NEW YORK - The United States and Afghanistan have been providing aid to anti-Taliban militias in several parts of Afghanistan, American officials said.
"American and Afghan officials have begun helping a number of anti-Taliban militias that have independently taken up arms against insurgents in several parts of Afghanistan, prompting hopes of a large-scale tribal rebellion against the Taliban," The New York Times reported Saturday from Kabul.
US and Afghan officials said the militia aid was part of the Community Defense Initiative that uses militia troops to provide security for Afghan communities from Taliban forces, The New York Times reported online Saturday.
While the anti-Taliban militias were created independently, U.S. and Afghan officials said they are hopeful they can help create similar local forces in Afghanistan in the future.
"The idea is to get people to take responsibility for their own security," an unidentified senior U.S. military official in Kabul said of the plan. "In many places they are already doing that."
"What we are talking about is a local, spontaneous and indigenous response to the Taliban," Afghan Interior Minister Hanif Atmar said. "The Afghans are saying, 'We are willing and determined and capable to defend our country; just give us the resources.'"
The Times said despite the success of such militias, officials remain concerned they could eventually turn on one another or simply insert themselves as the new dominant power in Afghan neighborhoods.
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