Afghan Local Police

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Afghan Local Police
Abbreviation ALP
Agency overview
Formed 2010
Employees 19,600 (February 2013)[1]
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
General nature
Operational structure

The Afghan Local Police (ALP) is a US-UK sponsored local law enforcement agency, defence force and militia in Afghanistan as part of the Afghan Ministry of Interior.[2] Formed primarily as a local defence force against Taliban insurgents its members have no power of arrest and are only authorised to investigate crime if requested to do so by the Afghan National Police (ANP). It was established at the request of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Summer 2010 and is paid for by the United States. Officers undergo three weeks military and police training by ISAF personnel and receive weapons and a uniform. They are intended to defend their villages from insurgent attack and allow the ANP to focus on offensive operations. It was originally intended to function for between two and five years.

The US government provided funding in February 2013 to expand the ALP to 45,000 members and to provide the programme until at least 2018, anticipating the withdrawal of most foreign troops from the country by the end of 2014. The ALP has received a mixed press with its members being involved in several green on blue attacks, though it has borne a heavy cost in its fight against the Taliban - suffering casualty rates twice that of the ANP and Afghan Army.

Formation

The Afghan government passed legislation to establish the Local Police in July 2010 and formal establishment occurred under a presidential decree of 16 August that year. An initial target of 10,000 members was set by the Afghan government and the US Congress agreed to provide funding for up to 30,000 policemen. It was originally planned to operate for between two and five years.[3] By August 2011 7,000 men had been recruited. Nomination and vetting is made by local village councils, with training provided by ISAF (primarily US) forces.[3][4] ALP members report to the police district chief and come under the remit of the Ministry of Interior.[3] The ALP was established with the backing of US General David Petraeus but with strong opposition from Afghan President Hamid Karzai.[5] The US Combined Forces Special Operations Component Command- Afghanistan (CFSOCC-A) manages the American component of the programme.[6]

Operation

File:USMC-111017-M-HB024-024.jpg
An ALP commander (in white) leads three ALP officers (in dark green) towards the sound of machine gun fire

The ALP was established as an armed defence force at village-level and does not have police powers. It was intended to free Afghan security forces from the defensive role and allow them to focus on offensive operations in advance of the withdrawal of foreign military units from Afghanistan.[3] ALP candidates receive three weeks of training some of which is delivered by US special forces personnel.[3][7] The training primarily covers military skills such as marksmanship and IED detection but also covers human rights, the correct use of force and the Afghan constitution. ALP officers do not have powers of arrest but can detain individuals for a limited amount of time before turning them over to the national police.[6] The ALP is not intended to investigate crime (and can do so only if asked by the National Police) and is uniformed in khaki in contrast to the Afghan National Police's (ANP) blue uniforms.[1][4][8] The Local Police are not permitted to carry arms outside of their home districts[8] ALP officers hold a one year employment contract, there is a provision in place for officers to transfer to the ANP or the Afghan Army upon completion of their one year service.[8]

File:USMC-110721-N-TH989-062.jpg
An Afghan receives familiarisation training with the AK-47 during an ALP training programme run by the British Royal Military Police

The ALP is intended to provide a local security presence whose members are known to those that they seek to protect. Previously this work fell to the Afghan National Police who were often sent from further afield and sometimes could not even speak the language of the local populace.[7] A target of 30 ALP officers per village and 300 in each district has been set by CFSOCC-A.[6] Potential recruits are biometrically screened in conjunction with the Afghan National Directorate of Security for potential criminal or terrorist connections.[6] Potential ALP officers must be Afghan nationals aged between 19 and 45, demonstrate patriotism and be fit and healthy.[8] Monthly salaries are between 6,000 and 8,250 afghanis per month.[8] The US government funds ALP salaries, weapons, ammunition and training through the Afghan Security Forces Fund that provides the finance direct to the Ministry of Interior.[6] The ultimate goal is for ALPs to function independently of the US security forces with all ALP posts seeking to be independent by the end of 2014.[6]

In February 2013 the US government announced plans to expand the ALP programme. The Pentagon will provide an additional $1.2 billion to extend the programme to at least 2018 and provide for 45,000 officers.[1] US military commanders hope that the programme will allow for the withdrawal of the majority of US troops by 2014 with only a small cadre of special forces personnel remaining to provide training to ALP officers and other Afghan security forces.[1] As of February 2013 the ALP had a presence in just 100 of Afghanistan's 400 districts, though plans were in place to expand this to a further 44 districts within the next few months.[1]

Incidents

File:Defense.gov photo essay 120529-F-YA200-032.jpg
Afghan Local Police officers during a graduation ceremony in May 2012

The Human Rights Watch has raised concerns that the ALP simply provides arms and training to another militia and has led to abuses of power by its members.[3] At least 77 ALP officers had been investigated for criminal activity by February 2013, this included serious allegations of murder and rape.[1] Concerns have also been raised over the power it places in the hands of local village elders, the increased proliferation of weapons, the possible infiltration by Taliban, the financial cost and the reliance on western trainers.[7] The use of the ALP has been likened to a local militia, the use of which by the USSR in the 1980s left Afghans wary of similar forces.[7]

The Local Police have been involved in several green on blue attacks against ISAF security forces or their Afghan colleagues. On 30 March 2012 a local policeman poisoned and shot nine of his colleagues in an attack he carried out on behalf of the Taliban in Yayakhil, Paktika Province.[9] A local policeman killed two US soldiers in Kinisk, Farah Province on 17 August 2012 after he was handed a weapon to begin training with. The policeman was shot dead by US and Afghan forces and a National Police officer was wounded.[10] Following a spate of such attacks the US military halted training to the ALP in September 2012 to re-vet new candidates, existing members of the force were not affected by the decision.[11] A local policeman who had infiltrated the organisation drugged and, with Taliban forces, shot 11 colleagues and six co-operating civilians at an ALP post in Ghazni Province, the worst such incident the force has suffered.[12][13]

The Afghan Local Police have been targeted by insurgents on numerous occasions. An attack on an ALP post in Khaki Safed, Farah Province in April 2012 left eight policeman dead and two captured and within the same timeframe a suicide bombing in the north of the country killed an ALP commander and his bodyguard and wounded 18 others.[14] Another attack towards the end of the month killed 10 ALP officers when a roadside bomb hit the truck they were travelling in.[15] Four policemen and five civilians were killed in a targeted suicide bombing on 18 June 2012 at Tagab in Kapisa Province, 17 civilians were wounded.[16] Six ALP officers were killed in an explosion on 10 October 2012 in Nad Ali in Helmand Province.[17] In all the casualty rate in the ALP runs at 6.2%, more than double that of the rest of the Afghan security forces.[1]

References

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Further reading

Journals
Reports