Note to Afghan President Ashraf Ghani
Note to President Ghani: Afghanistan Needs
Self-Help
By Wahab
Raofi
KABUL,
Afghanistan – If I were so bold as to send a note to President Ashraf Ghani, I
would say this: Tell your people to stop waiting for help from others. They
cannot rely on foreign support. Tell your citizens they should instead take an
active role in restoring peace to Afghanistan themselves. Tell them they can do
this. Tell them that your government will help them.
Too much time and energy is wasted – by Afghanistan’s
political leaders, educated elite and the public itself – urging the
international community to rush to their rescue. When our leaders constantly
spout this idea that Afghanistan needs more foreign troops, money and
assistance, it becomes woven into the national psyche.
President Ghani recently told a citizen
gathering in the Paktia province that he has finally convinced world leaders
that the war in Afghanistan is a foreign project that requires foreign
solutions. He seemed to suggest that the world will save us all.
These kinds of remarks are more suited
to a politician running for office. We need strong leadership from an
experienced president who can inspire citizens with a sense of pride and
ownership in their own land.
Peace will not come from outside the
borders; it must arise from inside the villages of Afghanistan itself. Garnering
international sympathy may give war-weary Afghans temporary solace, but relying
on assistance from abroad is a fool’s errand. The Afghan president can take a
cue from the 20th-Century American journalist Walter Lippmann, who
famously remarked that a good leader is someone who tells his people what their
responsibilities are.
Here is what he should tell his people:
Historically, tribal etiquette has been the
foundation of order in Afghanistan. For centuries, ethnic tribes fended for
themselves, keeping the peace and keeping their territory safe without the help
of any large armies.
During the Russian invasion of the 1980s,
it was villagers and ordinary people who stood against the Soviet army and
eventually prevailed. During the past 16 years of U.S. presence in Afghanistan,
villagers and citizens in several areas defended their turf without assistance.
In the Urgun District of Paktika, citizen governance alone prohibits the
Taliban from infiltrating.
During the late 1980s, the Taliban easily
took control of Afghanistan because they promised to clean up the mess the mujahedeen
had created. But they have long since lost support of the citizenry because
they are seen as lackeys of foreigners who have no agenda for Afghanistan but
to destabilize the elected government of Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah.
Ghani should spend more time on closing
the gap between his people and their government. Public support is the key to peace
and his own future.
In 1996, more than a decade before the Taliban
was declared a terrorist organization, A Taliban delegate was San Diego,
California, trying to garner support and asking Afghan-Americans to urge congressmen
to recognize the Taliban. My father, a retired government civil servant, asked if
the Taliban has the support of the people. “If they do,” he said, “then they don’t
need our support.” To this day, my late father’s words remain relevant.
Realizing the importance of public
participation, the U.S. Defense Department has approved the hiring of more
civilians to work under the command of the Afghan army to secure cleared areas.
The decision was welcomed by some Afghan Army officers.
One ex-Afghan Army general – now a
member of Parliament – told TOLO news, “Sending the Army into each village and
district is incongruous with the Army’s general norms and laws … Instead, the local
police with the assistance of citizens should be responsible for providing
security for the citizens, while the Army should be used only in emergency
situations.”
He is right, but a dominant expectation remains
that the government will guard and protect every public and private entity all
the time. This becomes clear when we hear the outcry after incidents such as the
recent ISIS attack that killed 20 at a Shiite mosque in Kabul.
The government cannot assign army and
security forces to protect every school, mosque, and shop. I suggest Afghans consider
assigning teams of civilian volunteers to work with law enforcement, like the Zharandoy,
a group similar to the Boy Scouts of America. They could work in conjunction
with law enforcement to patrol streets and borders, promoting safety.
This policy of waiting for foreign and
domestic governments to solve everything, then blaming them when they fail, is
fruitless. It only feeds a culture of dependency that prevents the country from
taking any major steps toward achieving a lasting peace.
Waiting for peace to be imported from
foreign lands reminds me of the Samuel Beckett play “Waiting for Godot,” in
which the characters spend all their time waiting for someone who never comes.
With limited capital and human skills,
it will not be easy. But that’s no excuse for Afghanistan’s government and
citizens to eschew their responsibilities. To twist the famous line from U.S.
President John F. Kennedy in 1961: Ask not what governments can do for you. Ask what you can do for yourselves.
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