The Afghan army is training female special forces to take part in night
raids against insurgents, breaking new ground in an ultraconservative
society and filling a vacuum left by departing international forces.
"If men can carry out this duty why not women?" asks Lena Abdali, a
23-year-old Afghan soldier who was one of the first women to join one of
the special units in 2011, reports The Associated Press.
Night raids have long been a divisive issue between Afghan President
Hamid Karzai, who doesn't want foreign troops entering Afghan homes, and
the U.S.-led coalition that says the raids are essential to capturing
Taliban commanders.
Many Afghans, however, have complained that the house raids are
culturally offensive. Having male troops search Afghan females is taboo.
So is touching a family's Quran, the Muslim holy book, or entering a
home without being invited. Another focus of anger has been the
disregard for privacy and Afghan culture because women and children are
usually home during the raids.
The raids now are conducted jointly by U.S. and Afghan forces, but the
female Afghan special forces soldiers play an important role. Their job:
Round up women and children and get them to safety while guarding
against the potential dangers of female suicide bombers or militants
disguised in women's clothes.
The missions have taken on increasing importance and the Afghan
government and the U.S.-led coalition have stepped up training of the
Afghan special forces as international troops prepare to end their
combat mission in 23 months.
President Barack Obama announced earlier this week that he will
withdraw about half of the 66,000 U.S. troops now in Afghanistan within a
year. He did not spell out what U.S. military presence would remain
after 2014.
Afghan women have been part of their nation's security forces for
years, but they didn't start being recruited for the special forces
until 2011. Defence Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi said
more than 1,000 women were in the army — a small fraction of the total
force of 195,000.
The role of female soldiers also has come under debate in the United
States after the Pentagon decided last month to open up front-line
combat jobs to women.
Col. Jalaluddin Yaftaly, the commander of the joint Special Unit of the
Afghan National Army, said villagers don't like foreign forces to carry
out operations in their homes, but they have welcomed the Afghan
special forces units and cooperated with them in many operations.
"We were faced with so many problems when we didn't have female special
forces in our units," Yaftaly said. "Female special forces are quite
useful."
On a recent frigid winter morning, an Afghan special forces unit,
comprising 30 men and women soldiers, drilled at a training centre in
Kabul.
As part of the exercise, the unit was told that an insurgent leader was
hiding in a house and women and children were inside with him.
The men on the team prepared to raid the house and arrest or kill the
target. Abdali and two other female colleagues were tasked with making
sure no women or children were harmed during the operation.
The most dangerous part of their assignment was the possibility that
the main target was hiding among the women — perhaps in disguise — so
Abdali and her colleagues had to stay alert to make sure they themselves
were not attacked while getting innocent women and children out of
harm's way.
The military advantages to having Afghan female special forces
soldiers, however, have not yet offset the social issues women like
Abdali face in doing their jobs.
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