Over the summer, the Afghan Taliban's military
committee distributed "A Book of Rules," in Pashto, to its fighters.
The book's eleven chapters seem to draw from the population-centric
principles of F.M. 3-24, the U.S. Army's much publicized
counter-insurgency field manual, released in 2006. Henceforth, the
Taliban guide declares, suicide bombers must take "the utmost steps . .
. to avoid civilian human loss." Commanders should generally insure the
"safety and security of the civilian's life and property." Also, lest
anxious Afghan parents get the wrong idea, Taliban guerrillas should
avoid hanging around with beardless young boys and should particularly
refrain from "keeping them in camps."
The manual might be risible
if the Taliban's coercive insurgency were not so effective.
Afghanistan's self-absorbed President, Hamid Karzai, might even
consider leafing through it; if he could account for his citizenry's
appetite for justice and security half as adaptively as his enemies do,
Barack Obama would not be struggling so hard to locate the "good war"
he pledged to win during his campaign for the White House.
Afghanistan's
deterioration cannot be blamed on one man, and certainly not on Karzai.
After the Taliban's fall, he was a symbol of national unity in a broken
land-for several years, he was perhaps the only Afghan leader able to
attract the simultaneous confidence of northern Tajik militias,
southern Pashtun tribes, and international aid donors. The landslide he
won in the 2004 election truly reflected his standing.
Gradually,
however, Karzai seemed to succumb to palace fever and corruption. An
unfortunate blend of ego and passivity hobbled him; he could neither
manage the American presence in his country nor turn its failures to
his advantage by remaking himself as a convincing nationalist. For
years, the Bush Administration accepted Karzai's limitations, and did
nothing to create conditions from which a plausible alternative might
emerge. In 2008, as another election approached, President Bush's
advisers at last sensed trouble; some of them considered trying to dump
Karzai. In the end, however, Bush chose a policy of neutrality, which
the incoming Obama Administration endorsed.
There is no
sugarcoating how Karzai played his hand: he or his backers tried to rig
the election on August 20th, a day on which several million of his
countrymen defied Taliban threats of violence to attend the polls.
Recently, after weeks of equivocating, the head of the United Nations
mission in Kabul, Kai Eide, of Norway, admitted that the vote had been
marred by "widespread fraud." (The U.N. had earlier fired Eide's
American deputy, Peter Galbraith, for chasing this conclusion too
vigorously.) U.N. voter-turnout estimates show that most of the fraud
occurred in Karzai's strongholds and lifted his tally far more than any
other candidate's. In southern Helmand Province, for example, the U.N.
estimates suggest that Karzai's campaign may have manufactured more
than seventy thousand fake votes; in Kandahar, a hundred and twenty
thousand; in Paktika, a hundred and sixty thousand. From June through
August, nearly two hundred coalition soldiers died in military
operations designed in part to create security for the election.
Karzai's
apparent betrayal has the capacity to shock, but it would be a mistake
to overemphasize his failings, just as it was an error to overemphasize
his early successes. American interests in Afghanistan-namely, the
disablement of Al Qaeda along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, and the
pursuit of a region free from the threat of Taliban revolution-should
not be wholly confused with the quest for an honest President in Kabul,
where rulers have not often been trustworthy.
A second round of
voting now looks probable; it could help calm the country, or it could
make things worse. In any event, the election is not yet an utter
catastrophe. Two years ago, in Kenya, Mwai Kibaki allegedly stole his
reëlection to the Presidency, and the country erupted in mass riots and
militia killings. In June, Iran's fraud-riddled vote ignited a protest
movement with revolutionary ambitions. In Afghanistan, despite possibly
decisive fraud, the opposition has barely thrown a rock. Abdullah
Abdullah, the aggrieved second-place finisher, just holds press
conferences in his garden.
It goes without saying that Afghans
have had enough of violence. Abdullah's restraint signals a broader,
resilient desire among many political and tribal leaders to avoid
having their country descend into chaos again. This is the opening that
American policy has repeatedly failed to grasp since the Taliban's fall
in late 2001: an opportunity to reject the false expediency of warlords
and indispensable men, in favor of deepening participatory, Afghan-led
political reform and national reconciliation.
In tandem with a
decision about troop levels, the Obama Administration requires an
ambitious political strategy for Afghanistan, one that will seize upon
the willingness of opposition leaders to negotiate even with a tainted
President Karzai about an array of national questions. These include
how electoral fraud might be prevented in the future; whether
provincial governors should be elected rather than appointed at the
President's whim; how ethnic balance can be assured as the country's
Army and police force grow; whether political parties should be
encouraged; whether the 2004 constitution should be revised to
strengthen parliament; how local government can be improved; how
corrupt or drug-dealing government officials should be brought to
account; and how Taliban foot soldiers and leaders might be encouraged
to forswear violent revolution for constitutional politics.
It
is not the specifics of these talks that matter most; it is the
prospective project of continuous Afghan-led negotiations, formal and
informal, amply resourced with money, international attention, and
supportive expertise. Some of these projects, such as the establishment
of local rehabilitation centers for defecting low-level Taliban
fighters, demand urgent investments, within months.
Such
political work will be no more certain to succeed than anything else in
Afghanistan. Karzai will resist encroachments upon his authority;
efforts to satisfy northern groups such as those aligned with Abdullah
will conflict with efforts to pacify the Taliban, who are rooted in the
south and the east. It is essential work,
nonetheless-counter-insurgency campaigns rarely prevail unless military
deployments are intimately connected with political negotiations.
Since
the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, in 1979, attempts by foreign
powers to shape events there have repeatedly been thwarted by what
intelligence analysts call "mirror imaging," which is the tendency of
decision-makers in one country to judge counterparts in another through
the prism of their own language and politics. The Politburo, for
example, engaged in energetic debates about the extent to which
Afghanistan might conform to the stages of revolutionary development
contemplated in Marxist-Leninist theory.
As the Obama war cabinet
now debates its choices, American discourse barely refers to Afghan
leaders by name or to the particular equations of the country's diverse
provinces. Instead, historical analogies and abstract concepts from
political-theory texts abound-arguments about "legitimacy" and
"governance," as if the Taliban were motivated primarily by the "Rights
of Man." Obama and his advisers might profitably consult the Democratic
Party's own book of rules, specifically an entry composed by a
peaceable boss from Massachusetts: All politics is local. In the case
of Afghanistan, there is a corollary: All local progress, or failure,
will be political.
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