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The Lesson
Learned:
View-points on the Best
Canada Can Do in Afghanistan
By: Sharif
Ghalib
Toronto, November 15, 2007
Having learned the appalling
lessons in the recent past what a failed state can make happen, the
international community must heed the declining situation in Afghanistan now
and before it is getting to the breaking point.
The situation in Afghanistan is heading to a
wholesale deterioration, day by day, at an alarming proportion and yet at a
rapid pace.
Owing to feeble security, dozens
of districts have been falling to the Taliban or changing hands recently between
the Taliban and the Afghan and coalition forces across the south and east,
while amid heightened fears, there appear serious signs that the insurgency
is bound to spilling over to the usually peaceful north of the country.
The international community,
to-date, has been evasive to responding to calls repeatedly made by President
Karzai and his government over the rational need for taking the battle to the actual sources of
terrorism, i.e. the centers of ideological indoctrination, training,
equipping, dispatch and the physical infrastructure of the insurgents outside
Afghanistan.
Similarly, the government is
being swamped by widespread corruption, and according to the UNDCP, the
bumper illicit drugs production in Afghanistan this year accounts
for the record 93-plus percent of the world total output.
Canada’s Afghanistan Mission:
In mid-October this year, Prime
Minister Stephen Harper announced a panel to review Canada’s mission in Afghanistan and the future
options after the mandate for the current mission ends in February 2009.
The following are itemized analyses of the looming
problems confronted by the international community in Afghanistan, and the options available to Canada,
per se, to carry the mandate forward now and then.
On the come-back of the
insurgency and the role of Afghanistan’s
neighbours:
It is widely perceived that certain
circles within the Pakistani government remain involved behind much of the worsening
insurgency engulfing Afghanistan.
Pakistani ultra right wing extremists, Taliban and other radical armed groups
all work in concert and at the behest of Pakistani Junta, with impunity, based
upon the adopted complicit policy of persist and prevail with the
assumption that NATO and coalition forces would soon be tired out, and as a
result shall pull out of Afghanistan.
However, the recent developments
unfolding in Pakistan
all point to an evolving willy- nilly change in the strategic thinking within
that country. The abrupt rise in militancy, involving domestic extremist
forces as well as Pakistan-based cliques linked to international terrorist
networks, their brazen territorial gains, the fiefdoms set up and being run
by armed elements in areas as close as a few hundred kilometres to the
nation’s capital, Islamabad, and the surrender, virtually at will, of
government troops to the advancing militants in the area, mass-abductions and
detention in large numbers of the Pakistani army servicemen by the rebels in
north and South Waziristan regions, the massive bombings, etc., all seem to
have led to the taking shape of an orthodox idea amongst the general public
in Pakistan conceding the dramatic events as a boomerang to Pakistan’s protracted
mis- guided and short-sighted policies vis-vis the neighbouring Afghanistan
and the region, to which Pakistan chose to cling over the past several
decades.
Canada must seek working
closely with the rest of NATO allies in a bid to convince Pakistan on the dire need for a whole-hearted systematic
change of policy toward Afghanistan,
beneficial to both fraternal nations, and for the sake of mutual peace and harmony
in the region and the world at large.
In this context, Canada, among
other things, could join the US and European partners to encourage both
neighbours to settle, justly and permanently, their historical border dispute
over the Durand Line -- commonly viewed as the most important impediment against
normalization of relations between the two countries-- through negotiations
and by political means aimed at ensuring both immediate and long-term
neighbourly concord.
Otherwise, Canada should bring added focus on forging a
collective and consistent methodology with the coalition partners aimed at
sending Pakistan
a stern warning against the safe havens within its territory used by
terrorists and the cross-border militant incursions.
On the illicit drugs:
The international community has
arguably failed in implementing an effective counter -narcotics strategy in Afghanistan. Soaring
opium production, fundamental to the security and future of the country and bearing
direct nexus with the insurgency and corruption, has plagued the nation’s
economy, which makes up 1/3 of total economic activities in Afghanistan, according
to the World Bank.
Canada may push for the idea
of NATO getting involved in the combat for eradication of the drugs and the
fight against narco-mafia. Likewise, Canada may need to appropriate exclusive
funding for substitute crops for the needy farmers who depend on the poppy cultivation
as a means of livelihood.
Meanwhile Canada must vehemently oppose the treacherous suggestions
by certain corners for legalization of the notorious drug production in Afghanistan for
the alleged global therapeutic use.
The intriguing proposition, if
consented, will most definitely give rise to far-reaching miseries and
agonies for Afghanistan
ranging from increased militancy, insecurity, corruption, criminality,
drug-addiction and infatuation to social and ethical hazards, as consistently
cautioned by President Karzai, while bearing potential perilous regional and
global implications.
On the raging corruption and the
reform of the government:
The chronic rampant corruption
within the government, to which President Karzai referred as rife during his blunt
assessment of the problem, of late, has indeed reached the boiling point. The
unchecked challenge has recently sparked tough criticism from the
international community, prompting President Karzai to emphatically call for the
reform of the government.
As a major donor-nation, Canada should earnestly use its
leverage with the government of Afghanistan to fight against the widespread
corruption, money squandering, mis-management, nepotism, and cronyism inside
and out and at all levels.
Manipulating means at its
disposal, Canada
should help create requisite checks and balances within the government and promote
the values of transparency, accountability, and meritocracy.
Canada should also
advocate strengthening of Afghanistan’s
legislature as a nationally representative body courting legitimacy for the
process.
Furthermore Canada should
push for further reform of the judiciary, within the context of a thorough reform of the system, recently called
for by President Karzai and the international community at large.
On the reconstruction and
development:
Over six years into the peace
process and the efforts for reconstruction of Afghanistan,
there is little doubt that the international community lacks the resolute will
to deliver on its lofty promises made to the people of Afghanistan, measured
by the negligible extent of the reconstruction across the country.
Lagging and decelerating due, in
part, to the persistent insecurity, the rebuilding schemes implemented, thus
far, staggeringly stand not even near the envisaged “mini-marshal plan” for
Afghanistan.
However, the shortcoming is believed
to be, by far, associated with the lack of a clear-cut reconstruction
strategy by the international community, leading to the ensuing disillusionment
and disappointment of the populace.
Canada should broaden the
parameter and increase the efficacy of its reconstruction and rehabilitation
efforts in Afghanistan.
Canada
needs to re-examine CIDA’s existing approach and strategy, ensuring added focus on targeted infrastructural
rebuilding and major developmental projects across the nation.
On the formation of Afghan national
army and police force:
The process of the formation of
the national army and police force projected to be completed by 2009 remains quite
sluggish and runs behind the schedule. The process is being faced with
manifold problems such as lack of adequate training, shortage in military
resources and hardware, low wages, delayed salary payments, etc.
Canada should ratchet up focus,
devote more resources and step up the task of providing extra training and
logistics to the nascent Afghan national army and police force aimed at furthering
their combat and logistical capabilities. As well, Canada should speed up the conduct
of the endeavours directed at the degree of preparedness of both the ANA and Afghan
police, so as to be able to independently take charge of ensuring local security
and defending the country at the earliest possible time.
On the policy and operational
coordination by NATO-members:
Lack of a cohesive policy, of coordination
and harmonious operational undertakings amongst NATO-member-nations in Afghanistan, has
caused increasing military setbacks in the campaign against the insurgency. The
adverse effects stemming from this handicap though has caused public
frustration and cynicism about campaign’s stated objective as much as it has
led to an emboldened Taliban able to bring the fight with the coalition next to
a standstill.
Canada needs to play a more
robust role in advocating the need for a unified, concerted and collaborative
policy amongst the NATO allies for a sustained and comprehensive strategy founded
on a consistent action plan in Afghanistan. Thus stated we must
not fail to recognize the foreseeable prognosis of
the catastrophic regional and international implications of any backtracking and/or
failure in the common quest for a comprehensive stabilization of the country.
On the need for an impartial
approach to the Afghan government:
A great many within Afghanistan
hold the perception that the international community has been selective in its
approach via-vis the ethno-political forces within the government.
If so pursued, the practice
would prove to be insensitive to national unity, ethnic harmony and equilibrium
of the country, hurtful to the on-going political process, counter- productive
to the pivotal social justice and political pluralism, damaging to the efforts
for the reconstruction, and certainly unfitting to the concurrent
state-building process.
Canada should pursue a clear line
of policy ensuring promotion of national unity
amongst all Afghans and avoiding ethnic tilting, in line with the new
geo-political and socio-strategic realities of the present-day Afghanistan
bound to becoming a modern, pluralistic and democratic state, as lauded time
and again by President Karzai, and of the region.
Canada needs to follow an
inclusive and even-handed approach toward all ethno-political forces enjoying
grass-root support and influence in different regions of Afghanistan,
who represent the heterogeneous dynamics of the political set up as a
democratic institution.
Canada should
engage all parties who are committed to the success of the peace process, are
part of the government and essentially part of the solution as a whole.
We must avoid
needless alienation of moderate peaceful ethno-political forces deemed to be
elements of stability within the country.
Canada may need to support the
government of Afghanistan in its bid -- already approved by the nation’s
Parliament -- for engaging all those rank and file combatants, who choose to break
with their past and come to the government fold, in good faith and without
any pre-conditions whatsoever, pledging allegiance to Afghanistan’s
constitution in its entirety, with the sole aspiration to re-integrate into
the society and pursue a peaceful life.
On Canada’s
mission in Kandahar:
The government and
the people of Afghanistan
truly appreciate the continued solidarity and generous humanitarian,
reconstruction and development contributions as well as the invaluable
sacrifices made by the international community including Canada for
the sake of peace and security in their country.
In the broader context, however,
Canadians must realize that, resembling other partners, the Canadian mission
in Afghanistan, apart from
assisting the country and the people of Afghanistan,
also serves their own safety and security objectives vitally important for Canada’s
national interests at home.
On the future options:
1/ Canada
may consider shifting the PRT to a different more peaceful region pending a replacement force by NATO to take over
the mission in Kandahar.
2/ Canada
may also consider drawing down its troop’s level in Kandahar by formation of a combined PRT
involving another NATO partner to shoulder the difficult mission. In the mean
time, this shall allow Canada
to consider assigning the splinter reduced force for deployment to another
province.
3/ Canada
may finally consider the establishment of a joint mechanism for rotational
deployment of the Canadian contingent in Kandahar along with a group of fellow- NATO-partners.
End.
Sharif Ghalib was the first Afghan diplomat to negotiate
the establishment of full bilateral diplomatic and consular relations between
Afghanistan and Canada at
resident-embassy level. He opened the Embassy of Afghanistan
in Ottawa in
late 2002 and served as the country’s Charge d’Affaires, a.i., and Minister
Counselor until 2005.
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