CMI (Chr. Michelsen Institute) Development Studies and Human Rights
 
 

What next for Afghanistan?

Edging closer to the Soviet Trap

International Affairs Forum posed the following question to eight commentators on Afghanistan:

"The report by the Afghanistan Study Group warns the conflict there could become a 'forgotten war' and that Afghanistan is at risk of becoming a 'failed state'. Is this a fair assessment, and what can and should be done to stop this happening?"

CMI's Afghanistan and peacebuilding expert, Astri Suhrke responded:

The Washington-based Afghanistan Study Group claims in its report (January 2008) that "there is a weakening of resolve in the international community to see the efforts in Afghanistan through to a successful conclusion." (p.5). In reality, "the weakening resolve" reflects growing European concern that the strategy staked out by Washington may be neither realistic nor desirable.

The big, divisive issue in NATO at present is the reluctance of many members to send combat troops to the embattled south and east of Afghanistan. Transatlantic differences surfaced again early this year when Secretary of Defense Robert Gates bluntly told Germany to send more troops - and without national caveats. The German government equally bluntly refused.

The German position reflects scepticism towards the role of military forces in addressing the conflict in Afghanistan, and, as die Welt noted, a certain Angst that the very word "war" arouses. (1) This scepticism is shared by broad segments of public opinion in other European countries. It is not simply a reflexive reaction in a political culture that mistrusts the efficacy of military power - the Mars vs Venus difference in Robert Kagan's universe - but rests on an assessment of the limits of what NATO combat forces can achieve in this particular conflict.

First, there is a lack of clarity about the purpose of the mission. Is it to defeat Al-Qaida, an objective that is premised on a domino theory of international terrorism that itself is questionable? Is it to bring good (liberal) governance and economic development to Afghanistan? Or is it increasingly to protect the credibility of NATO in its first combat mission ever, and hence the relevance of the alliance as an instrument of Western-led order and stability in the 21st century? By now, all three objectives appear to be quite intertwined. The experience so far, however, shows that inserting more combat forces have not brought any of them much closer. On the contrary, a tenfold increase in Western forces since early 2002 seems to have had the opposite effect. The militants have responded by adopting new tactics and recruiting more members, Al-Qaida has entrenched itself on the Pakistan side of the border, and Afghan public confidence in the Karzai government and the future has declined. All these negative developments are acknowledged by the ASG report. Yet it recommends more troops - i.e. more of the same.

A more radical, but arguably more logical, conclusion is that there are some good reasons why the sharp increase in Western forces over the past seven years has failed to turn the tide. The main reason is not lack of numbers, but the limitations of the military approach that governs OEF and ISAF combat operations in Afghanistan.

There are four main constraints:

The premise for the initial 'light' military footprint in Afghanistan was precisely this: American military planners did not want to walk into the Soviet trap by appearing as an occupying power that would mobilize national resistance. The U.S. and its allies now have around 50 000 troops in Afghanistan. That is almost half of what the Soviet Union had during most of its occupation. Regardless of the role of the sanctuary in Pakistan and foreign support for the militants, by repeatedly asking for more NATO troops, the U.S. is edging closer to the Soviet experience of sustaining an inconclusive and costly war in Afghanistan.

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Events November / December 2008
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Fri 21 November 2008
How Relevant is Robin Hood? The Human Right to Health in a Global Perspective

The seminar will address the role of the international community in securing the right to health through an exploration of the content of the right itself, the corresponding obligations, and in particular which obligations are assumed by richer states - acting bi- or multilaterally. Read more

Mon 24 November 2008
Rights and Legal Empowerment in Eradicating Poverty

Empowering the poor requires more than simply a transfer of resources; it entails the creation of sound legal and political frameworks which specifically address the needs of the poor and vulnerable and hold political and administrative leaders accountable for policy failures. Read more

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