional fleet provide air support to beleaguered troops, but it is also essential to supplying and evacuating hundreds of outposts and bases across the country — the quickly thinning line that separates government and Taliban-controlled territory.  

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Update: Without U.S. contractors, the Afghan military will lose its main advantage over the Taliban — air power (NBC News)  

WNU Editor: This was all predicted months ago .... U.S. contractors pullout could devastate Afghan forces - U.S. government watchdog (Reuters).

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