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    Munitions Turn-in Program shows promise in Kandahar

    KABUL, AFGHANISTAN

    07.16.2010

    Courtesy Story

    ISAF Joint Command

    By Sgt. Ben Watson

    KABUL- In Afghanistan's Kandahar province, residents living in the districts to the north are taking advantage of the U.S. Department of Defense's Small Rewards Program, and as a result, countless lives are being saved.

    For many safety-minded people around the world, reporting stray weapons or munitions in their neighborhood to the police would be an automatic reaction, but in Afghanistan, a country that has been riddled with armed conflicts and wars, this hasn't always been the case.

    The SRP, an initiative aimed at reducing weapons that often cause harm to Afghan citizens and international security forces, has been used in Afghanistan since 2005, according to the U.S. Central Command website.

    A key part of the program is citizens passing along information on where to find weapons or munitions. This information is shared with U.S.

    Special Operations Forces through a tip line or by face-to-face interaction. Special Operations Forces follow up on these tips and if anything is found, the citizen who provided the tip is paid according to DoD guidelines on SRP.

    At one location in Kandahar province, more than 30 different types of munitions have been turned in since the SRP began there in March. This total includes more than 90 mortars, 52 rocket-propelled grenades, 24 antipersonnel mines, and almost 30 57 mm rockets.

    "Any one of these could have been used in an [improvised explosive device]," said a USSOF chief warrant officer working in Arghandab district, Kandahar province. "Thanks to ordinary Afghan citizens turning all this stuff in, none of these munitions made it into an improvised explosive device (IED)."

    In addition to what's brought into Afghanistan by the Taliban, the country still contains munitions left behind after the invasion and withdrawal of Soviet forces nearly 20 years ago. Some parts of the country have known and marked minefields. But other places contain munitions stored by insurgents, according to a USSOF intelligence sergeant.

    These conditions have motivated many Afghan citizens to provide tips on stray weapons that are being stored and used to inflict damage throughout the country, mostly by the Taliban.

    Afghan children occasionally report the munitions they discover to their parents. Sometimes, the children decide to move the munitions themselves. This scenario recently played out for U.S Special Forces in Kandahar province.

    "We got a call on our tip line," said the USSOF warrant officer. "A woman was calling and saying her son had found some grenades. We worked with her to keep it confidential and soon enough, her son brought the grenades to us."

    Shortly before that event, the USSOF warrant officer said "We had somebody bring in an entire IED."

    When Coalition forces are given the location of weapons and explosives, or are simply handed the materiel, as with the turned-in grenades, first they investigate. Then the items are collected and destroyed. This occurs in an established and secure area which is surrounded by ample cover and always a safe distance away from citizens and property. Lastly, the citizen who provided the information which led to the munitions discovery is paid in Afghanis, the currency of Afghanistan.

    "It's a great arrangement," says a USSOF captain whose unit has collected munitions as part of the program. "There's no doubt in my mind this program is reducing IEDs. If our guys had not destroyed those [munitions], they'd still be out there as a threat, or worse; they would have already blown up, killing civilians or one of our guys."

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 07.16.2010
    Date Posted: 07.16.2010 02:05
    Story ID: 52905
    Location: KABUL, AF

    Web Views: 155
    Downloads: 146

    PUBLIC DOMAIN