Trump's New Strategy for Afghanistan
Note to Trump: Nation-Building is the Answer in Afghanistan
By Wahab
Raofi
KABUL,
Afghanistan – U.S. President Donald Trump’s new strategy for Afghanistan
contains some bold new ideas that might help, but he got the most important
part wrong. When Mr. Trump said, “We are not nation-building again ... we are
killing terrorists,” he was catering to an American citizenry grown weary of
this never-ending war. But help with nation-building is precisely what
Afghanistan needs most.
First, here are the good aspects of
the new strategy: a U.S. president finally is warning Pakistan that it won’t be
able to support radical elements with its own security establishment and still
get billions of U.S. taxpayer dollars to “fight” terrorists. Also, Mr. Trump
has sent a strong message to the Afghan government that the era of the blank
check is over. Too much cash meant to help the people of Afghanistan has ended
up in foreign bank accounts of corrupt Afghan officials or unscrupulous foreign
contractors.
But here is where Mr. Trump misses
the point: like presidents before him, he has opted for a military solution to
a socio-economic problem. As long as Afghanistan teeters on the brink of
becoming a failed state, the men of its disenfranchised younger generation will
be easy bait for the Taliban and other insurgencies.
The Trump plan is based on a sound
military assessment that any rapid withdrawal would lead to a total collapse of
Afghanistan’s relatively democratic system. The country would become a breeding
ground international terrorism.
But no amount of artillery and death
can miraculously turn Afghanistan into a prosperous nation, free of
socio-economic ills and political sclerosis. More guns and killing will only
prolong this nightmare.
Mr. Trump eschews “nation building,” but
imagine if $5 billion a year were spent on building roads, clinics and major
infrastructure instead of weapons and soldiers. We know that the U.S. isn’t
responsible for fixing Afghanistan’s socio-economic problems, but if the
collapse of Afghanistan into terroristic chaos presents a clear and present
danger to the U.S., why not pull out the root of the problem, instead of just
trimming the leaves?
We need to use our soft power to build
Afghanistan from within. The military option not only doesn’t work, but
exacerbates the problem. Guns and soldiers merely give the insurgency a cause
for jihad against the “invaders” and solidifies their base. Increased American
military operations also inevitably lead to more civilian casualties, which harms
the American image.
U.S. troop escalation raises tensions in
neighboring countries and prompts U.S. adversaries to further help the
insurgency. It could heighten the rivalry between Pakistan and India, tempting Pakistan
into further use of the Taliban as their proxy to counter the Indian influence
in Afghanistan.
The soft power of nation-building would
work because, despite 16 years of violence and setbacks, many Afghans still
view the U.S. as an ally and friend, not as the invader they once viewed the Soviet
Union during its occupation in 1980s.
The generation of Afghans who were in
their teens when the U.S. liberated Afghanistan from the yoke of Taliban are
now in their 20’s and 30’s. They have tasted freedom of expression and the right
to peaceably assemble. Women are now members of cabinets and Afghan parliament.
None of that would have happened under the Taliban. U.S. values have taken root
and grown in Afghanistan, and that’s why we don’t see mass demonstrations on
the streets against the U.S. or Afghan government. The new generation
appreciates the fact that there is no going back, and they want to preserve
what has been accomplished. These successes are a result of American soft
power.
There is no correlation between the
number of NATO troops and the level of peace in rural areas. In places like
Helmand, where the bulk of NATO forces is concentrated, violence levels are much
higher than in areas where there are no foreign troops. Why? Because in places
without troops, the villagers take matters into their own hands and defend themselves
against Taliban.
Afghan media reports that in the Mirzaka
district of the Paktia province, village elders and tribal leaders impose hefty
monetary fines on any who support or give sanctuary to insurgents. Some who
violate this decree have been punished by the burning of their homes.
So, Mr. Trump, the facts strongly show
that it’s time for a shift from military options to some nation-building. Yes,
politically, it will be a hard sell in the U.S. Why would taxpayers support job
creation in Afghanistan when their government is struggling to do the same at
home?
But if they think of this as simply a
shift in the allocation of funds that are already being spent, it makes sense.
Americans did the same thing after World War II, nation-building in Japan and
Germany, and it led to generations of peace that remains to this day.
Afghans must accept that this would not
be a free lunch. If they fail to fulfill their responsibility to fight
corruption and restore accountability, all the good will and money the U.S. can
offer would fail. Afghans should prepare for more sacrifices and tighten their
financial belts to help the U.S. help them.
Dropping the Mother of All Bombs may
kill more insurgents, but it will do nothing to address
the cause of the problem.
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