Tim Willasey
Just before midnight on Saturday 14 August 2021, a long line of beige-coloured 4x4 vehicles snaked out of a high-walled fortress in Logar Province, about 35 miles south of Kabul. The vehicles contained some 300 soldiers of Afghan Special Police Commando Force 333 (CF333). This was not the Afghan army evaporating and fleeing the Taliban advance. Quite the contrary: they were in uniform and fully armed. This was a British-trained and funded unit ‘marching to the sound of the guns’. Ignoring direct threats from the Taliban, they headed for Kabul to help with the defence of their capital city.
On the morning of 15 August, as the evacuation from Kabul airport got underway, the Commanding Officer (CO) and a squadron of around 40 soldiers were asked to deploy to the Baron Hotel at Kabul airport to provide protection for British passport holders. On 17 August, three of their number were evacuated, with the remaining 37 told by British troops that their assistance was no longer required. Meanwhile, two other squadrons of CF333 were ordered to patrol the east of the city while the remaining squadron defended the Police Special Units’ Headquarters. By evening, 333 was the last formed unit of Afghan soldiers still loyal to a regime whose president had fled in ignominy. Just before midnight, they were advised to save themselves. Some went to the airport; a few managed to get on flights.
Their last CO believes that several dozen members of CF333 have made it to the UK, and about double that number are still in Afghanistan. Most of the abandoned 333 survivors have been in hiding; others have fled to Pakistan, Iran and beyond. One has recently arrived by small boat from France. Those who still remain in Afghanistan are in constant danger.
Several 333 soldiers have been murdered by the Taliban. A few of their deaths have been publicised, like the case of Noor Agha, a CF333 sniper murdered in front of his wife and children. A more recent example was Riaz Ahmedzai, shot dead in front of his house. Another sniper was murdered in September 2021. The toll of deaths will continue to mount as the years pass, with fewer and fewer receiving any press interest.
I have just been forwarded the rejection decision sent to one of CF333’s senior officers by the UK government’s Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (ARAP). It is quite clear that the officials deciding this man’s fate and that of his family have no conception of what CF333 was. How could this be? Its history dates to the frantic weeks after 9/11, 22 years ago.
CF333 was one of the biggest achievements of the UK government in Afghanistan. Its origins stem from when the (then) Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) attended a UN conference in Geneva in late 2001 and offered to lead the international community’s counternarcotics effort in Afghanistan. On returning to London, there was a moment of trepidation as the sheer scale of the undertaking was contemplated. One of the more ambitious ideas was the creation of an Afghan Special Narcotics Force, now better known as CF333. The core concept was that it should comprise only Afghans. It should be Afghan-led and should report to the Afghan Interior Ministry. Only the funding and training should come from the UK. Its existence and funding were briefed to the UK Parliament.
The force was created in double-quick time. It comprised 150 men, led by an inspirational Brigadier who had fought under the Soviets against the mujahideen. Initially it had about 30 Toyota offroad vehicles, soon supplemented by three Mi17 helicopters built in Ukraine. Two years later, at the FCO’s request, it was doubled in size to 300 personnel (including women) plus six choppers. Soon it developed the reputation of being the best Special Forces unit in all of Afghanistan. A video of US General John Nicholson visiting CF333 at its Logar base makes for painful viewing, given what was to come.
The Brigadier’s whole ethos, learnt painfully during the failed Soviet presence in Afghanistan, was that 333’s role was to help the people by freeing them from the vicious and corrupt servitude of the opium producers and traffickers. He held educational sessions on the dangers of drugs and created a nationwide network of well-wishers. Whenever 333 arrived in a village they were welcomed, even feted. This was because they were evidently Afghans and not foreign soldiers. The sight of a disciplined Afghan force was a source of considerable pride among a population which associated men with guns with violent and rapacious behaviour. Later, 333 developed sophisticated counterterrorist and counterinsurgency capabilities.
The ARAP officials doubtless saw that the recent applicant had not worked for the UK government but for the Afghan Interior Ministry. So, his application went straight into the ‘Rejected’ pile. Had they had any knowledge of the force’s origins, they would have seen that its Afghan identity was the whole purpose behind what was still entirely a creation of the UK government. This may be why hundreds of CF333 soldiers and their families are still in mortal danger, and the death toll continues to grow.
This is all a far cry from the days when every senior UK government minister and general would visit 333’s fort as part of their Afghan visit programme, always ending with a speech about the UK’s long-term commitment to Afghanistan. Now, the once-proud unit is dispersed. The lucky ones are pizza-delivery riders in Liverpool or Exeter. Others live in fear in Afghanistan, having destroyed or buried their unit badges, commendations and medals from the proudest days of their lives.
My close association with 333 ended in 2008. However, in January 2021 – seven months before the evacuation – I realised that the likely outcome of the Doha Accords (the Trump administration’s agreement with the Taliban) would place the men of CF333 at particular risk. I wrote to senior officials at the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) and copied the Ambassador in Kabul, suggesting it was not too early to make preparations for the safety of 333, to whom we owed a duty of care. My email concluded: ‘We can all see the trajectory of Afghan events and I would argue in favour of relocating people to UK now or soon, rather than wait until an emergency. We don't want to be flying aircraft into Kabul at a time when Taliban could be on the streets of the city.’
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