Jakarta GlobeAshley J. Tellis
April 14, 2009
Ashley J. Tellis is a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the author of “Reconciling with the Taliban? Toward an Alternative Grand Strategy in Afghanistan.”
Despite opposition from many within the Democratic Party and even within the White House against deepening US involvement in Afghanistan, President Obama has courageously decided to fight this war — using, as he put it, “all elements of our national power to defeat Al Qaeda, and to defend America, our allies, and all who seek a better future.” In a White Paper, his administration has affirmed that Washington aims “to disrupt, dismantle, and eventually destroy extremists and their safe havens” within the “Af-Pak” region because doing so constituted America’s “vital national security interest.” All this is good, but by failing to admit, out of political convenience, that the United States will engage in nation-building in Afghanistan — even as he embarks on just that mission — Obama risks undermining his own strategy.
Comprehensive engagement in Afghanistan, of course, was opposed by a variety of constituencies. Senator John Kerry, for example, warned against any reconstruction intended to make Afghanistan “our 51st state,” suggesting instead that allied objectives in that country be limited to ensuring that “it does not become an Al Qaeda narco-state and terrorist beachhead capable of destabilizing neighboring Pakistan.” Others, such as the former president of the Council on Foreign Relations, Leslie Gelb, urged Obama “to explore a strategy of power extrication” by which the United States would “leave Afghanistan” because “trying to eliminate the Taliban and Al Qaeda threat is unattainable.” Some other alternatives were proposed as well. David Boaz of the libertarian Cato Institute wondered whether the United States would “be able to extricate sooner if we accept a decentralized Afghanistan with some regions ruled by groups that are currently fighting against our troops?” And one senior NATO official, reflecting the view of many European governments eager to end their involvement in Afghanistan, has been quoted by the Guardian as arguing that Kabul “doesn’t need to be a democracy, just secure.”
It is to President Obama’s credit that, despite strong pressures emerging from various quarters, he has rejected all of these alternatives in favor of building an effective democratic state in Afghanistan. That is the good news. If success in Afghanistan — understood as the extirpation of Al Qaeda and the marginalization of the Taliban as an armed opposition — is to be achieved, Washington and its partners will have no choice but to erect an effective Afghan state that can control its national territory and deliver its citizens security, responsive governance and economic development necessary to ensure internal stability. Nothing less will suffice for attaining even the most minimal strategic aim in Kabul. Obama’s new “Af-Pak” policy suggests that he has understood this clearly and his administration’s White Paper corroborates his intention to pursue precisely this goal. The bad news, however, is that the administration has spelled this out only indistinctly and by circumlocution. President Obama has asserted that the United States will have a “clear and focused goal,” namely, “to disrupt, dismantle and defeat Al Qaeda in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and to prevent their return to either country in the future.” Toward this end, he has rejected any “return to Taliban rule”; he has upheld the need for “a more capable, accountable and effective government in Afghanistan that serves the Afghan people”; and he has endorsed the objective of “developing increasingly self-reliant Afghan security forces that can lead the counterinsurgency and counterterrorism fight with reduced US assistance.”
Whether explicitly admitted or not, these propositions indicate that the United States will not abdicate state building in Afghanistan, will not recognize the Taliban as an acceptable Islamist group in contrast to, for example, Al-Qaeda, and will not exit Afghanistan either as an end in itself or to better focus on Pakistan, as some analysts have suggested. The administration’s reiteration of the need for “a more capable, accountable and effective government in Afghanistan” also implicitly conveys a rejection of all ambiguous strategies of governance, a refusal to integrate an unrepentant Taliban into any Afghan organs of rule, and a decisive repudiation of authoritarianism as a solution to the political problems in Kabul. But the failure to transparently declare that the United States is committed to building an effective democratic state in Afghanistan — a circumvention owed probably as much to appeasing fears within the Democratic Party as it is to calming NATO partners about nation-building — has opened the door to unreasonable expectations that his strategy for defeating terrorism in Afghanistan and Pakistan can be implemented without what the New York Times calls “the vast attempt at nation-building the Bush administration had sought in Iraq.” As the civilian surge already underway in Afghanistan suggests, the administration understands that successful counterterrorism needs successful state building. But the failure to own up to this could prove to be the strategy’s undoing — within Congress and among the allies. Accordingly, the president should clarify this ambiguity at the earliest opportunity.
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http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/opinion/article/16471.html-- --- --
Beneath The VeilA hard hitting documentary with presenter Saira Shah who went undercover prior to 9/11 to find out what the Afghanistan not shown in the press was like under Taliban rule. Strongly recommended documentary for anyone who is interested in what was happening in Taliban run Afghanistan leading up to the 2001 invasion and what the country will very likely descend into again if we just 'pull out':
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4201322772364661561