Description |
1 online resource (iv, 32 pages) : color illustration, color maps |
Series |
Asia report ; no. 268 |
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ICG Asia report ; no. 268.
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Contents |
Introduction -- Pro-government militias pre-2001 -- Pro-government militias post-2001 -- Future options -- Conclusion |
Summary |
"The Afghan Local Police (ALP) began as a small U.S. experiment but grew into a significant part of Afghanistan's security apparatus. In hundreds of rural communities, members serve on the front lines of a war that is reaching heights of violence not witnessed since 2001, as insurgents start to credibly threaten major cities. The ALP also stand in the middle of a policy debate about whether the Kabul government can best defend itself with loosely regulated units outside the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) structure. The mixed record suggests that the ALP contribute to security where local factors allow recruitment of members from the villages they patrol and where they respect their own communities. But such conditions do not exist in many districts. The ALP and pro-government militias are cheap but dangerous, and Kabul should resist calls for their expansion. Reforms are needed to strengthen oversight, dismiss ALP in the many locations where they worsen security and incorporate the remaining units into the ANSF"--Publisher's web site |
Notes |
"4 June 2015." |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references |
Notes |
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ICG, viewed June 5, 2015) |
Subject |
Police -- Afghanistan
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Internal security -- Afghanistan
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Security sector -- Afghanistan
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Internal security.
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Militia.
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Police.
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Security sector.
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SUBJECT |
Afghanistan -- Militia
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Subject |
Afghanistan.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
International Crisis Group, issuing body.
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