[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 98 (Monday, June 28, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5481-S5482]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
USE OF IEDS IN AFGHANISTAN
Mr. CASEY. Madam President, I rise tonight to speak about the war in
Afghanistan, but on a particular subject. In particular, I wish to
speak about the terribly destructive force of improvised explosive
devices. These improvised explosive devices, known by the acronym IEDs,
represent the single greatest threat to the United States and coalition
forces in Afghanistan. The impact of this deadly tool of war has been
felt in my home State of Pennsylvania, and I know so many of our
colleagues have had not only loved ones in some cases but constituents
who have lost their lives because of IEDs. In Pennsylvania, we have
lost marines, soldiers, and National Guard troops to this insidious
threat.
In the first 4 months of 2010, incidents of IEDs in Afghanistan
increased 94 percent over a comparable period in the previous year
according to the United Nations.
In 2009, more than 6,000 IEDs were discovered, the vast majority of
which
[[Page S5482]]
used ammonium nitrate as their main explosive ingredient. This is the
No. 1 killer of United States and coalition forces. In 2009 alone, 275
American troops were killed by IEDs. In addition to the lethality of
IEDs, they have a tremendously demoralizing effect on our troops. Just
the threat of IEDs forces troops to move at a slower pace and take away
their focus from the mission at hand.
Ammonium nitrate bombs, often crude wood and graphite pressure-plate
devices buried in dirt lanes or heaps of trash, are very difficult to
detect.
Americans remember, unfortunately, the deadly power of ammonium
nitrate from its use by Timothy McVeigh in the 1995 Oklahoma City
bombing which killed 168 Americans. It can be used, as we know, as a
fertilizer as well as an explosive in the mining and construction
industry. Its use in the United States is tightly restricted. President
Karzai of Afghanistan has rightly recognized the threat and has banned
its use as a fertilizer. Afghan troops and police, supported by ISAF
forces, have begun a concerted effort to crack down on its
proliferation, distribution, and sale. On Wednesday, ISAF reported that
11 tons of ammonium nitrate were seized by Afghan forces supported by
NATO troops. These 11 tons would have been enough to build more than
500 IEDs--IEDs that could have been used to kill NATO forces, Afghan
troops, and civilians.
The Afghan Government appears committed to this fight and has enacted
the appropriate legal measures and enforcement efforts. But ammonium
nitrate is still ubiquitous in Afghanistan due to smuggling along
supply routes from its neighbors, particularly along Pakistan's tribal
belt where smuggling is a way of life. The Los Angeles Times newspaper
reported last month that as much as 85 tons of ammonium nitrate is
smuggled into Afghanistan from Pakistan in a single night, a shipment
that could yield more than 2,500 bombs. Even as we heard recently that
11 tons were intercepted, this published report says that 85 tons can
be smuggled in a single night.
Along with seven of my colleagues--Senators Levin, Reed, Snowe, Webb,
Kyl, McCaskill, and Kaufman--I have submitted a resolution calling for
continued support for and increased efforts and focus by the
Governments of Pakistan, Afghanistan, and the central Asian countries
in that region to effectively monitor and regulate the manufacture,
sale, transport, and use of ammonium nitrate fertilizer in order to
prevent criminal groups, insurgents, and terrorist organizations from
transporting ammonium nitrate into Afghanistan where it is used in
these improvised explosive devices.
I am committed to highlighting this threat and supporting United
States and international efforts to crack down on the proliferation of
precursor chemicals such as ammonium nitrate. The Joint Improvised
Explosive Device Defeat Organization--JIEDDO--which includes coalition
partners from the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia, has led an
impressive effort to combat IEDs at every step in the process. The U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency will soon commence Project
Global Shield, which is an unprecedented multilateral law enforcement
operation aimed at countering the illicit diversion and trafficking of
precursor chemicals, such as ammonium nitrate.
Pakistan has made efforts to contend with ammonium nitrate in large
part because the threat has begun to impact the security of its country
as well. Recent coordination between Pakistani civilian and military
entities on the IED issue has been positive. The Government of Pakistan
has formed an interagency national coalition IED forum. We are also
beginning to see efforts at the local level, such as small-scale bans
and regulations in the community of Malakand. I hope Pakistan
expeditiously approves its draft legislation to better control
explosive materials in the country and make a concerted effort at
enforcement.
We must exercise extraordinary vigilance in stemming the unregulated
flow of ammonium nitrate in this region because of its importance to
U.S. national security interests, as well as, of course, to the lives
of our troops.
The United States, together with our allies, must do everything we
can to make it more difficult for our enemies to make IEDs. I am
committed to this task for the long term. I also understand terrorists
will resort to different strategies and different ingredients after we
are better able to restrict the flow of ammonium nitrate. Implementing
more robust and interdiction measures is important, but we also must do
more to disrupt and dismantle terrorist and criminal organizations in
making IEDs. This will involve multilateral engagement, regulatory
measures, training, and technological efforts, building border control
capacity, and other means as well.
There are a host of other ingredients terrorists can and probably
will utilize in IEDs. But ammonium nitrate is what they are using today
to kill scores of U.S. troops. We must do all that is in our power to
ensure the job of making these bombs is made more difficult. When they
shift tactics and use other ingredients, we will go after those too.
Restricting the flow of ammonium nitrate is, in fact, a very difficult
challenge. But we must do all we can to protect our troops on the
ground across the world, but especially our troops in Afghanistan.
There is no more important task at hand.
____________________