The Pentagon's office of the inspector general, in a report done jointly with the State Department and the US Agency for International Development, said the Afghan government by the end of 2017 had not expanded its areas of control, even as the US added about 3,500 troops and intensified airstrikes against the Taliban.
"On the sole quantifiable metric discussed publicly to date - expanding security to 80 percent of the Afghan population by the end of 2019 - Afghanistan made no significant progress in 2017," the report said.
Senator Richard Burr, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said this week that recent Taliban attacks killing scores of people in Kabul make it appear the Taliban insurgency is "nowhere near folding," and that the government is incapable of protecting its own citizens.
Earlier this month, Deputy Secretary of State John J. Sullivan said after visiting Kabul and meeting with President Ashraf Ghani and other Afghan government officials that he realized it wasn't a "rosy situation."
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He told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that the Taliban attacks in January were "a real shock to many people in the government."
More than 2,400 Americans have died in Afghanistan since the US launched its war in October 2001 in response to the al-Qaida 9/11 attacks.
The administration touts its Afghan strategy, announced by President Donald Trump in August, as a realistic and more aggressive approach to achieving the goal prior administrations have pursued: to bring the Taliban to an Afghan peace table and to prevent extremist groups like al-Qaida or the Islamic State from using the country as a launch pad for attacks on the West.
Also withheld from public release, the report said, are data on the size, status and combat readiness of Afghan security forces. The US-led coalition also "classified or otherwise restricted information" about the possible creation of a new Afghan National Army militia force, it said.
The report appeared skeptical of U.S. military assertions that the tide of battle has turned against the Taliban. Gen. John Nicholson, the top U.S. commander in Kabul, told reporters in November, "we have turned the corner," with the Taliban changing their tactics from trying to seize control of district population centers to "guerrilla-style warfare," which he defined as suicide attacks designed to maintain relevance and to inflict casualties without gaining new terrain.
"The insurgents went on to expand their control of Afghan territory," it said, as U.S. and international forces withdrew from direct combat at the end of 2014. Trump's strategy gives the U.S. expanded authorities to conduct offensive operations.
"The Taliban has a history of adapting to changing conditions and shifting their tactics in response to operations against them," the report said, "and changes in Taliban operations do not necessarily signal that momentum has irreversibly shifted."
It added: "Overall, the security situation throughout Afghanistan remained a stalemate" at the end of 2017. The report published a pie chart showing that as of October 31 last year, 64 per cent of the Afghan population was under government control or influence; 12 per cent was under Taliban control or influence, and the rest was "contested."
The U.S. Agency for International Development, which participated in producing the report, said that during the final three months of 2017, humanitarian assistance was against impeded by military operations, security threats "throughout the country," violence against humanitarian providers and facilities, and restriction of movement in the country.
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