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Old 12-17-2020, 06:06 AM
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Exclamation Sensitive US military equipment given to local forces goes unaccounted for in Afghani

Sensitive US military equipment given to local forces goes unaccounted for in Afghanistan, watchdog says
By: Phillip Walter Wellman - Stars & Stripes News - 12-17-20
Re: https://www.stripes.com/news/pacific...-says-1.655610

Photo link: https://www.stripes.com/polopoly_fs/..._900/image.jpg
An Afghan National Army commando tests his night vision device during mission preparation in Kabul district, Afghanistan, in 2013. The Defense Department has failed to keep track of military equipment including surveillance systems, controls for laser-guided bombs and night vision devices that were provided to the Afghan government, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan said in a report released Thursday, Dec. 17, 2020.
By: Jame K. McCann/U.S. ARMY

KABUL, Afghanistan — The Defense Department has failed to keep track of surveillance systems, controls for laser-guided bombs, night-vision devices and other equipment provided to the Afghan government, a U.S. government watchdog agency said Thursday.

The goods transferred to the Afghan government are “some of the most sensitive of all defense articles” and were supposed to be fully inventoried by the U.S. every year, to ensure they were being used for their intended purpose and were not transferred to a third party without U.S. government consent, the report by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan said.

But only 40% of the sensitive articles given to the Afghans were inventoried between May 2019 and April 2020, it said, and about 5% of items that were supposed to have been tracked since October 2016 have never been inventoried at all.

Inadequate tracking means that “sensitive technology remains susceptible to theft or loss,” and the Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan, which is responsible for monitoring the equipment, is less able to verify that Afghan units “are using these articles in accordance with their transfer agreements,” the report said.

Most of the articles supplied to the Afghan security forces during the period covered in the report, from 2017 to this year, were night-vision devices, SIGAR said.

In December 2017, CSTC-A found “a serious deficiency in [night-vision device] accountability” resulting from discrepancies in reports it was receiving from Afghan government officials and data that U.S. personnel collected, it said.

Two years ago, Afghan forces told the U.S. monitors that 19 of 48 U.S.-provided night-vision devices had fallen into enemy hands and 29 were listed as destroyed, damaged or lost.

Security constraints and travel limitations in Afghanistan make it difficult to monitor the U.S.-provided equipment and how it's being used, the report said.

Although U.S. monitors aren't required to complete enhanced inspections when security conditions prevent them from doing so, “not conducting all of the inspections limits the command’s ability to verify reported numbers of lost and destroyed articles, and discover additional broken or missing articles the (Afghan forces) may not have reported," SIGAR said.

SIGAR recommended that DOD change its monitoring procedures to make them more suitable for Afghanistan.

The Pentagon plans to address the failings identified by SIGAR, Thomas Croci, deputy assistant secretary of defense for Afghanistan, Pakistan and Central Asia, said in a comment included in the report.

“DoD recognizes the importance of providing the greatest possible accountability for U.S.-funded equipment provided to (Afghan forces),” Croci said.

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Personal note: As much as you would like to give them an edge by letting them use our technology - but to have go misplaced - or stolen now give's the bad guys more opportunities to turn our advantages over to them. It happens all the time. If we drop or leave anything behind - our advantages our lost and we've got nobody to blaime but ourselves. Inventory is a must in the field for if the bad guys get our advantages we've only dug hole for ourselves. When I was in we had to inventory daily our equipment - if anything was missing or gone we had to report it and take ass chewing for not knowing where anything was. Shit happens - but we've got to be more aware and live the reprocautions of the bad guys new opportunities with our gear.

Boats
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