Tariq Rizwan
We have been listening and witnessing Afghan war for almost five
decades since our birth. Several generations have doomed since the breakup of
political crisis in Kabul; quick successions of President Dawood, President
Amanulla Khan and Zahir Shah followed by full-fledged invasion of USSR.
The invasion of Afghanistan
caused an exodus of Afghan Refugees in Pakistan
and Iran.
Next destination of the expansionist USSR
was either Pakistan or Iran to reach
the warm water. Man proposes God disposes, collective efforts of Pakistan & Iran
and daring nature of Afghan Mujahideen with US\West financial and weaponry
support defeated the USSR
designs and pushed back the communist monster to disappear in its own ashes.
Ditched and left out by US/West in a fragile state, the warring
Afghans continued fighting with one another instead of stabilizing their gains
in Afghan Jihad. The Madrassa students “Taliban” led by Mulla Umer had driven
all the Mujahideen groups and captured Kabul.
Though fighting continued with elements in the north and Northern Alliance put
up some resistance yet Taliban were able to annex most parts of Afghanistan
quickly and introduced Islamic system in the country. After 9/11, Taliban were
ousted by US led ISAF in 2001 and established administration of own choice with
a Quetta based pro - Zahir Shah Teacher, Karzai as President of the new
administration. Afghan Taliban dispersed and continued its proxy under the
command of Mulla Umer. Mulla Umer is no more alive but his group has defacto
rule on almost 70% area of Afghanistan.
President Ashraf Ghani government has no writ in most parts of the country. US
& ISAF troops became exhausted and left Afghanistan
except some US
airbases & air bases without developing and bringing lasting peace in the
war torn country.
The war - dependent economy in Afghanistan is worsening day by
day. Afghanistan’s
economy slowed down dramatically from an average of 10% in 2003-12 to only 3%
in 2013-15. The prevailing anarchy and fragile infrastructure in Afghanistan is
in the news almost every day, and it is hard to escape the images of worst hit
villagers caught in the middle of the conflict. With a growing Taliban
insurgency centered in the south, East and Southeast, the violence continues to
escalate. Analysts believe that too much aid, especially in the insecure
regions of Afghanistan,
has led to more instability. Money has siphoned off by corrupt government
officials, which fueled anti-government sentiment in the people who were
supposed to benefit from that aid. On the other hand, regions that were
relatively stable received much less aid than unstable areas. Afghans
think that it is not the Taliban who are winning rather it is that the Kabul government which is
losing. Kabul government
is viewed as corrupt and predatory. A US researcher Wielder says that
interaction with local Afghans reveal that most Afghans think “when Taliban
were in charge there were fewer problems. We didn’t have these warlords, and at
least we had some form of justice. And the police then weren’t ripping us off.”
The
problems of Afghanistan
include overinvesting in warlords who were the actual cause of Taliban birth,
illiterate young generation, lack of women empowerment, lack of government
& business infrastructure and fear among the international donors and
investors. Aid and military support cannot resolve all these problems.
Political stability, secure environment and foreign investment can produce job
opportunities and bring prosperity to Afghanistan. In Afghanistan,
only 23.5 percent of the population above 15 years old is literate, while the
rate for women is even worse at 12.6 percent. At 36 percent, Afghanistan’s enrollment of girls in primary
schools is low compared with 90.4 percent in Iran,
67 percent in Saudi Arabia,
and 62 percent in Pakistan.
Other impediments that hinder women’s education are violence against women,
underage marriages, forced marriages, economic problems, and marriage as a
solution to family disputes (known as baad).
As a quick-fix solution, we basically re-armed all the warlords
who were willing to fight the Taliban. But they were the very ones who gave
birth to the Taliban in the first place, since people were so fed up with the
warlords. Most Afghans held them accountable for most of the instability of the
previous 20 years. So very quickly we brought back to power some of the most
unpopular and discredited individuals from the past, and they became the
backbone of this new government that many Afghans see as part of the problem,
rather than part of the solution.
Afghans are fed up of continued fighting and have become more
security conscious over a period of time as is the case with international
community. US is fast shifting its focus from Central Asia and South Asia towards
Asia - Pacific to counter the growing Chinese-North Korean threat to its
interests in the region thus affecting its focus on Afghanistan. Facing crises in
Middle East, reduction in oil prices, empowering moderate new generation,
Saudis have became more neighbors-centric and undermined to a greater extent
its interest in Afghanistan.
Warring parties became less dependent on Saudi finances and investment. Iran and India
are developing its own infrastructure by developing Chabahar
Port to pass on business to Central Asia using Western Afghan routes. Pakistan has allowed China
to develop China - Pak
Economic Corridor (CPEC) which is the shortest route towards Chinese Xinxiang
Province, Central Asia and even Russia.
There are reports that Mulla Umer’s successor Mulla Akhter Mansoor
has been killed in Balochistan in US drone strike. It is yet not confirmed but
if confirms will be a great setback to the upcoming peace talks between Tehrik
- e - Taliban Afghanistan.
Reportedly, he was coming from Iran
when targeted in Noshki area, Balochistan on Saturday 21 May 2016. Indeed,
Afghans should come out of their ashes and think seriously for peace and
prosperity of the country. It is the real time for economic enhancement,
prosperity of the region and the neighboring countries including Pakistan, Iran,
Uzbekistan and Tajikistan
as well as the extra regional powers to put their interests aside and work
sincerely for “Afghans’
owned and led” solution to the Afghan dilemma. Though the
weak Hizb-e-Islami of Gulbadin Hikmatyar joined Ashraf Ghani government yet the
fresh Taliban pre-condition shows that US may play a pivotal role by
withdrawing its troops from Afghanistan
as per the desire of Taliban faction to prepare the ground for a meaningful
dialogue between the sides. Sitting Afghan government may be asked to come out
of Northern Alliance and their foreigner
mentors to show flexibility and give some reasonable share in government to the
Pashtun groups in South, East and North East of Kabul. Doing so, the warring
factions may be convinced and brought on negotiating table to resolve the issue
once for all.
The writer is a
freelance journalist based in London
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