The scenario was exactly the same when I arrived in Kabul from Kunduz at sunset a few weeks earlier — so it came as no surprise that militants were able to penetrate the so-called ‘ring of steel’ surrounding the city to carry out their recent coordinated attacks on selected targets. It was also no surprise that President Hamid Karzai blamed the situation on Nato intelligence failure without mentioning Afghan forces or his own intelligence network and, even less of a surprise, that fingers were promptly pointed towards the Haqqani network and Pakistan. Where the surprise lies, however, is that almost everyone who should be both concerned and informed continues to ignore the blatant truth, which is that the shadow play comprising Afghan politics and foreign occupation has undergone a complete volte-face, in that the majority of the population outside of Kabul want the Taliban back in the driving seat.
Shocking as this may sound to the uninitiated, it is perfectly understandable if you happen to be an Afghan villager with peace and justice in mind: Taliban-dispensed justice may be bloody but it is quick. If a murderer is apprehended for instance, then that is that and the same goes for a thief. But if such criminals are brought to government courts, then depending on who they happen to be, justice may, or may not be served. Afghan villagers and, to be fair city dwellers, too, view the government as nothing more than a collection of corrupt braggarts and upstarts who are considered, by them at least, to be war criminals and thieves of the dirtiest order. The established fact that $4.5 billion was flown out of the country last year via Kabul airport and another estimated $8 billion taken out by other means serves to underscore their point.
People throughout the country are eager for the current government to fall, yet not all are so eager to see foreign occupation forces pull out and few believe that they actually will: “If American troops were leaving, then why is it that after 10 years of living in makeshift barracks, they are replacing them with concrete ones right now?” asks an informed source. Adding, “There is also the matter of the multimillion city complex scheduled for construction adjacent to Kabul airport. This is specifically to house foreigners and service contracts — up until 2025 — which have already been given out”.
In the conundrum that is Afghanistan, the shadows are shifting, altering shape and gathering for whatever comes next, which for a sizeable percentage is the dream of a just and peaceful Taliban rule over the chaos of the current ‘now’.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 24th, 2012.
COMMENTS (25)
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i think the author was just sharing the journey experience that made to Afghanistan.I ve all my doubt that she has interacted with the people of local area,she has mentioned that what she has read in eyes of innocent Afghans who are fighting for their today and are not sure of tomorrow.They just need any for govt who can full fill their basic needs that may Karzai r Talban.but unfortunate the dilemma is that its their country but their are hundreds of thanks tank who are planning the future of Afghan ppl.everybody has invested entrusts starting from mighty america ,india , Russia ,china and pak.i think all of us leave them in their land and them decide whom they want whether they fight are vote.
@blackjack Yeah I could ask you the same thing. If you read the article she mentions that she did travel through afghanisan so I would take her opinion over your keyboard crusading.
If any of you trolls knew anything at all about the author you'd know that she opposes the Taliban. That she would write this only goes to show how far things have come and how badly the US and Afghan governments have failed. This goes for the local as well as imported trolls. You guys need a life.
If some people want Taliban rule then let them have it. Divide Afghanistan into one Islamic and one (strictly) secular nation. Anyway it is an artificial country created in very recent history, that too only on map.
@ Wonderer -- Pakistan sees the Afghanistan its backyard because it is like that since centuries. India is new player in the dirty game. When the NATO and American leave the Afghanistan scene, India is eager to have a major role for its Army.What baffling surprise in Store for Pakistan. I think the surprise is in store for India, to entangle its feet in the quagmire of Afghanistan.
It is certain that after the NATO departure this corrupt Karzai government would not be able to hold its ground. and Taliban are strong enough around the Kabul to fight back the lost territories.
Personnaly , I wish that Paksiatn has enough of its feets in Afghanistan. It would be better to take care of its own house.
the majority of the population outside of Kabul want the Taliban back in the driving seat
Finally someone said it.
Resistance & Gureilla Wars cannot survive & succeed without the help of locals and we are looking that Afghan resistance is alive from the last 11 years, it means that they are supported by locals. Furthermore, it is now becoming evident, that US didn't come here for Osama or Taliban, they came to attain their goals and these goals are very clear i.e. Using Afghanistan as a basecamp to get the Natural resources of this area (Balochistan, Afghanistan & Central Asia), Restricting Chinese influence and progress, Nukes of Pakistan & Iran.
Afghans may or may not be wishing for return of Taliban, but the Pakistan Army does want them back. That is because of the perceived necessity of "strategic depth". Pakistan has been treating Afghanistan as its backyard all along, and feels fully entitled to have an Afghan Government of its choice. Pakistan also seems to have decided that India will have no role to play in Afghan reconstruction. What the Afghan people want is obviously of no concern at all.
The NATO is not chasing victory in Afghanistan. The future has a baffling surprise in store for Pakistan and its dreams.
If the illiterate masses of Afghanistan are happy under Taliban rule, then let them have it. They are content having a hand-to-mouth subsistence living, reminiscing about the golden age of Islam. Why should we bother ?
I think we should build a strong wall around our border to prevent Afghani refugees to enter our soil and then wait for the entire population to get decimated and wiped out in internecine quarrels, in honor killings and judicial punishments and religious warfare.
Then we will populate the country with more humane gentry and give the country some civilized people it deserves.
@ Muqarrib:
Disagreed. Please do not paint the Taliban as the saviors of Islam. The reasons for this woman's conversion to Islam probably had to do with her personal study of Islam rather than any impact from the Taliban. Or it is just a case of the Stockholm Syndrome, who knows.
I have personally visited the northern areas of Afghanistan, places like Bamyaan, Baghlan, Takhar, Kunduz, Mazar Sharif and Badakhshan and seen the effects of the atrocities committed by the Taliban. The writer may be talking about the Pushtun majority areas of Afghanistan, but people from other areas really do not want the barbaric Taliban to come back in power. The current structure, with all its failings, at least keeps the hope alive for these people, specially women and children, who want a bright future like other global citizens.
@Muqarrib: An exception doth not the rule make. Homework for today - Patty Hearst.
Hmmm i my opinion the writer have appreciated the situation to some extent in the right direction. It is hard fact to believe that USA has failed to fight taliban. And things are going out of there control. People are fedup of ISAF. But the idea that people want taliban back is in my opinion not true. What they want is ISAF out of there country and balanced government in power which may be impossible to materialised due to local, regional and international interests. Lets see how the situation in afghanistan snakes thorough the time. Many big events are coming in future like american withdrawl, Qatar peace talk and twist and turns in PAK US relation.
@BlackJack:
" I am surprised that a woman has written this article – despite the horrific atrocities that were visited upon women during the Taliban’s barbaric reign."
BlackJack, if it were so horrific then an educated and western women - Yvonne Ridley - would have not gone from Taliban prison into the fold Islam. Agree?
The author's obvious glee that the Taliban was able to attack Kabul and kill innocent people is barely concealed!!!
@Bhindian: @Roflcopter: @Super Pak: I suppose you conducted a poll amongst the villagers of Afghanistan to determine that they want the Taliban back? There may be a sense of invevitability connected with the inability of the NATO forces to win the war - this should not be construed as desire to see those blood-thirsty hoodlums back in the driver's seat. I am surprised that a woman has written this article - despite the horrific atrocities that were visited upon women during the Taliban's barbaric reign.
I bet MarkH believes US is winning this war lol!
@MarkH, To trolls like you facts are fiction and fiction is fact.
You tell us Mark, what have your travels through afghanistan taught you.
Keep to writing books. You set the scene up with a decent visual and then go straight into fictional story telling.