"Geopolitical
Setting"
America's three Afghan challenges
The Christian Science Monitor, November 23, 2001
S. Frederick Starr
America's campaign in Afghanistan has succeeded beyond its planners'
wildest dreams. But after the Taliban's sudden collapse, the United States faces three new
challenges. Any of them could throw Afghanistan back into chaos. How will US planners
handle these challenges? The signs are far from encouraging.
The first problem arose when the Northern Alliance flaunted the US's
explicit requests and pushed prematurely into Kabul, setting itself up as a nationwide
government. It sent in its own president, Burhanuddin Rabbani, an ethnic Tajik; took over
the "power" ministries; began appointing governors; offered government posts to
friends; and told the UN not to send international peacekeepers.
Nothing could be more calculated to inflame the passions of the
plurality Pashtun population, not to mention the 16 million Pashtuns in nuclear-armed
Pakistan. This fact was lost in the euphoria of Kabul's fall. But as soon as the Taliban
is out of the way, Pashtuns will turn against Mr. Rabbani and his fellow usurpers. A new
war will surely follow.
Even though the northern warlords have agreed to attend this week's
UN-sponsored conference on governance in Berlin, they have otherwise ignored requests to
step back. But there is a way to correct the problem: Hold Russian President Putin
responsible for this situation and demand that he rectify it.
Why Putin? Because the Northern Alliance is entirely a Russian project,
a tool for reviving Russian hopes of controlling Afghanistan. Every Afghan knows Russia
has used the alliance as a Trojan horse. In an act of naivete, the US helped the horse
into Kabul. The Russian-Northern Alliance actions replicate the Russian Army's brazen rush
into Pristina during the Balkan war, and are equally dangerous. Even before his US visit,
Putin backed it to the hilt, declaring that Rabbani must head the future government of
Afghanistan.
So the US must now hold Putin rather than Rabbani alone accountable for
this foolhardy action. He must pull Rabbani out of Kabul, declare his support for the
UN-sponsored peace process, and end Russian support for the Northern Alliance.
Second, a new government is needed. All parties agree it must be
national in scope, out of the terrorism business, opposed to cultivation of opium poppies,
and adhere to the UN Declaration of Human Rights. But then the discord begins. Germany
Foreign Minister Joshchka Fischer and Assistant Secretary of State Richard Armitage are
talking of a decentralized arrangement or even a federal system. This is a formula for
disaster.
But surely federalism has worked in the US and Germany, not to mention
Switzerland? True, but there the units and borders were clear. None were dominated by
warlords who based their relations with neighbors on zero-sum thinking. In Afghanistan, a
federal system would legitimize and undergird the power of warlords. The very process of
defining internal borders would be a casus belli.
Instead, Afghanistan should be ruled by a unitary and effective central
government based on the existing and historical 29 provinces. Central power must be
reinforced, so that it can patrol the borders, collect taxes, provide services equitably,
stamp out opium poppies, and act on the world stage as a single state. The US must insist
on this as a condition of postwar assistance.
Third, even the best government will fail without international aid.
Fortunately, Washington and other capitals understand this. Several donors' meetings are
scheduled.
What else is called for? Americans have rhapsodized about an Afghan
Marshall Plan. Members of Congress have called on the US to rebuild infrastructure, e.g.,
highways, airports, power plants, and phone systems. Such projects will eventually be
necessary, although they are a stretch in a country from which the entire middle class has
fled. Unless people are first enabled to feed themselves and create remunerative jobs for
themselves, Afghanistan will quickly descend once more into anarchy.
Afghans are not America-haters. They know we provided massive aid
before 1979, stood by them against the Red Army in the 1980s, and provided most of the
emergency assistance even under Taliban rule. But they fear two things: that either the US
will cut and run or, if it does not, that US assistance will focus on big projects that
subsidize the leaders more than the common people. Until the former Afghan fighter sees
direct benefit from our help, he will be an easy recruit for the next warlords or
terrorists.
What kind of aid is needed? The issue that has transformed Afghanistan
and its neighbors into the world epicenter of desperation is definitely not ethnic or
religious differences. After all, the same people who are now killing each other lived in
relative peace for long periods through the past two centuries.
The core issue in Afghanistan is deep poverty, which prevails
throughout the vast mountain zone of inner Asia. Poverty defines the lives of the 60
million inhabitants of the western Himalayan chain - the Hindukush, Kohi-Noor, Pamirs,
Tien-Shan, Karakorum, and Allatau-Jungaria ranges.
Fortunately, experience proves that mountain-based poverty can be
alleviated, but not through Marshall Plans. Twenty-five years ago, Pakistan's northern
areas were as poor as Afghanistan is today, and a hotbed of killing and drug trafficking.
Working quietly at the village level, international development projects have turned the
situation around. Today the region can boast more trekkers than narco-traffickers.
There are other successes. As recently as five years ago, Tajikistan's
Pamir region was locked in civil and interethnic war, with all parties also fighting over
control of what was then the biggest drug route in the world. Religious extremism was
rising. Neither Tajik Badakhshan, as the region is called, nor the adjoining region of
Afghanistan, could feed themselves.
In a mere half decade, development projects have helped the people of
Tajik Badakhshan make their region self-sustaining in food. Violence is down, and the main
route for drug-trafficking has shifted westward. The method by which this happened is
astonishingly simple. It involves work with local people to reopen mountainside irrigation
channels, obtain better seeds, establish communal organizations of self-government, and
extend small loans.
In the end, Afghans are practical. The experience of 2,000 years living
along the Silk Road has made them dealmakers. If they see a likelihood of improving their
lives by joining a new political force, they will seize it. If they don't see it, it's our
fault, not theirs. Make no mistake - these incentives work.
A Tajik transformation
Six years ago, the valley of Garm, Tajikistan, was one of the nastiest
spots in the region. Religious extremism, terror, drug dealing, and Mafioso-type killing
were rife.
A local mullah typified this mood. Armed with a Kalashnikov, he exuded
hate, as did his young contemporaries, who met daily at the village mosque. Then
international development workers came in. The mullah took out a $500 loan for Dutch
potato seeds. Over three seasons, he amassed $21,000. He paid off his loan, rebuilt his
house, bought a used car, and provided new clothes for his children.
Recently, a fellow Tajik who had known the mullah during his fighting
days encountered the man. When asked, "Where's your Kalashnikov?" the mullah
replied, "I turned it in to the government." When asked whether he still hangs
out with fighters, he said, "No. I don't have time for that now."
America and other donor countries can and must move quickly to multiply
his story a million-fold, throughout Central Asia. Experience shows this is entirely
possible, and does not call for rocket science.
S. Frederick Starr is chairman of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute
at Johns Hopkins SAIS.
The Christian Science Monitor, November 23, 2001
http://www.cacianalyst.org/Publications/Starr_CSM_1123.htm
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