Suicide bombings that killed two
peacekeepers from Britain
and Canada in
48 hours have abruptly reminded Washington and its NATO allies they face major
challenges in ensuring sufficient security in Afghanistan to hold credible elections
scheduled for June.
Already, some officials are suggesting the vote might have to
be rescheduled as a result of both delays in the registration process and the
security situation, particularly in the south, southeast and eastern parts of
the country, where the Taliban, which was ousted by U.S.-led forces in late
2001, is resurgent.
But the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush, which
is far more preoccupied with Iraq and the increasingly dicey transition there
that is also due to take place in June, is still hoping the Afghanistan elections
can be held as scheduled.
Reports this week that the Pentagon is preparing a major "spring
offensive" against the Taliban and members of the al-Qaeda terrorist group,
both in Afghanistan and across
the border in Pakistan, suggest Washington has opted for a proactive strategy
aimed precisely at minimizing the ability of those groups to disrupt the elections.
The latest attacks in the capital Kabul took place just after
President Hamid Karzai's signing last weekend of Afghanistan's new constitution,
which was ratified by a loya jirga, or assembly of notables, Jan. 4, after 22
days of often rancorous debate.
Depicted by Washington as a milestone in stabilizing the country
and guaranteeing basic rights to all Afghans, including women and minorities,
the constitution must still be implemented in practice, particularly over vast
parts of the country outside the capital still ruled by warlords and clan chiefs.
"Ratification of the constitution is only half the challenge,"
Lakhdar Brahimi, who just ended a two-year assignment as the United Nations'
top envoy to Kabul, told a Washington audience Tuesday.
He stressed that ensuring security, particularly in advance of
the elections, was "really the key issue" for the central government
and international peacekeepers.
The United States currently has about 11,000 troops in Afghanistan.
Most of them are there to track down and engage Taliban and al-Qaeda forces,
although a growing number of soldiers are also working in provincial reconstruction
teams (PRTs) – groups of between 50 and 100 troops plus civilian and political
advisers – that have deployed to several key towns and cities to provide
security and carry out some reconstruction activities.
A second force of about 5,500 troops currently under NATO command,
the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), is restricted to Kabul,
although it recently pledged to create several of its own PRTs to deploy outside
the capital. The two soldiers killed this week were both attached to ISAF.
US Gen. James Jones, the military head of NATO, complained in
testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday, however,
that ISAF still lacks the needed equipment, such as helicopters, to begin such
deployments.
He said NATO's ability to provide those items will be a "defining
moment for the alliance" and its ability to improve the security situation
in Afghanistan. Jones also hinted that additional US or NATO troops could be
helpful, either for combat operations or to create more PRTs.
A third force that is supposed to enhance security is the Afghan
Army itself. But desertions have sharply set back progress in building and training
a force that currently numbers less than 6,000 soldiers.
The high rate of desertions has been blamed until recently on
the dominance in the officer corps of ethnic minorities, particularly Tajiks
from the Panshir Valley – whose Northern Alliance was Washington's main
partner in ousting the Taliban.
Low pay has also been singled out, particularly compared to the
money available in the thriving drug trade, which has emerged as another major
obstacle to Afghanistan's stabilization and reconstruction.
Not only has drug money become a steady source of income for the
Taliban and assorted warlords who still challenge the central government's authority,
but it is having a growing impact on the country's economy as a whole.
The United Nations currently estimates that Afghanistan's annual
opium production now accounts for 75 percent of the world's total output and
nearly one-half of the country's gross domestic product (GDP).
"Some in the government say Afghanistan risks becoming a
narco-state (and) ... really needs to be tackled more vigorously," Brahimi
said Tuesday.
In addition to undermining the central government, "it is
already distorting the delivery of aid," he added, noting that farmers
earn as much as 12 dollars a day to cultivate opium, while the US Agency for
International Development (USAID) is only offering between three and six dollars
a day to its Afghan employees.
"Along with growing insecurity, the drug trade is the single
biggest obstacle to a stable Afghanistan," according to Dennis Kux and
Harpinder Athwal, two members of a Council on Foreign Relations-Asia Society
task force that traveled to Afghanistan last month.
But a major crackdown against the drug trade, particularly in
Pashtun areas where the Taliban thrives, could backfire by spreading discontent,
according to some US analysts – an assessment that helps explain the current
"hands-off policy" observed by US forces.
Washington's most important goal for now is to ensure elections
can be carried off, if not by the scheduled June date then by only a few weeks
later, say US officials.
The administration of President George W. Bush is particularly
worried that failure to hold elections in Afghanistan before US presidential
elections in November will be trumpeted by Democrats as evidence that Bush's
"war on terrorism" is going poorly..
Out of a total potential voting population of more than 10 million,
only about 600,000 voters have been registered to date, although Brahimi said
U.N. officials are "reasonably hopeful" that nearly all potential
voters can be registered by June.
But up-to-date voting rolls are only one prerequisite for credible
elections, he stressed, noting that several others must still be met, including
disarmament, the creation of credible national political parties and freedom
of expression – all dependent on real security.
(Inter Press Service)