World | donkey Afghan Troops Switch From US Copters to Donkeys Technological gap yawns wide as US hands off bases By Kevin Spak Posted Nov 9, 2012 3:39 PM CST Copied Afghan women ride donkeys with their children, on the outskirts of Ab Kamari, the provincial capital of Badghis province, west of Kabul, Afghanistan, Feb. 2, 2012. (AP Photo/Hoshang Hashimi) Just how big a void is the US leaving in Afghanistan? Well, let's put it this way: Whereas the US used helicopters to access its remote bases in rocky regions, Afghan forces are now using … donkeys. "Donkeys are the Afghan helicopter," one colonel tells the Washington Post. Hundreds of asses are already hard at work ferrying men and supplies to and from the bases that have been handed over to Afghan control. Afghanistan has just 31 helicopters, and the US has made no promises it will get more. A furious Hamid Karzai has threatened to buy them off non-NATO countries. But in the meantime, it's up to the donkeys, and even they're proving too expensive for Afghanistan's corrupt and incompetent government. Some "donkey contractors" (read: local farmers) haven't been paid in almost a year. "Who knew that the end of this war would boil down to donkey contracts?" asks one NATO commander. "I wasn't trained for this." Read These Next Scientists eye a problem with trendy doodle dogs. Navy's most advanced aircraft carrier pulls out of the Iran war. Trump's panel approves coin, wants his image bigger. Disney just scrapped a full completed season of The Bachelorette. Report an error