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The quagmire deepens in Afghanistan
By Peter Symonds
14 November 2006
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In the wake of the US elections, the Bush administration has
been anxious to affirm there will be no course correction
in Afghanistan, despite the escalating armed resistance to the
US-led occupation of the country.
Visiting the region last week, US Assistant Secretary of State
Richard Boucher reiterated Washingtons firm commitment
to the puppet government of President Hamid Karzai. He declared
that last weeks US election results and Defence Secretary
Donald Rumsfelds resignation would have no impact
on US military policy in Afghanistan.
Boucher stated that the mission in Afghanistan
has very strong support among Republicans and Democrats.
While the Democrats are calling for a shift in tactics in Iraq,
there is no suggestion of any change in Afghanistan. The war in
Afghanistan, like that in Iraq, remains a crucial component of
US ambitions to secure domination over the resource-rich regions
of the Middle East and Central Asia.
US military spokesmen indicated that American troop levels
would remain at about 20,000, half of which are under NATO command.
In October, NATO assumed formal responsibility for security throughout
Afghanistan, including the south and east where armed opposition
by the Pashtun majority is fiercest.
The international media has focussed attention on the crisis
confronting the US in Iraq, but Afghanistan is no less of a quagmire.
Five years after toppling the Taliban regime in Kabul, none of
the Bush administrations promises has been kept. A profound
social crisis compounded by anger over repeated US attacks and
abuse of civilians has fuelled an anti-occupation insurgency that
has dramatically expanded this year.
A report released on Sunday found that the number of deaths
had risen to more than 3,700 since the beginning of the year.
The Joint Coordination and Monitoring Board, comprising Afghan,
UN and coalition officials, estimated that 1,000 of those killed
were civilians, but the figure could be much higher. With nothing
to distinguish the so-called Taliban from the Afghan population,
the military undoubtedly counts many dead civilians as insurgents.
The frequency of attacks on government and NATO-led forces
has more than quadrupled since last year to 600 a month. Insurgent
groups have also embraced the tactic of suicide bombings, with
106 such attacks as of October 22, with 22 in September alone.
This compares to just 17 suicide bombings for all of 2005.
When it committed an extra 3,000 troops to Afghanistan in May,
the British government declared that the aim was to complete the
three-year mission without a shot being fired. Since
taking over formal control of the southern provinces in August,
NATO troops have been involved in continuous fierce fighting.
Since May, 32 British soldiers have been killedhigher than
the British toll in Iraq.
Some 2,200 Canadian troops have also been in the frontline.
Since 2001, 42 Canadian soldiers have died in Afghanistanall
but 10 this year. Per capita, the figure is higher than any other
country in the occupation force. The death toll is the worst suffered
by Canadian forces since the Korean War. In both Britain and Canada,
public support for the military intervention in Afghanistan has
fallen sharply to less than half.
The fighting has produced bitter recriminations inside NATO,
with increasingly open criticisms of France, Germany and Italy
for failing to provide more troops or allow their forces to be
used in the worst conflict areas. NATO has a smaller force than
in the Balkans to patrol an area some 60 times larger than Kosovo.
An appeal in September for NATO members to provide an additional
2,000 to 2,500 soldiers fell on deaf ears and has still not been
met.
NATO secretary general Jaap de Hoop Scheffer last week called
for a radical overhaul of all operationsmilitary and civilianin
Afghanistan, saying it was impossible to win by military
means alone. Italys foreign minister Massimo DAlema
has also called for a review, saying the strategy of military
intervention has ... unfortunately... turned out to be ineffective.
US ambassador in Kabul Ronald Neumann recently said the US would
have to remain for multiple years and spend multiple
billions to avert failure.
Afghanistan will be high on the agenda of a NATO summit on
November 28-29. But while all participants will no doubt agree
on the problems, there is unlikely to be any agreement on a strategy.
Hearts and minds
In many ways, the US-led occupation confronts a crisis that
is eerily similar to the disaster faced by the Soviet army in
the 1980s. The widely-despised Karzai regimes influence
is largely confined to the capital Kabul, which is no longer immune
from attack. In the south and east of the country, government
and foreign forces are operating from fortified bases that are
under continual attack. Any forays into the countryside are conducted
in hostile territory, where insurgents move freely with considerable
local support.
Like the Soviet forces, the US and its allies have established
heavily-guarded reconstruction teams, offering limited aid projects
with the object of winning hearts and minds. These
teams are not only subject to attack, but are increasingly regarded
as part of the foreign occupation. Far from expanding, aid projects
are collapsing. At least 30 aid workers, including from non-government
organisations, the UN and humanitarian contractors, have been
killed this year.
The New York Times reported last week that a recent
CIA review found that support for President Karzai had significantly
weakened. A separate poll conducted by the US-based Asia Foundation
in Afghanistan reported that only 44 percent of the population
thought the country was headed in the right direction, compared
to 64 percent in its 2004 survey. The mood was the same across
all ethnic groups. The study did not include two southern provinces
where the security dangers were too high to poll anyone.
Abdul Shakoor, a shopkeeper in the southern city of Kandahar,
told the London-based Times: When we saw the Taliban
go and the foreign soldiers come we were so full of hope. We were
100 percent sure that, with the world behind it, our government
would improve our lives. But now our hopes are crushed. Since
then, in this city, we have had three different governors. None
of them has done anything for us. Our problems are getting worse.
In a report released this month, the Brussels-based International
Crisis Group stated: Ordinary people see little change in
their everyday lives; and while it is true ... that the [government]
institutions are weak or even non-existent, in many cases where
they do exist they are so corrupt and predatory that people would
rather they were not there at all. Afghanistan continues to rank
bottom of the South Asian region in the World Banks corruption
and rule of law indicators.
In 2004, the UN Development Program report listed Afghanistan
173rd out of 177 countries. Poverty and unemployment are extensive.
Describing the situation outside Kabul, the Times article
commented: Kandahar still only has enough electricity for
a maximum of six hours in every 48. Bad roads, open sewage systems,
and a lack of fresh water are seen in the city as inconveniences
very low down on the list of complaints. Kidnapping, banditry
and police corruption rank much higher. In rural towns and
villages, the social crisis is far worse.
By contrast, a tiny layer of businessmen, government officials
and militia commanders has benefited at the expense of the majority
of the population. Associated Press reported last weekend on the
social gulf in Kabul, where slum dwellers in Shirpur had been
evicted to make way for a new Afghanistan of
palatial homesscores of four- and five-storey mansions boasting
gold-painted marble columns and floor-to-ceiling windows flanking
grand wooden doors. One aid worker asked: Why doesnt
the government help the poor? Why do the government people and
commanders build big mansions and the poor people live in bad
conditions?
Outside Kabul, the economy is almost completely dependent on
the lucrative opium trade. The latest estimate by the Joint Coordination
and Monitoring Board found that the crop had increased by almost
59 percent compared to 2005. Afghanistan is the source of more
than 90 percent of the worlds heroin and the area under
poppy cultivation has increased from 8,000 hectares in 2001 to
165,000 hectares currently. According to the International Crisis
Group (ICG): Many [of the profiteers] are government officials,
thus warping and corrupting fledgling institutions. The open way
in which these big fish operate, with opulent mansions
and convoys of SUVs, further feeds accusations of government corruption
and hypocrisy.
Talatbek Masadykov, the head of UN assistance mission in Kandahar,
told the Times: Everywhere weve gone downhill
here. Weve never improved the situation. The security issue
isnt just to do with the Talibanits to do with
bad, weak governance. Fifty percent of this problem is internal.
People dont naturally want the Taliban back, not at all,
but they increasingly think the government offers them nothing
but insecurity, and that though the Taliban offer them nothing
either, they may perhaps give them some stability and an end to
corruption.
The Taliban is simply a convenient term for an
amorphous and rather loose grouping of disparate Afghan insurgent
organisations. Many of their leaders, like Gulbuddin Hekmatyar,
who opposed the Taliban regime, trace their origins back to the
CIA-backed jihad against the Soviet occupation in
the 1980s. The ICG, a private thinktank, said these groups have
no difficulty recruiting angry and disaffected youth to their
ranks, particularly in Pashtun tribal areas. Commenting on the
killing of hundreds of Taliban in the past six months,
the ICG noted: It is increasingly apparent, however, that
numbers count for little, since there is a seemingly endless supply
of recruits, or as many insurgents as you want, as
a senior Western diplomat admitted.
Neither the Bush administration nor any of its NATO allies
has any solution to the social and political disaster created
by the occupation of Afghanistan. Earlier in the year, prior to
the upsurge of fighting, the Bush administration had planned to
foist the responsibility for day-to-day security onto European
troops, cut aid to Afghanistan by 30 percent and withdraw up to
3,000 US soldiers. The troop withdrawal, however, has been cancelled,
compounding the crisis that the Pentagon and the Bush administration
already face in Iraq and further exacerbating tensions with the
European powers.
See Also:
NATO forces carry out massacre of Afghan
civilians
[1 November 2006]
NATO warns Pakistan's Musharraf
to end covert support for Taliban
[16 October 2006]
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