Five years after the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) was putting the final touches on a brilliant campaign plan to oust
the Taliban and its al-Qaeda allies from power, Afghanistan is back in the headlines,
and the news isn't good.
An unexpectedly fierce and prolonged Taliban offensive that began last spring
has U.S. and NATO officials deeply worried that they face a serious insurgency
fueled by a thriving drug trade and growing popular disaffection with the government
of President Hamid Karzai.
Greatly compounding their concern is Pakistan's cease-fire agreement with pro-Taliban
Pashtun tribal leaders signed earlier this month to withdraw thousands of army
troops from North Waziristan and release several hundred Taliban and al-Qaeda
militants from jail.
The accord, similar to one reached with pro-Taliban forces in South Waziristan
two years ago, reportedly obliges the tribal chiefs to prevent Taliban and al-Qaeda
forces from crossing into Afghanistan, but most experts here considered those
pledges a mere face-saving measure that enabled Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez
Musharraf, to insist during his visits with increasingly skeptical U.S. officials
in Washington and Britain over the past two weeks that he remains committed
to the anti-terror fight.
But even as Musharraf sat down with Karzai for a peacemaking dinner hosted
by Bush himself last Tuesday, an anonymous senior U.S. military officer was
telling reporters in Kabul that cross-border attacks by Taliban forces had,
in fact, tripled since the North Waziristan truce actually took effect in late
June.
Several days later, the Washington Post reported on a captured al-Qaeda document
that strongly suggested that at least part of the group's top leadership is
in fact living in North Waziristan, bolstering claims that the truce had created,
in Newsweek magazine's words, a "'Jihadistan' … an autonomous
quasi-state of religious radicals, mostly belonging to Pashtun tribes,"
stretching from central Afghanistan to much of northwestern Pakistan.
Whether the White House dinner, which followed a week of mutual recriminations
between Karzai and Musharraf, helped reconcile the two leaders remains highly
doubtful; U.S. officials made no attempt to convince inquiring reporters that
any major breakthrough had been achieved.
In any event, the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan – and the increasing
media attention it is getting with the marking Thursday of the fifth anniversary
of the launch of U.S. operations there – has added to the growing pessimism
among the foreign policy elite here about Bush's "global war on terrorism."
It was only last spring that top administration and military officials told
reporters that Washington planned to withdraw about 25,000 troops from Iraq
and 4,000 troops from Afghanistan by now. At the same time, Vice President Dick
Cheney was confidently describing Afghanistan as a "rising nation"
from which U.S. forces could return home "proud of their service for the
rest of their lives."
Cheney, whose sunny optimism on Iraq has become fodder for late-night comedians,
used precisely the same phrasing about Afghanistan as recently as last week.
But both the military, which has increased U.S. troop levels from 19,000 six
months ago to nearly 22,000 today, and independent analysts see a much darker
picture in light of the intervening Taliban offensive, which has reportedly
taken the lives of at least 2,800 Afghans and more than 160 U.S. and NATO troops
in the past year.
Not only has the death toll been the highest for any year since 2001, but the
Taliban campaign has been made more deadly by the importation of tactics –
notably sophisticated improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and suicide bombings,
of which one outside the Interior Ministry headquarters in Kabul took 12 lives
Saturday – from Iraq.
"My fear is that Afghanistan is beginning to look like Iraq," Richard
Haass, president of the influential Council on Foreign Relations and a top aide
to former Secretary of State Colin Powell, told the Washington Post last
week. "We're seeing the beginning [of the] Iraqification of Afghanistan."
To deal with the growing threat, NATO, which currently has some 20,000 non-U.S.
troops in Afghanistan, has called for contributions of 2,000 more soldiers to
a reorganized International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) that will also
incorporate 12,000 U.S. troops who are already there.
In addition, the Bush administration, pursuant to urgent recommendations by
NATO's supreme commander, Gen. James Jones, has for the first time nominated
a four-star general to head the combined NATO force. It is also reportedly considering
sending its current ambassador in Baghdad, Afghan-born Zalmay Khalilzad, back
to his previous posting in Kabul.
A Pashtun like Karzai, Khalilzad was considered particularly effective after
the Taliban's ouster in juggling the interests of the victorious Tajik- and
Uzbek-dominated Northern Alliance and the Pashtuns, Afghanistan's single largest
ethnic group, which also constitutes the Taliban's popular base.
Khalilzad would be particularly well-suited for any enhanced effort to co-opt
more pragmatic elements of the Taliban, a strategy that none other than Senate
majority leader and Bush loyalist Bill Frist recommended after a briefing with
senior U.S. military officials in southern Afghanistan this weekend.
"It sounds to me … that the Taliban is everywhere," he said,
adding that the only way to prevail is "to assimilate people who call themselves
Taliban into a larger, more representative government."
But that alone will not save the day, according to Barnett Rubin, an Afghanistan
expert at New York University, who nonetheless noted that NATO's recent moves,
as well as Khalilzad's possible transfer, suggested that policymakers have begun
to realize how tenuous the situation has become.
"I think some reality appears to have pierced the veil around top-level
decision-makers, and there's a greater realization of what has to be done,"
he told IPS, crediting Jones with getting the attention of top officials.
Washington and NATO must give top priority to three policy objectives: "eliminating
the Pakistani sanctuary [for the Taliban and al-Qaeda], dramatically increasing
international economic assistance, and pressing Karzai to take much tougher
stand against corrupt and abusive elements in his government," Rubin added.
To achieve "strategic victory" over the Taliban, he told the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee two weeks ago, the Western powers must above all
exert much stronger pressure on Pakistan, including suspending all military
and economic aid, until it moved to disrupt and dismantle the Taliban's Pakistan-based
command structures, which he called a "major threat to international peace
and security."
"Contrary to the analysis of the Bush administration, whose response to
Sept. 11 wandered off to Iraq and dreams of a 'New Middle East,'" Rubin
noted, "the main center of global terrorism is in Pakistan, especially
the Pakistan-Afghanistan border region. In the words of one military commander
[he interviewed on a recent trip to Afghanistan], 'Until we transform the tribal
belt, the U.S. is at risk.'"
(Inter Press Service)