So far, only three per cent of the 800 square miles of territory currently mined and peppered with unexploded ordnance has been cleaned up. This includes a 60 square-mile-area from which 32,000 pieces of ordnance were removed. Going by this ratio, the actual number of live rounds lying around unprotected elevates to nightmarish amounts. Though half of the 240 ranges will be handed over to the Afghan army, the fate of the rest of them, and whether they will be cleared, remains unknown. The funding for this task has not been issued due to the lack of planning. A US military official explained that since they were at war, ‘they didn’t have time for this’. And considering that the military drawdown is well underway and the US has shuttered half of its 880 bases in Afghanistan, there isn’t sufficient manpower for this daunting task. Afghanistan and this region have suffered dearly from unending conflict in that country for more than three decades and it must be ensured that the legacy of this does not continue to haunt the Afghans even after foreign troops depart.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 4th, 2014.
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Pakistanis wanted NATO get out of Afghanistan, their wish is being granted.
If the demand is to turn back the clock and leave Afghanistan in the state it was back in 2001, then thats no possible.