Obama, instead of bringing Jeffersonian democracy to Afghanistan, wants to negotiate with the Taliban and get out. By doing that he indirectly supports Pakistan's reviled strategic depth policy. He also feels, as do many analysts in Washington, that the Taliban run a shadow government in the various provinces of Afghanistan because the government in Kabul has failed to provide good governance; he realises that talking to the Taliban means reaching out to (argh!) Mullah Omar. Ahmed Rashid, a leading expert on Afghanistan, considers, ceteris paribus, that it is a good development that the US wants to negotiate with the Taliban and fears that leaks about the rounds of negotiations held so far could derail the process.
He also wants Pakistan to get its act together and help the US reach a settlement, that being the foremost prerequisite for an orderly US withdrawal.
All of this means that Obama’s approach is anti-Pakhtun and he equates the Taliban with the Pakhtuns. Worse, like Pakistan, Obama’s desire to seek a stable government in Kabul and Washington’s thinking that Pakistan must play a role in facilitating its withdrawal from Afghanistan indicates he is being hegemonic.
But wait. It’s not just him. Writing in International Affairs, Rudra Chaudhry and Theo Farrell (“Campaign disconnect: operational progress and strategic obstacles in Afghanistan, 2009–2011”) argue that while the Isaf has notched significant successes at the operation level, it has failed to meet those prerequisites without which the insurgency can be made irrelevant. They call it the operational-strategic disconnect. This disconnect now requires that the Taliban be engaged.
Separately, in a draft chapter for a book, “Negotiating the way out: The need for dialogue in Afghanistan”, Rudra Chaudhry kicks off by saying that it is now widely considered as fact that the war in Afghanistan cannot be won. Hence the importance of writing an essay that sketches the underlying logic of negotiating with the Taliban. Chaudhry and Farrell, both honest scholars, must also be in the pay of the Pakistani establishment.
According to Chaudhry — those who have studied insurgencies know he is spot-on — “Conventional wisdom dictates that almost all insurgencies end with a political bargain between the government and its sponsors on one side, and the insurgency and its supporters on the other. On average, it is said to take a decade before the key actors make it to the negotiating table.”
Another one is former British ambassador to Afghanistan, Sherard Cowper-Coles. Even when he was on the job, he was working for Pakistan and advocating a political solution to the problem. But the real coup by the Pakistani establishment is getting the former chief of the MI5, Lady Eliza Manningham-Buller, to say that it is important to understand the causes of ressentiment in the Muslim world and the western governments should try and talk to (horror of horrors!) al Qaeda.
There are many other analysts and one can’t list all those who the Pakistani establishment has infected in some way or the other.
Okay, I concede that this was a bit of spoofing. But I played it this way because it points to the penchant of abominations on both left and right to cast aspersions on anyone who does not subscribe to their worldview. They select, de-contextualise and accuse, insisting at the same time that this activity falls under the category of open, democratic debate and must not be challenged. That’s poppycock. Democracy is not mobocracy, which is why America’s founding fathers made clear that despite their emphasis on many fundamental freedoms they were not aiming to recreate Athenian democracy, and personal attacks do not constitute debate.
But some partisans have chosen to do just that to a recent joint report by the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) and Jinnah Institute (JI) which is the product of multiple roundtables involving 53 Pakistanis interested in foreign policy issues.
Nothing is sacred. People have a right to debate issues. Neither can any one report or paper cover all the details of any issue, much less one as complex and wicked as Afghanistan. One of the participants, Nasim Zehra, has already written in detail in the Daily Times about the intent of the USIP-JI report — quoting extensively from it — and the multiple voices it tried to reconcile. I shan’t therefore go into the details, but a few points need to be made.
First, policy is not about what is desirable but what is doable. There is no Lockean tabula rasa in human affairs. Serious analysts have to work in and through what is on the ground, not through ideological prisms.
Second, keeping this in mind, the report merely attempted to see how the Pakistani state is likely to behave in the run-up to the end game in Afghanistan: what are its options and what is good and bad about the exercise of those options. As I noted in a previous article, this report is the first of its kind, an exercise to see if Pakistan has a viable Afghan policy. None of the participants, as the discussions proceeded, seemed happy with the way Pakistan has dealt with Afghanistan. At the same time all were cognisant of what can and cannot be done, given a host of factors.
Third, I was also part of another one-day roundtable whose findings have been put out by the Centre for Public Policy and Governance at Lahore’s Forman Christian College. One ad hominem critic of the report has praised the FC college report. It amazed me because that report too attempted to reconcile disparate views and arrived at a view which I think complements the USIP-JI report by flagging many issues which were also discussed at length during the roundtables for the latter report. This can be corroborated by a careful reading of both the reports. But such a study can only be done if one is approaching both the efforts in a nonpartisan manner.
Fourth, reading the foreword to the USIP-JI report makes clear that the initial idea for the report developed in the context of US-Pakistan relations. The participants agreed that debate in Pakistan was often contradictory and inconclusive and the state needed to listen to and reconcile voices. This was the first tentative step towards that effort. As the report makes clear, there is nothing final about its findings. Figuratively speaking, this is the motif throughout the report in bold print. It can only be missed by partisans.
Finally, it is now accepted across the board that the insurgency cannot be weakened because the Isaf and the Afghan government have failed to bolster governance and reach. That fact cannot be wished away and any policy framework has to accept it. Abstractions don’t work in prescriptive work; if they did, America would not be talking to the Taliban.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 14th, 2011.
COMMENTS (15)
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By day the Dupont Circle crowd writes tall letters to the GHQ - showing how they can stand up to the men in Pindi. By night the same people seem to be vying to get into the 'elite' list and doing the GHQs bidding. These journalists are firmly embedded with the military and pushing their agenda. They can't fool the people all the time.
TAPI
@Abdul Rehman Gilani Well a stable Afghanistan is not going to be achieved by supporting insurgent groups, like was proved in 90's. Yet Pakistan did not learn its lesson and continues to support criminals like Taliban and Haqqani network, who kill civilians every day.
Mr. Haider's argument that all those arguing for negotiation with the Taliban must necessarily be on the payroll of the establishment is a complete strawman.
There is an obvious difference between Pakistani lobbyists and think-tankers and the sympathetic views they express towards negotating with the Taliban and the views of foreign analysts and individuals like President Obama. The difference is that in the case of the former, they are actively contributing to forming and solidifying the Pakistani establishment's viewpoint as well as building support for this viewpoint among the general public and acting as advocates for the Pakistani establishment to outsiders. In the case of the latter, they are simply dealing with the reality which is a result of the Pakistani establishment's view on Afghan policy. President Obama, for example, recognizes the reality that the Pakistani establishment will continue to aid and abet the Taliban and his point of view must necessarily take this ground reality into consideration.
But by conflating these two very different actors, Mr. Haider seeks to ridicule the idea that there are individuals and opinion-makers within Pakistan who contribute to the formation of the military establishment's foreign policy views. Which is an utterly ridiculous point of view since every foreign policy perspective has to have its advocates in the media and intelligentsia in order to gain popular acceptance.
@mfhussain:
We have the longest porous border with Afghanistan, so I believe any stable friendly government is in our interests also. A stable Afghanistan=Stable Pakistan.
@Gilani . how does one become legitimate. what business oes Pakistan have in Afghanistan except increasing turmoil.
As this article amply demonstrates Pakis should avoid strategic thinking, the sound childish. It's just not in our genes. we don't have he brains or it.
The Taliban are a LEGITIMATE party in Afghanistan, along with Pakistan, dialogue without one's presence is useless and doomed to fail.
I normally like what Ejaz writes, right from the days when he wrote for Daily Times and TFT, but this piece is written with emotions and not historical logic. USA did not go to Afghanistan to create west-minister style democracy, it wanted to gget rid of those who targeted USA. With eliminating OBLaden and putting Taliban on the defensive, this object has been achieved. Afghans will carry on fighting with each other, but once uncle sam leaves, they will only concentrate on local issues and politics. They have said often enough that once the 'infidels' leave, they are going to participate in national issues. I say Obama is right: Mission achieved. Let US go home.
It is nice to say that Afghanistan suffers from lack of governance and control over its territory but the same applies to Pakistan too. Yes America may want to negotiate with the Taliban but they are clear that the Taliban must lay down arms and accept the primacy of the Afghan Constitution. This has not been highlighted by the author who tried to equate US/Pakistan position on the same. The Taliban should be welcomed if they participate in the Democratic process and renounce the use of violence.
The question is not what US wants- what if tomorrow they say Taliban and AQ can run Afghanistan again because they agreed to not to attack Western interests again ? Will these self proclaimed foreign policy experts be happy over that scenario? Have they not learnt their lesson yet ? Have they not seen enough devastation as a result of supporting Taliban in the past ? Have we not seen the results of negotiating with TNSM in Swat ?
So Washington is finally keen to start negotiating with Mullah and his band of men in Qatar (or Turkey as proposed earlier). Interestingly the US is believed to be insisting that the new Taliban office be located “outside Pakistan’s sphere of influence”. Soon the GHQ may find itself placed partially outside the Afghanistan power loop. In that case I wonder what will happen to its rather rigid (and regionally calamitous) 'strategic depth' theory policy.
Liberals love their conspiracy theories.
The USIP-JI report was ridiculed because it was merely a civilian facade to military policy of strategic depth. Pakistani Generals have a monopoly on policy making when it comes to Afghanistan so noone is going to listen to the windbags who compiled this report.
Sherry Rehman must be loving all this free press! This back and forth over this document is pointless in the greater schemes of things. The egos of both sides is being massaged, taking up space in this paper to prove a point to how many people? 20...50...100?