FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Outlook on Afghan Progress Remains Positive, Press Secretary Says
By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
American Forces Press
Service
WASHINGTON, Feb. 26, 2013 - Despite discovery of a clerical error that
incorrectly indicated a drop in Taliban attacks, the Defense Department's
assessment of progress in Afghanistan is unchanged, Pentagon Press Secretary
George Little said here today.
At a Pentagon news conference, Little said the incorrect information is being
fixed.
"This is a regrettable error in our database systems that was discovered
during a routine quality check," he said. "We are making the appropriate
adjustments. In spite of the stated adjustment, our assessment of the
fundamentals of progress in Afghanistan remains positive."
Little said
the clerical error doesn't change the fact that 80 percent of the violence has
been taking place in areas where less than 20 percent of the Afghan population
lives. The Taliban have been pushed out of population centers and have failed to
retake any of the areas they lost, he added.
Afghan security forces are now in the lead for the vast majority of partnered
operations, and have taken the leading role in providing security for 87 percent
of the country's population, Little told reporters.
"There's a tendency sometimes to fixate on one metric, whether it's this
particular database number or insider attacks or casualties," he said. "The
complete picture of progress in Afghanistan is much more nuanced, and I would
encourage you to look at that overall picture."
Little also said the congressionally mandated Report on Progress Toward
Security and Stability in Afghanistan will be reviewed for any necessary
adjustments, but that he doesn't believe a broader review is necessary.
"As we transition in partner war with the Afghans, we're going to have to
collect information with them, so we need to make sure that our numbers and
their numbers are accurate, that they're reported effectively, that our systems
are capable of processing those numbers, and then we drive out the correct
analytics at the end," he said.
The Defense Department has a duty to convey information that is as accurate
as possible, the press secretary said. "So I view this as a limited instance at
this stage," he added. "If there is a broader problem, of course, we'll be
forthright about it."
Little said this year's statistics show a "story of tremendous progress" for
the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan.
"It's, in part, what steps American and ISAF partners have done to orient
this very effective campaign in the right direction," he said. "It's also about
what the Afghans are doing themselves to orient their own campaign, and it's
about what we're doing together in Afghanistan.
"And we're seeing major muscle movements on all three tracks," he continued.
"And I think if you add the progress up along those three tracks -- bearing in
mind that there are still challenges out there, and we're not at all discounting
the challenges that still remain in the midst of a war -- then the overall trend
lines are very positive."
Little said the goal of ISAF partners has been to "make this war effort over
time, more and more Afghan, not just the face of Afghans providing security for
their own country, but also their capabilities."
"And we are, I think, doing a very effective job enabling them," he added.
"And in many cases, they have surpassed our own expectations. That's not to say
we don't have work to be done ... in certain areas. But they have really taken
on this fight, willingly, and have made great sacrifices, and we're trying to
help them every step of the way."