How to End the War in Afghanistan

ajtr

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If someone is good at white -washing their sins it got to be british.Yeah the same David miliband who white washes that UK and usa didnt start war in Afghanistan in the very first sentence of the article.Its the same miliband who in india was peddling the theory 26/11 was the result of kashmir and and solution of afghanistan lies in solution of kashmir.



How to End the War in Afghanistan

by David Miliband

Neither the UK nor the US started the war in Afghanistan. In the 1990s that country's Taliban government provided a safe haven and support for al-Qaeda. In return Osama bin Laden provided the Taliban with money and fighters. Afghanistan became the incubator for the September 11 attacks. The international intervention in response to those attacks had widespread support around the world. But we never meant for our militaries to be there forever. Eight years later, with al-Qaeda pushed into Pakistan, it is not enough to explain to people why the war started. We need to set out how it will be ended—how to preserve what has been achieved and protect South Asia from a contagion that would affect us all.

The route to progress depends on recognizing the centrality of politics to issues of war and peace. Violence of the most murderous, indiscriminate, and terrible kind started this Afghan war; politics will bring it to an end. A political settlement for Afghanistan must have two dimensions. First, a new and more inclusive internal political arrangement in which enough Afghan citizens have a stake, and the central government has enough power and legitimacy to protect the country from threats within and without. And second, on which the first depends, a new external settlement that commits Afghanistan's neighbors to respect its sovereign integrity and that carries enough force and support to ensure that they abide by that commitment.

ritain fought three wars in Afghanistan between 1839 and 1919. Each time it was defending its power base—and economic stake—in British India. And each time it suffered military reverses as it sought to establish order. Yet on every occasion, once that lesson had been learned the hard and bloody way, Britain's imperial strategists sought—and secured—a saner and more sustainable objective: a self-governing, self-policing, but heavily subsidized Afghanistan, whose tribes balanced each other and that posed no threat to the safety of British India. Soviet strategists reached strikingly similar conclusions. When the Soviet forces in Afghanistan withdrew in 1989, they left behind a government, led by the Afghan Communist Mohammad Najibullah, that survived for three years. It did so—in the words of advice from the Kremlin—by "forgetting communism, abandoning socialism, embracing Islam, and working with the tribes." As with every other regime in modern Afghan history, the Najibullah government could not have existed without external subsidy. And so it fell when Boris Yeltsin's newly independent Russia cut all aid to Kabul.

Britain's experience in the nineteenth century, and the Soviet Union's in the twentieth, showed that the best way, perhaps the only way, to stabilize Afghanistan in the long term is to empower the Afghans themselves in charge so that they can secure and govern their own villages and valleys. To achieve this, the Afghans need full political and military support, and generous economic subsidy, from outside. But the Afghan people neither need nor welcome our combat troops on their soil any longer than is necessary to guarantee security and set them on a course to regulating their own affairs.

recent study of Britain's bloody withdrawal from Kabul in 1842 concluded that the first cause of that disaster was the reluctance of junior officers to tell their superiors the truth about the dire situation the British forces found themselves in. I know from my own discussions with diplomats and commanders in the field that such "happy talk" is no longer the order of the day. Getting Afghanistan right means getting down to ground truth. These are the facts as I see them:

"¢ The Afghan people are tired of thirty years of war. They have been traumatized by the fighting and the denial of basic rights and opportunities. The majority of them hate, for good reason, the brutality of the Taliban. But sometimes they see them as their only protection from other brutal powerbrokers or warlords.

"¢ The Afghan government led by Hamid Karzai faces competing demands from its own people, from powerful criminal and commercial interests, and from the international community. But it lacks the capacity to govern. The concerns about its credibility run deeper than last fall's elections, which were marred by widespread corruption and fraud. They also relate to the very structure of the political system.

"¢ The Afghan insurgency is a broad but shallow coalition, with shifting relationships, geographical bases, and tactics. The Taliban is led by members of the former Talib regime under Mullah Omar, who has been based in Pakistan's border areas. A variety of other factions are also operating, including the Haqqani network, Hizb-e-Islami, and a range of smaller groups. These groups all trade on the uncertainties of the people and the weaknesses of the state.

"¢ The Taliban are still despised—one recent poll suggests that only 6 percent of Afghans want them back in power. But they do now have organized cadres that enjoy some limited support—in the south, east, and north—and are able to mount operations in Kabul and elsewhere.

"¢ Having fled Afghanistan, al- Qaeda's senior leadership is now also hiding in Pakistan's tribal areas. A significant number of its leaders have been killed or arrested. Despite the historical ties between al-Qaeda and the Afghan Taliban, their relationship is predominantly tactical and local. Yet al-Qaeda retains the capacity—including through its affiliates in other countries, such as Yemen—to plan and carry out deadly attacks around the world.

"¢ There has been a significant change in Pakistan in the last eighteen months under President Asif Ali Zardari's democratic government. The reality and threat of domestic terrorism has brought new purpose to civilian and military leadership, and new consensus between leaders and the Pakistani electorate. It is now realistic to talk about complementary pressure on the insurgencies on both sides of the border.

The Afghan and international strategy over the last eight years has been to focus on building up the key functions of the state and delivering better lives for the Afghan people. Despite many setbacks, there is a real record of achievement here, continuing today. The return of five million refugees in recent years is perhaps the greatest sign of the growing confidence of Afghans in their safety and security, and an important indicator of our own progress in protecting them. Still, polling shows that Afghans regard the lack of security as one of the biggest problems; last year more Afghan civilians were killed in insurgent attacks than ever.

In 2003 the Afghan National Army numbered fewer than two thousand. Today it is over 100,000 strong, though the ethnic balance within it—and particularly the proportion of Pashtuns—is weak. The total will grow by a third by the end of the year, and further in the years to come. Afghan soldiers are gaining frontline combat experience, including in the current Moshtarak operation in Helmand province. Plans are now being developed for the transfer of "lead security responsibility" to the Afghans—district by district and province by province—once the Afghan National Security Forces, local government, and other institutions are able to meet key conditions of effectiveness. As the Afghan National Army gets stronger, international forces will be able to withdraw from combat operations—although their training and mentoring of their Afghan counterparts will need to continue for a number of years.

Concerning education and health, in 2001 only one million Afghan children attended school, all of them boys. This year we expect to see seven million Afghan children enrolled in school—a third of them girls. Eight out of ten Afghans now have access to health care.

Poppy growing and the drug trade are major problems for Afghanistan; but during the past two years there have been successive reductions in poppy cultivation: 19 percent in 2008, 22 percent in 2009. The UN Office on Drugs and Crime estimates that cultivation will not increase in 2010. Improvements in governance and security, along with high wheat prices, have supported these results.

The achievements of the National Solidarity Programme—which aims to improve local and regional government—would be a remarkable story in any country. Over 22,000 village councils have been elected by their peers since 2003. They have not just designed but implemented almost 40,000 development projects, and are now forming, from the bottom up, district councils.

here are also areas where progress has not been so impressive. We are now stepping up our efforts to address these concerns, and the Afghan government needs to do much more:

"¢ Justice and law and order are a critical battleground. The Afghan National Police number almost 100,000, but the biggest problem is now quality, not quantity. Part of the force is involved in the drug trade. It also suffers from illiteracy, patronage by criminals and insurgents, and corruption. The Afghan government is launching a robust and far-reaching program of reform. But the government needs, with our help, to build up the informal judicial structures for resolution of criminal and civil disputes. That is, after all, what Afghans often mean by the rule of law.

"¢ Despite the success of the National Solidarity Programme, civil administration remains an extremely difficult and uphill struggle. In large parts of the country, district governance is almost nonexistent; half the governors do not have an office, fewer than a quarter have electricity, and some receive only six dollars a month in expenses. Over the next two years the international community has promised to help train 12,000 civil servants to serve on the district level.

"¢ Last, there is the problem of corruption. According to January's BBC/ABC/ARD poll, 95 percent of Afghans see corruption as a problem in their local area. In some regions Afghans are paying an average of $100 in bribes to officials every year. Such widespread abuse has deep roots. President Karzai has promised to tackle corruption and build independent institutions to monitor and drive progress. The international community will judge him by his actions, not his words. Donors are trying to provide him with incentives by promising to channel more aid through the government as certain tests are met, for example the verification and publication of the assets of senior officials and ministers; the adoption of new procedures for senior appointments; and a clear timeline for the enactment of comprehensive anti-corruption legislation.

The achievements of the last eight years would not have been possible were it not for the tireless efforts and unstinting bravery of our troops. Without them, the insurgency would have overwhelmed the Afghan government and probably overrun Kabul. Our development work would have ground to a halt. And al-Qaeda would have seized more space to plan its terrorist atrocities.

The work ahead—on each of these fronts—is both clear and pressing. The additional troops that the United States, Britain, and others are deploying are vital if progress is to be made. Britain's commitment and determination will endure until we have achieved our shared objective—an Afghanistan that must not again be used as a basis for international terrorism. However, even on the most optimistic reading of present plans, the Afghan authorities will not be able to govern their land in sustainable or acceptable ways unless the scale of the insurgency itself is reduced. And only then will we be able to withdraw our forces confident that we will not have to return. The strengthened efforts of our military forces are an important part of this. As General McChrystal said recently, the role of the military is to "try to shape conditions which allow people to come to a truly equitable solution to how the Afghan people are governed." This raises the core political challenge for Afghanistan, one that has been neglected for far too long.

The Bonn Agreement of 2001 and the process that followed it fell short of a truly balanced political settlement. The Northern Alliance came to Bonn as the new masters of Afghanistan. But they were not representative of the broader Afghan population, including the Pashtun majority in the south. It was right that the Taliban leaders were excluded from Bonn. But other more significant and legitimate groups were seriously underrepresented, most notably the various Pashtun confederations from which the Taliban draws its strength.

The two jirgas that followed Bonn led to a top-down, highly centralized political structure for a country whose people have always had a strong predilection for managing their own affairs at the local level. Furthermore, new arrangements in Kabul did not do justice to tribal and other informal, traditional, and community-based structures. Corruption has exacerbated these problems. The unconstrained accumulation of financial resources by malign power brokers has eroded tribal balance. Finally, from Iran in the west to Pakistan in the east, from the Central Asian Republics in the north to the regional powers of India, China, Saudi Arabia, Russia, and Turkey, the Bonn Agreement failed to bind Afghanistan's neighbors into the long-term project of building a new, more peaceful country. The lesson I draw from history is that Afghanistan will never achieve a sustainable peace unless many more Afghans are inside the political system, and its neighbors are in agreement with a political settlement.

Political Outreach

There is now an international consensus behind a program to reintegrate Taliban fighters, which the UN defines as "the process by which ex-combatants acquire civilian status and gain sustainable employment and income." The logic behind this program is simple. As military pressure on the insurgency increases—as the dangers of continuing the fight grow and the prospects of success look more remote—those on the periphery of the insurgency will start to review their allegiances. We have seen this happening in fits and starts in recent years.

For such realignments to be sustained there needs to be not just employment but protection from retaliation by former allies. That is the significance of President Karzai's proposed National Council for Peace, Reconciliation, and Reintegration, and of the $150 million the international community has already pledged to fund it.

But I would emphasize that a re-integration program will have a major impact only if it is coupled with a serious effort to address the grievances of those whom President Karzai describes as his "disaffected compatriots"—i.e., the Taliban and other insurgents. Without a genuine effort to understand and ultimately address the wider concerns that fuel the insurgency, it will be hard to convince significant numbers of combatants that their interests will be better served by working with the government than by fighting against it.

Some insurgents are committed to al-Qaeda's violent extremist agenda. There will never be reconciliation with them—they must be beaten back. But the majority are not. They share conservative Islamic beliefs and, linked to that, strong views about what is a just social order. Their rallying cry is the expulsion of international forces. But they are also motivated by their intense dissatisfaction with the Afghan government and Afghan politics—which they see as corrupt and incompetent.

The idea of anyone reaching out to political engagement with those who would directly or indirectly attack our troops is difficult. We have no more right to betray our own values than those of the Afghan people who pray that the Taliban never come back. But dialogue is not appeasement; nor is allowing political space for discussion with opposing forces and politicians.

The Afghans must own, lead, and drive such political engagement. It will be a slow, gradual process. But the insurgents will want to see international support for it; and international mediation—for example under the auspices of the UN—may ultimately be required. So there needs to be clarity about the preconditions for any agreement: those who want a political say in their country's future must permanently sever ties with al-Qaeda, give up their armed struggle, and accept the Afghan constitutional framework. In doing so their interests would be recognized and given a political voice but would be constrained by the nation's laws and balanced by the interests and views of others.

In his repeated offers to talk directly to insurgents, President Karzai has made clear that while such preconditions should set the terms of any eventual agreement, they should not prevent a dialogue from developing. The build-up of international and Afghan military forces should concentrate everyone's mind. Dialogue provides an alternative to fight or flight. Any such process of political outreach will take time and effort to prepare, let alone conclude. But the time to start laying the foundations for dialogue is now, so as to take advantage of the growing Afghan and international military presence.

resident Karzai has proposed for April 29 a great consultation—a grand peace jirga—involving around 1,400 members and guests. They are to include parliamentarians, provincial councils and governors, religious and tribal leaders, and representatives from civil society organizations and women's groups. This should be the start of a process of building a new national political settlement. He has said:

The objective will be to get guidance from the Afghan people on how to move forward towards reintegration and reconciliation —where reconciliation may be possible—and chart out an action plan in consultation with the Afghan people.

What might such a political settlement look like? An outsider can only offer suggestions.

First, there should be arrangements, whether formal or informal, to ensure that the legitimate tribal, ethnic, and other groups that feel excluded from the post-Bonn political settlement are given a real stake in the political process and are able to compete for political representation. A peace settlement must include the vanquished as well as the victors. To do this, the new arrangements should give voice to the different blocs of opinion and influence. Access to political office and government jobs should be opened up. And efforts should be made to broaden the ethnic base of the Afghan National Army. All of this would encourage Afghans to address their grievances, and those of their broader community, from within the system. And it would offer them a part in building stability and security in Afghanistan so that—and this is a key objective of many of the insurgents—the international forces will be able to withdraw from combat, initially into a training and support role, and then altogether.

Second, the provincial and district governors and their associated assemblies of elders should be given new governing powers, so that the walis (or provincial governors) and the uluswals (district governors) have the confidence, competence, and capacity to govern in the best interests of those they represent. Recruiting the right people for these jobs is essential—and in view of the challenges of upholding justice and the rule of law, the police chief and local magistrates are equally important. Local governors and local assemblies also need to be given more direct responsibility for overseeing development, adjudicating disputes, providing local security, and reintegrating local insurgents and their sympathizers.

Third, a new legislative process should be established—not necessarily involving constitutional change—between president and parliament, in order to give parliamentarians a real stake in the success of the political settlement. Such a stake would encourage them to participate as well as to criticize, and would ultimately lead to the development of something completely alien in Afghanistan today, but critical to democracy—a constructive or loyal opposition.

Fourth, underpinning all this must be a more concerted effort to prevent and eradicate corruption. President Karzai's promises to tackle the culture of impunity and to establish a new anti-corruption unit are important. Emphasis must also be put on how the Afghan government—with international help —can counter the extensive drug trade. This goes to the heart of ordinary people's concerns about corruption and lack of the rule of law. Part of this is about ensuring that the new political settlement includes many more checks and balances—such as independent courts—and much greater emphasis on transparency and accountability to ensure that government at all levels and in all guises is the servant, not the master, of the Afghan people.

The External Political Settlement

No country's politics can exist in a vacuum, least of all Afghanistan's. For too long it has been the victim of external meddling and interference. Today competing regional interests are being pursued in Afghanistan, and the country's tribal and ethnic groups—in the south, the east, and the north—still roam freely and find refuge across its borders. Those who oppose the government still draw on funding, support, and shelter from abroad. If Afghanistan is to have a more peaceful and prosperous future, it needs not just a new internal political settlement but also a new external political settlement.

Given the scale of the geopolitical challenges in this region—including the long-running tensions between India and Pakistan and the presence of Iran—it can seem that Afghanistan is fated to remain the victim of a zero-sum scramble for power among hostile neighbors. The logic of this position is that Afghanistan will never achieve peace until the region's most intractable problems are solved. But there is an alternative and ultimately more promising possibility, by which Afghanistan poses so many dangers that it becomes the place where more cooperative regional relations are forged.

The first step is a greater recognition by all of Afghanistan's neighbors and the key regional powers of two simple facts. Fact one: no country in the region, let alone the international community, will again allow Afghanistan to be dominated, or used as a strategic asset, by a neighboring state. Fact two: the status quo in Afghanistan is damaging to all. Crime, drugs, terrorism, and refugees spill across its borders when Afghanistan's great mineral wealth and agricultural land should instead be of benefit to the region. These two facts can and must provide the basis of a shared interest around which the countries of the region can coalesce.

Second—and this point is more complex—there needs to be a more honest acknowledgment of the different interests and concerns of Afghanistan's neighbors, so that efforts can be made to provide reassurances. Pakistan is essential here. It holds many of the keys to security and dialogue. It clearly has to be a partner in finding solutions in Afghanistan. Pakistan is a country of 170 million people. It is a nuclear power. Pakistan will act only according to its own sense of its national interest. That is natural. Its relationship with Afghanistan is close to the core of its national security interests. Pakistan fears the build-up of a non-Pashtun Afghan National Army on its doorstep, and it is perpetually worried about India's relationship with Afghanistan.

It has also had a difficult relationship with the US for a generation. That is the significance of the Obama administration's determination to pursue a new security, economic, and political relationship with Pakistan. This policy opens up a vital opportunity to address Pakistan's concerns—and ours. The Kerry-Lugar Act—which provides for over $7 billion in nonmilitary aid over the next five years, but makes the support conditional on the Pakistani government taking effective action against militants in its territory—is an important down payment in this regard.

But progress cannot be achieved simply by a more serious, more equal US–Pakistan strategic security understanding, crucial though that is. Alongside Pakistan's fears about its western border, fears about Pakistan's own involvement in Afghanistan need to be addressed. Every country needs to accept that, just as there will be no settlement in Afghanistan without Pakistan's involvement, so there will be no settlement in Afghanistan unless India, Russia, Turkey, and China are also involved in the search for solutions. China is Afghanistan's largest foreign investor. India has already pledged $1.2 billion for reconstruction in Afghanistan. It has a big part to play. Moreover, the Iranian regime—whose nuclear policies have flouted the UN and that has a record of attempting to destabilize its neighbors—must acknowledge that the best way to protect its investments or promote the interests of Afghans that share its Shia faith is to work to promote peace, not undermine it. The Iranian government's refusal to take part in the recent London Conference on Afghanistan was completely shortsighted. Third—and this is where the external settlement connects most clearly to the internal political settlement—there needs to be greater transparency with respect to the future direction of Afghan foreign policy. It is for the Afghans to decide how to do this, but their involvement is critical in building confidence and reducing miscalculation. Linked to this, there will need to be consistency and clarity about the presence, activities, and future plans of the international forces in Afghanistan.

Fourth, economics should be the great lubricant for better regional relations. Afghanistan can benefit all its neighbors if it becomes the land bridge of Central Asia, South Asia, and the Gulf. After all, the Silk Road was the passage for trade for many centuries. There are common interests not just in trade and transport, but in managing and sharing water and electricity and harnessing economic growth for the benefit of Afghanistan and the neighboring countries.

Fifth is the question of the forum in which this work should move forward. The process must be led by the countries in the region. Only these governments can decide whether the multitude of existing bodies such as the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation and the Organisation of the Islamic Conference can provide the basis for the serious and sustained regional engagement that is now needed. The Afghans should take the lead, in partnership with the UN. In time perhaps this could lead to a standing Conference on Stability, Security, and Cooperation in South Asia. Above all, Afghan citizens must decide the future political process in their country. Important as the neighbors' legitimate interests are, they cannot supplant, nor will we allow them to supplant, the Afghan government and the Afghan people. The days are long gone when powerful countries would dispose of a smaller, vulnerable neighbor to suit their own ends.

Conclusion

If we successfully implement the strategy I have outlined, a better future for Afghanistan is not a utopian goal. Within two to five years it is realistic to aspire to see the country still on an upward trajectory, still poor but stable, with a just peace, with democracy and inclusive politics taking hold at all levels, and with incomes growing. The urban population should have access to electricity. More shops will be open in the local bazaars and more children—in particular more girls—will be going to schools. Most grassroots insurgents —the so-called ten-dollar-a-day Taliban—should be resettled in their villages with at least some of the insurgent leaders taking part in the legitimate political process. Communities will be increasingly able to rely on the Afghan National Security Forces for protection—or to protect themselves. International troops will have stepped back from the front line—though they will still have a role, and sometimes a dangerous role, in training and mentoring their Afghan counterparts. The neighbors will be working together, preventing trouble, not fueling it. And above all, al-Qaeda will be kept out.

I have been to Afghanistan six times as British foreign secretary. On my first visit in July 2007 I attended the funeral of its last king, Mohammed Zahir Shah. The grief I witnessed was palpable and deep, but so too was the sense of national unity. Ethnic allegiances and historic feuds were put aside to mourn the passing of the "father of the nation."

This unity is not expressed today through allegiance to a monarch. Instead it is founded on a deep desire among the people to live life as they see fit. The military surge is vital to success; so is investment in the civilian economy; but now is the time for Afghans to pursue a political settlement with as much vigor and energy as we are pursuing the military and civilian effort. That is how to end the war in Afghanistan.
 

ajtr

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We are seen as weak


Rajiv Dogra

Maldives and British Foreign Secretary David Miliband's advice to India to settle its affairs with Pakistan through dialogue is symptomatic of a larger malaise. Perhaps our goodness is now being mistaken for weakness. But who is to tell this to our Prime Minister?

Sometimes, in international affairs, a single gesture reveals far more than laborious statements and voluminous reports. There was one such moment in Thimpu when the Prime Ministers of India and Pakistan emerged from behind a diaphanous curtain to provide a photo opportunity.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh took his place to stand on the right side facing the photographers. The Pakistani Prime Minister was about to step towards the left side. When Prime Ministers take their position, especially in the India-Pakistan context, woe betide anyone who dares prompt them differently. Yet this is exactly what happened.

A junior Pakistani official signalled suggesting that the Indian Prime Minister shifts to the left side. It was an awkward moment, one that may not have a precedent, but the Prime Minister of India shuffled over to the position indicated to him on the left. Now the Pakistani Prime Minister was on the right side; a position that is considered of psychological advantage in Summit level hand-shakes — as our friends the Americans would have told us.

This is a tested technique, one that gives advantage to the leader on the right side, yet our officials slipped up.

But it wasn't merely a question of disadvantage in the photo-op. The issue concerns the dignity and respect for our Prime Minister. Why must he be embarrassed into shuffling across to a new position on a cue given by some Pakistani official? Why wasn't the positioning at photo-op anticipated?

Mr Singh is a mild-mannered leader and he may not have taken offence. But can one imagine such a thing being dared with Mrs Indira Gandhi? Whatever may have happened to the Pakistani official can only be a subject of conjecture, but the Indian officials responsible for the slip up would have been roasted right and proper.

That act of cheekiness is also reflective of the new sense of confidence, verging on cockiness, on the part of the Pakistani establishment. It knows that India is powerless to put any significant pressure on it. The decision to approach the international interlocutors for help post-26/11 has yielded limited dividends. Perhaps, researchers at some future date might come to the conclusion that by going to the international chancelleries India has only succeeded in re-hyphenating itself with Pakistan.

Everyone, and everybody, now consider it their fair preoccupation to advice India to settle its affairs with Pakistan through a dialogue. Maldives pontificated thus from the pulpit of SAARC Summit in Thimpu; casting aside the SAARC principle of not introducing bilateral matters in that forum.

This is symptomatic of a larger malaise; perhaps even of the fact that our goodness risks being mistaken for weakness by our interlocutors. Even worse, it may be interpreted as an open invitation to busy bodies to proffer advice. There is a huge risk in letting that impression gain ground, because when such pressures multiply then some give somewhere eventually takes place, and you end up ceding something or the other. The mention by Maldives should, therefore, be treated as a warning shot. Much more could follow from others like it; especially from those who make interference in others' affairs their professional leitmotif.

If Maldives was brief in delivering its homily, states which habitually punch beyond their weight in international affairs feel it perfectly in order to go far beyond. British Foreign Secretary David Miliband did that recently.

Mr Miliband is a clever and ambitious man who uses his position to cajole people into seeing the world as he wishes them to view it. His article in the April issue of The New York Book of Reviews is quite in character. He has also given it a grand title; "How to end the war in Afghanistan."

There is no doubt that the Nato countries want to get out of Afghanistan as soon as possible. For Mr Miliband, and for them, only the future in Afghanistan seems to be real, the hardships of today are nightmarish.

The Nato countries have many reasons to leave Afghanistan. The economic meltdown in the West and the voter fatigue with an unwinnable war, have led to this desire to quit Afghanistan with as much grace as they can muster.

Thereafter, Mr Miliband wants the world to put all its eggs in the Pakistani basket. Thus, he maintains in his article; "Given the scale of the geopolitical challenges in this region — including the long-running tensions between India and Pakistan and the presence of Iran — it can seem that Afghanistan is fated to remain the victim of a zero-sum scramble for power among hostile neighbors. The logic of this position is that Afghanistan will never achieve peace until the region's most intractable problems are solved."

His message is clear; the most intractable problem in his eyes can be nothing else except the Kashmir issue. It is also a point that Pakistan has been constantly pressing in Washington and London. Having thus advocated Pakistan's case on Kashmir, Mr Miliband goes on to sing its praises;

"Pakistan" he informs us, "is a country of 170 million people. It is a nuclear power. Pakistan will act only according to its own sense of its national interest. That is natural. Its relationship with Afghanistan is close to the core of its national security interests. Pakistan fears the build-up of a non-Pashtun Afghan National Army on its doorstep, and it is perpetually worried about India's relationship with Afghanistan."

But he has not finished advancing Pakistan's case. He goes on to assert that "progress (in Afghanistan) cannot be achieved simply by a more serious, more equal US–Pakistan strategic security understanding... Alongside Pakistan's fears about its western border, fears about Pakistan's own involvement in Afghanistan need to be addressed."

Clearly, in Mr Miliband's scheme of things self-interest is of primary importance. He recognises that to secure early withdrawal and to have some semblance of order in Afghanistan they would need Pakistan's munificence. And for this they would have to appease and propitiate Pakistan.

In that process they need India to wiggle and accommodate Pakistan. A syndrome all over again of the price the world extracts from the good and the meek.

They would therefore welcome the large financial commitments that India might continue to make in Afghanistan. It is likely that $ 1.3 billion in aid that we have given to Afghanistan may have won us many friends there. But the point is at what cost?

We are a poor country and the money that we have committed there has been at the cost of development projects in India.

Second, does any aid recipient remain obliged forever? How many Europeans recall today the transformational role the Marshal plan had played in their lives? How many Pakistanis acknowledge the billions of dollars in aid that they receive annually from the US? How many Nepalese are grateful for the vast infrastructure projects that India has built there? And in Afghanistan itself we have built hospitals, industrial institutes and agricultural projects in the past too. But the Taliban wiped out all memories of that with a strike of dynamite. And they might do so all over again as soon as the US and UK forces withdraw from Afghanistan.

All this, the Maldivian homily and the British self-interest, only reinforce the point that we may have become the victims of our goodness and of our proclivity to rush to the world to seek their aid in preventing terror attacks from Pakistan.

We may be doing so out of a moral imagination; the idealistic conviction that truth and peaceful persuasion triumph ultimately. Sadly, however, we live in an imperfect world. Had it been otherwise, would there have been any need for the sermon of Bhagavad Gita?
 

nandu

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Getting Obama's Afghan policy back on track



By C. Uday Bhaskar

The May 12 summit meeting in the White House between visiting Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his host, U.S. President Barack Obama comes against the backdrop of the mercifully aborted May 1 terrorist bombing incident in New York's Times Square.

From the barrage of news and commentary that floods various media outlets here in Washington DC, it is evident that the Obama Af-Pak policy unveiled with considerable fanfare last year will be in for detailed and contested policy review.

Immediate U.S. interests apart – including the Obama second term, the stakes for the long-term stability of the entire southern Asian region and the troubled Muslim populace in the scattered diaspora ranging from North America to west Europe are immense and complex.

Afghanistan came into global focus with the tragic enormity of September 11, 2001 when it was under the control of the Taliban and the obscurantist, anti-liberal ideology espoused by this group had earlier impacted India's security interests in the December 1999 aircraft hijacking episode.udaybhaskar1

The Taliban provided a safe-haven for those elements and non-state entities that were nurturing radicalism and terror derived from a distorted interpretation of Islam that went against the grain of every normative tenet associated with that religion.

Almost 10 years down the road and with billions of dollars and precious human life having been expended, peace and stability in that ravaged land is still elusive.

The U.S.-Afghan relationship remains testy and the natural xenophobia of the Afghan has a historical precedent that goes back to the days of Alexander in the BC period to the more recent travails of the British and Soviet military over the last two centuries.

'Graveyard of empire' is a phrase that is often used by detractors to summarize the Obama policy predicament and on the eve of his Washington visit, President Karzai has reminded his U.S. interlocutors that despite the disagreements – some of which were avoidable, "What has kept ustogether is an overriding strategic vision of an Afghanistan whose peace and stability can guarantee the safety of the Afghan and the American peoples."

Yes, there are many inadequacies in Afghanistan's institutional capacities and it is an oft ignored truism of low intensity conflict that a state andsociety that have been systematically placed under the trauma of incessant violence and bloodshed will need an equally extended period for re-construction and a return to some modicum of normalcy.

Thus if 1979 when the former USSR occupied Afghanistan is seen as the beginning of the current radicalization and internal turbulence, and 2001 the collective effort to redress the situation – then at the very least it will be the late 2020's before one can expect any significant improvement in that ill-fated nation and its hapless people.

But regrettably Afghanistan is being thwarted in its nascent attempts to build a basic minimum of state capacity and the safe-havens that nurture the radical non-state groups such as the al-Qaida and the Taliban in its many variants across the border in Pakistan have been an intractable challenge for the Karzai regime since it came to power.

The Kabul-Islamabad relationship has been under intense strain over the kind of sanctuary being provided in Pakistan to such groups and President Karzai made veiled reference to this abiding challenge for U.S. policy when he noted: "We are not yet delivering security to large portions of the country. I have consistently noted the urgency of addressing the problem of sanctuaries, training and other support that terrorists receive beyond Afghanistan's borders. This problem is far from solved."

And the problem in Afghanistan whose non-linear manifestations surfaced in New York on May 1 will remain unsolved as long as the challenge is defined as 'Af-Pak'.

The semantic needs to be re-arranged as Pak-Af with a clear recognition that it is Pakistan that is the driver of the turbulence and mayhem in Afghanistan. Furthermore, the last Obama review of the policy towards Islamabad remains tentative and mistakenly hostage to the short-term US interest in the region.

The Pakistani establishment that thrives on a deep and inflexible anti-India/anti-American agenda has created a virtual reality about how the Pakistani masses should orient themselves in the face of the many threats that engulf that country.

Denial of certain inexorable realities is the central motif and a make-believe simulacrum over a threat to Islam and the Pakistani identity has been carefully crafted.

As the noted Pakistani analyst Hasan-Askari Rizvi has perceptively noted in recent days: "Since the early 1980s the state pursued an agenda through education and the mass media to Islamise the state and society. Pakistan's military and the intelligence agencies continued to patronise a religious hard line and militancy as an instrument of domestic and foreign policy towards Afghanistan and Indian-administered Kashmir.

By September 2001, at least one and a half generations had been socialised into religious orthodoxy and militancy as a desirable mindset and a frame for action. These people have reached the middle level positions in government, the military, and other services.

They may not directly get involved in bomb planting, but they have sympathy for Islamic radicals who engage in violence in the name of Islam.In this way the political discourse of Islamic radicalism and the political right has become integral to the mindset of countless people who tend toview national and international affairs in purely religious terms." It is this conviction that allows political leaders like the Sharif brothers to align themselves with the Taliban against the USA.

This is a heady cocktail that can only lead to the proliferation of more Faisal Shahzads and hence calls for a more objective counter discourse cum narrative about Islam and Pakistan to be injected into that society.

The muted and shrinking liberal spectrum in Pakistan must be strengthened as part of the courageous Kerry-Lugar provisions. In essence the Obama Af-Pak policy audit needs to take a far more seminal and informed review about Pakistan and the role of the malignant establishment if it is to get the Afghan policy back on track.

http://blogs.reuters.com/afghanista...n-getting-obamas-afghan-policy-back-on-track/
 

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