It is one thing to win an election, and quite another to win a country. Whoever sits in the presidential palace once the process is complete faces a very uncertain future. Foreign combat troops will have left by the end of the year, leaving the Afghan National Army to fend for itself with precious little by way of armour and air assets and a slow-burn insurgency that could quickly flare to a conflagration in the absence of the firewall provided by foreign forces. The Taliban already run a parallel government in the south and east of the country, and although they have not ‘taken and held’ territory, they do have that potential, at least in areas that are ethnically Pashtun. The economy is in a shambles and the country is heavily aid dependent. Relations with its neighbours — including Pakistan — are occasionally fractious and border ‘incidents’ are common. Despite the withdrawal, institutional ties with the US remain strong, with an announcement in July 2012 that the two countries are formally allies, a status that goes beyond the long-term multilateral efforts to bring stability. Few are going to lament the departure of Mr Karzai, widely regarded as corrupt and ineffectual for many years. Afghanistan is truly at a crossroads and the route it eventually chooses is going to affect us all.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 15th, 2014.
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