• Login
  • Home
  • Pakistan
  • International News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Pakistan
  • International News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Time of Pakistan
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

Ensuring an exit

ToP by ToP
March 21, 2012
in Opinion
0
President Obama
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

President ObamaPresident Barack Obama has been correct in one part of his response to the killing of 16 Afghan civilians by an American soldier on Sunday: Such disasters must not lead to a panic-stricken “rush for the exit” by America and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

If the United States is to emerge from this conflict with some honour, and if Afghanistan is to have any chance of avoiding future civil war, it is essential that Obama stick to his promise.A flight by the United States would be seen purely as a response to Western losses, reflect callous disregard for the plight of the Afghan people, and lead to justified feelings of triumph on the part of the Taleban and their allies.

Equally important, it would undercut Washington’s ability to shape a peace settlement. The present deadline for a withdrawal of US and NATO ground forces by the end of 2014 allows a reasonable time to search for such a settlement — if the United States uses that time well. On this point, unfortunately, the Obama administration’s approach is not encouraging. If it continues, the current US strategy will likely bring disaster to Afghanistan after 2014.

In the first place, Western talk of success in building up the Afghan state seems little more than whistling in the dark. Not only is that state incorrigibly corrupt, in much of the country it barely exists. If the Western presence has not achieved major improvement in these areas over the last 10 years, it is hard to see what can be achieved over the next two years as the West withdraws.

The Afghan police forces, for example, are riddled with corruption and are loathed by many ordinary Afghans. Moreover, the auxiliary police forces promoted by the United States to fight the Taleban in southern Afghanistan are in many ways a throwback to the heroin-trading, grossly oppressive local militias of the early 1990s — which the Taleban came into being to crush.

More success has been achieved in building up the Afghan National Army; but the weakness of the civilian state could well make this army as much of a liability as a strength. The recent history of Pakistan, much of Africa, and Afghanistan in the 1970s shows what is likely to happen when the military is the only strong institution in a very weak state.

A future military takeover in Afghanistan is made more likely by the fact that Washington has no plan for who to put in place after President Hamid Karzai steps down, as he is constitutionally bound to do, in 2014. This is not the Obama administration’s fault.

Even the anti-Taleban elements of Afghan society are so fractured along ethnic and political lines that it may be impossible to find a candidate who could take over as an executive president without bringing down the entire existing political order.

Moreover, one element of the Obama administration’s strategy would make agreement impossible. This is the insistence, deeply unpopular among many Afghans, that the United States retain bases, Special Forces and military advisers in Afghanistan until at least 2024. Washington wants to keep forces on the ground that can continue to hunt Al Qaeda and prop up Kabul. In practice, however, this plan risks landing the United States in the worst of 
all worlds.

The continued presence of such forces will make agreement with the Taleban impossible, so the war will continue. And if the Kabul administration and army disintegrate, then US advisers will be mired in the resulting disaster.

Instead, Washington should pursue a peace settlement along the following lines: the guarantee of a complete withdrawal of Western forces; the exclusion by the Taleban of all international terrorists from the areas they control; and a Taleban crackdown on heroin production in return for international development aid to those areas.

America and its allies should seek such a settlement because, after 2014, the attempt to suppress the Taleban in the south and east promises, at best, an unending conflict, at worst, a catastrophic collapse of the Afghan state.

The reason the Taleban should accept such a settlement is that taking over Pashtun areas where they have strong support is not at all the same thing as conquering non-Pashtun populations who are bitterly hostile to them. In other words, another decade of civil war would be very likely to end with a de facto territorial settlement close to the one that I am advocating today. The difference would be that in the meantime innumerable more Afghans and Americans would have died. – Khaleejnews

Tags: NATO forces in AfghanistanPresident Barack Obama
Previous Post

Katy and Rihanna plan a girl power anthem

Next Post

India, China not spared from US sanctions on Iran oil

ToP

ToP

Related Posts

Can the Future of Renewable Energy lead to Global Instability?
Opinion

Can the Future of Renewable Energy lead to Global Instability?

by Snea Shams
September 6, 2022
12-year-old British Pakistani boy makes £290,000 during summer holidays
Opinion

12-year-old British Pakistani boy makes £290,000 during summer holidays

by Jameel Ahmad
September 3, 2021
Pakistani philanthropist wins ‘Asia’s highest honour’
Opinion

Pakistani philanthropist wins ‘Asia’s highest honour’

by Jameel Ahmad
September 1, 2021
Japanese regions suspend use of Moderna vaccine
Opinion

Japanese regions suspend use of Moderna vaccine

by Jameel Ahmad
August 30, 2021
PDM sans PPP holds first power show in Karachi
Opinion

PDM sans PPP holds first power show in Karachi

by Jameel Ahmad
August 30, 2021
Cotton growing areas may shift to northern areas due to climate change’
Opinion

Cotton growing areas may shift to northern areas due to climate change’

by Jameel Ahmad
August 26, 2021
WhatsApp to launch new messaging feature soon
Opinion

WhatsApp to launch new messaging feature soon

by Jameel Ahmad
August 25, 2021
Next Post
India, China not spared from Iran oil

India, China not spared from US sanctions on Iran oil

Popular Stories

  • Qamar made Acting President NBP

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Time of Pakistan

About Times Of Pakistan

kralbetbetturkeyikimislibahis1xbetm.infohipas.infohttps://www.wiibet.com/restbetcdn.com

Other Categories

  • Beautiful Pakistan
  • Fashion News
  • Funny News
  • Viral Videos
  • Weird News

Recent Posts

  • 11th J.A. Zaman Memorial Open – Powered by Gem Golfers
  • Imran Khan and Bushra Bibi Sentenced to Jail in £190 Million Case
  • World’s Largest Submarine Cable Arrives in Pakistan: Could This End Internet Woes?

Times Of Pakistan © 2024. Design & Developed by E2E Solution Providers.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Pakistan
  • International News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In