By Nick Turse, cross-posted by Tom Dispatch
In late December, the lot was just a big blank: a few
burgundy metal shipping containers sitting in an expanse of crushed
eggshell-colored gravel inside a razor-wire-topped fence. The American
military in Afghanistan doesn’t want to talk about it, but one day
soon, it will be a new hub for the American drone war in the Greater
Middle East.
Next year, that empty lot will be a two-story concrete intelligence
facility for America’s drone war, brightly lit and filled with powerful
computers kept in climate-controlled comfort in a country where most of
the population has no access to electricity.
It will boast almost 7,000 square feet of offices, briefing and
conference rooms, and a large “processing, exploitation, and
dissemination” operations center -- and, of course, it will be built
with American tax dollars.
Nor is it an anomaly. Despite all the talk of drawdowns and withdrawals, there has been a years-long building boom
in Afghanistan that shows little sign of abating. In early 2010, the
U.S.-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) had nearly 400 bases in Afghanistan. Today, Lieutenant Lauren Rago of ISAF public affairs tells TomDispatch, the number tops 450.
The hush-hush, high-tech, super-secure facility at the massive air
base in Kandahar is just one of many building projects the U.S. military
currently has planned or underway in Afghanistan. While some U.S.
bases are indeed closing up shop or being transferred to the Afghan government, and there’s talk of combat operations slowing or ending next year, as well as a withdrawal
of American combat forces from Afghanistan by 2014, the U.S. military
is still preparing for a much longer haul at mega-bases like Kandahar
and Bagram airfields. The same is true even of some smaller camps,
forward operating bases (FOBs), and combat outposts (COPs) scattered
through the country’s backlands. “Bagram is going through a significant
transition during the next year to two years,” Air Force Lieutenant
Colonel Daniel Gerdes of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Bagram Office
recently told Freedom Builder, a Corps of Engineers publication. “We’re transitioning... into a long-term, five-year, 10-year vision for the base.”
Whether the U.S. military will still be in Afghanistan in five or 10
years remains to be seen, but steps are currently being taken to make
that possible. U.S. military publications, plans and schematics,
contracting documents, and other official data examined by TomDispatch
catalog hundreds of construction projects worth billions of dollars
slated to begin, continue, or conclude in 2012.
While many of these efforts are geared toward structures for Afghan
forces or civilian institutions, a considerable number involve U.S.
facilities, some of the most significant being dedicated to the
ascendant forms of American warfare: drone operations and missions by elite special operations units.
The available plans for most of these projects suggest durability.
“The structures that are going in are concrete and mortar, rather than
plywood and tent skins,” says Gerdes. As of last December, his office
was involved in 30 Afghan construction projects for U.S. or
international coalition partners worth almost $427 million.
The Big Base Build-Up
Recently, the New York Times reported
that President Obama is likely to approve a plan to shift much of the
U.S. effort in Afghanistan to special operations forces. These elite
troops would then conduct kill/capture missions and train local troops
well beyond 2014. Recent building efforts in the country bear this
out.
A major project at Bagram Air Base, for instance, involves the
construction of a special operations forces complex, a clandestine base
within a base that will afford America’s black ops troops secrecy and
near-absolute autonomy from other U.S. and coalition forces. Begun in
2010, the $29 million project is slated to be completed this May and
join roughly 90 locations around the country where troops from Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force-Afghanistan have been stationed.
Elsewhere on Bagram, tens of millions of dollars are being spent on
projects that are less sexy but no less integral to the war effort, like
paving dirt roads and upgrading drainage systems on the mega-base. In
January, the U.S. military awarded a $7 million contract to a Turkish
construction company to build a 24,000-square-foot command-and-control
facility. Plans are also in the works for a new operations center to
support tactical fighter jet missions, a new flight-line fire station,
as well as more lighting and other improvements to support the American
air war.
Last month, Afghan President Hamid Karzai ordered
that the U.S.-run prison at Bagram be transferred to Afghan control.
By the end of January, the U.S. had issued a $36 million contract for
the construction, within a year, of a new prison on the base. While
details are sparse, plans for the detention center indicate a thoroughly
modern, high-security facility complete with guard towers, advanced
surveillance systems, administrative facilities, and the capacity to
house about 2,000 prisoners.
At Kandahar Air Field, that new intelligence facility for the drone
war will be joined by a similarly-sized structure devoted to
administrative operations and maintenance tasks associated with robotic
aerial missions. It will be able to accommodate as many as 180
personnel at a time. With an estimated combined price tag of up to $5
million, both buildings will be integral to Air Force and possibly CIA
operations involving both the MQ-1 Predator drone and its more advanced
and more heavily-armed progeny, the MQ-9 Reaper.
The military is keeping information about these drone facilities
under extraordinarily tight wraps. They refused to answer questions
about whether, for instance, the construction of these new centers for
robotic warfare are in any way related to the loss
of Shamsi Air Base in neighboring Pakistan as a drone operations
center, or if they signal efforts to increase the tempo of drone
missions in the years ahead. The International Joint Command’s chief of
Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) operations, aware
that such questions were to be posed, backed out of a planned interview
with TomDispatch.
“Unfortunately our ISR chief here in the International Joint Command
is going to be unable to address your questions,” Lieutenant Ryan Welsh
of ISAF Joint Command Media Outreach explained by email just days before
the scheduled interview. He also made it clear that any question
involving drone operations in Pakistan was off limits. “The issues that
you raise are outside the scope under which the IJC operates, therefore
we are unable to facilitate this interview request.”
Whether the construction at Kandahar is designed to free up
facilities elsewhere for CIA drone operations across the border in
Pakistan or is related only to missions within Afghanistan, it strongly
suggests a ramping up of unmanned operations. It is, however, just one
facet of the ongoing construction at the air field. This month, a $26
million project to build 11 new structures devoted to tactical vehicle
maintenance at Kandahar is scheduled for completion. With two large
buildings for upkeep and repairs, one devoted strictly to fixing tires,
another to painting vehicles, as well as an industrial-sized car wash,
and administrative and storage facilities, the big base’s building boom
shows no sign of flickering out.
Construction and Reconstruction
This year, at Herat Air Base in the province of the same name
bordering Turkmenistan and Iran, the U.S. is slated to begin a
multimillion-dollar project to enhance its special forces’ air
operations. Plans are in the works to expand apron space -- where
aircraft can be parked, serviced, and loaded or unloaded -- for
helicopters and airplanes, as well as to build new taxiways and aircraft
shelters.
That project is just one of nearly 130, cumulatively valued at about
$1.5 billion, slated to be carried out in Herat, Helmand, and Kandahar
provinces this year, according to Army Corps of Engineers documents
examined by TomDispatch. These also include efforts at Camp Tombstone
and Camp Dwyer, both in Helmand Province as well as Kandahar’s FOB
Hadrian and FOB Wilson. The U.S. military also recently awarded a
contract for more air field apron space at a base in Kunduz,
a new secure entrance and new roads for FOB Delaram II, and new
utilities and roads at FOB Shank, while the Marines recently built a new
chapel at Camp Bastion.
Seven years ago, Forward Operating Base Sweeney,
located a mile up in a mountain range in Zabul Province, was a
well-outfitted, if remote, American base. After U.S. troops abandoned
it, however, the base fell into disrepair. Last month, American troops
returned in force and began rebuilding the outpost, constructing
everything from new troop housing to a new storage facility. “We built a
lot of buildings, we put up a lot of tents, we filled a lot of
sandbags, and we increased our force protection significantly,” Captain
Joe Mickley, commanding officer of the soldiers taking up residence at
the base, told a military reporter.
Decommission and Deconstruction
Hesco barriers are, in essence, big bags of dirt. Up to seven feet tall, made of canvas and heavy gauge wire mesh, they form protective walls
around U.S. outposts all over Afghanistan. They’ll take the worst of
sniper rounds, rifle-propelled grenades, even mortar shells, but one
thing can absolutely wreck them -- the Marines’ 9th Engineer Support
Battalion.
At the beginning of December, the 9th Engineers were building bases
and filling up Hescos in Helmand Province. By the end of the month,
they were tearing others down.
Wielding pickaxes, shovels, bolt-cutters, powerful rescue saws, and
front-end loaders, they have begun “demilitarizing” bases, cutting
countless Hescos -- which cost $700 or more a pop -- into heaps of
jagged scrap metal and bulldozing berms in advance of the announced
American withdrawal from Afghanistan. At Firebase Saenz, for example,
Marines were bathed in a sea of crimson sparks as they sawed their way
through the metal mesh and let the dirt spill out, leaving a country
already haunted by the ghosts of British and Russian bases with yet
another defunct foreign outpost. After Saenz, it was on to another
patrol base slated for destruction.
Not all rural outposts are being torn down, however. Some are being handed over
to the Afghan Army or police. And new facilities are now being built
for the indigenous forces at an increasing rate. “If current
projections remain accurate, we will award 18 contracts in February,”
Bonnie Perry, the head of contracting for the Army Corps of Engineers’
Afghanistan Engineering District-South, told
military reporter Karla Marshall. “Next quarter we expect that awards
will remain high, with the largest number of contract awards occurring
in May.” One of the projects underway is a large base near Herat, which
will include barracks, dining facilities, office space, and other
amenities for Afghan commandos.
Tell Me How This Ends
No one should be surprised that the U.S. military is building up and
tearing down bases at the same time, nor that much of the new
construction is going on at mega-bases, while small outposts in the
countryside are being abandoned. This is exactly what you would expect
of an occupation force looking to scale back its “footprint” and end
major combat operations while maintaining an on-going presence in
Afghanistan. Given the U.S. military’s projected retreat to its giant
bases and an increased reliance on kill/capture black-ops as well as
unmanned air missions, it’s also no surprise that its signature projects
for 2012 include a new special operations forces compound, clandestine
drone facilities, and a brand new military prison.
There’s little doubt Bagram Air Base will exist in five or 10 years.
Just who will be occupying it is, however, less clear. After all, in
Iraq, the Obama administration negotiated for some way to station a significant
military force -- 10,000 or more troops -- there beyond a withdrawal
date that had been set in stone for years. While a token number of U.S.
troops and a highly militarized State Department contingent
remain there, the Iraqi government largely thwarted the American
efforts -- and now, even the State Department presence is being halved.
It’s less likely this will be the case in Afghanistan, but it remains
possible. Still, it’s clear that the military is building in that
country as if an enduring American presence were a given. Whatever the
outcome, vestiges of the current base-building boom will endure and
become part of America’s Afghan legacy.
On Bagram’s grounds stands a distinctive structure
called the “Crow’s Nest.” It’s an old control tower built by the
Soviets to coordinate their military operations in Afghanistan. That
foreign force left the country in 1989. The Soviet Union itself departed from the planet less than three years later. The tower remains.
America’s new prison in Bagram will undoubtedly remain, too. Just
who the jailers will be and who will be locked inside five years or 10
years from now is, of course, unknown. But given the history -- marked
by torture and deaths -- of the appalling treatment of inmates at Bagram and, more generally, of the brutality toward prisoners by all parties to the conflict over the years, in no scenario are the results likely to be pretty.
Nick Turse is the associate editor of TomDispatch.com. An award-winning journalist, his work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the Nation, and regularly at TomDispatch.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
The Pentagon's Afghan Basing Plans For Prisons, Drones And Black Ops
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Afghanistan
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