Pakistan’s Election Could Eventually Free Afghanistan
By Wahab Raofi
While Pakistan's recent election may not meet all Western
standards of perfection, it certainly serves as a demonstration of democracy in
action. Its ramifications could potentially influence its neighbor,
Afghanistan, particularly if the Pakistani military relinquishes its subtle
support for the Taliban.
Among the various forms of battle, a war of hatred,
suspicion and envy is just as pernicious as battles fought on traditional
fields. This is precisely the conflict ongoing between the Afghans and the
Pakistani security establishment.
Afghans accuse their neighbor Pakistan of pursuing a
duplicitous policy toward the Afghan people. While ostensibly endorsing
democracy and elections within its own borders, Pakistan is alleged to support
the Taliban, a group seemingly disinclined to let Afghans go to voting polls to
select their leaders.
Pakistan held elections amidst
political, economic, social and political scandals that led to
the imprisonment of former Prime Minister Emran Khan. Like many elections
around the world, Pakistan's was not exempt from
accusations of rigging, particularly involving
interference from the military to manipulate the results in its favor.
But the allegations of corruption, misuse of power and
voting fraud are not a new phenomenon, and it’s seen in many developing
nations.
In his book The Nine Lives of Pakistan, Declan
Walsh takes the reader into Pakistan’s violent political and social order, with
“fraught elections, assassinations and military rule.”
But pessimism aside, the glass in Pakistan’s political
spectrum now seems half-full. Pakistanis went to the polls to cast their votes with
no major reports of violence. To give the military its fair share of credit, the
generals showed a level of civility by not calling the troops, as they did in
the past.
As
an Afghan-born American, I find it hard to understand a simple fact: Why does Pakistan’s
security establishment and Islamist parties now espouse free elections, freedom
of speech, democracy and polarization for Pakistan, while rejecting these very same
ideals for Afghanistan?
During
his recent visit
to Kabul, Maulana Fazul Rahan – leader of the
Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam party and a staunch supporter of the Taliban –
conveyed to Afghan media that the world should not impose its ideology on the
Taliban, including the concept of elections. That’s in stark contrast to his
party’s participation in his own country’s election.
According
to the Afghan media, he is said to have leveraged his long-time friendship with
the Afghan Taliban by striking a deal with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP),
whose leaders are said to be ensconced in Afghanistan, to refrain from
disrupting the Pakistan elections. The TTP allegedly pledged not
to attack the rallies before the election. But the Taliban refuses to honor the same
principles for elections in their own country.
Undoubtedly,
the Taliban fears elections because they know such freedoms would lead to a
rejection of their presence. They know their rise to power was not the result
of popular choice, but rather stemmed from an agreement struck in the 2020 Doha
Agreement, signed between the United States and the Taliban. This agreement
stipulated that the Taliban would not attack U.S. forces as they withdrew.
In
the Taliban's view, the concept of sovereignty belongs to Allah alone, and any
system of government that allows people to make laws or choose leaders is
considered a violation of this principle. They argue that the Islamic system of
governance should be based on the Quran and the teachings of the Prophet
Muhammad, with religious scholars (ulama) serving as the guardians of Islamic
law and morality.
The
predominantly mono-ethnic Taliban, primarily composed of Pashtuns from the
southern region, notably Kandahar, wield Islam as a tool for their hegemony,
and free elections would bring an axe to their power. They can’t be happy about
the new election freedoms now evident in their neighbor Pakistan.
The Taliban and its ultra-nationalist
elite, referred to as the "necktie Taliban" by Afghans, have constructed
a governance that has failed.
It’s a stark contrast to the 20 years of
American presence, when Afghans exercised their right to select their leaders
by participating in elections. During a private visit to Afghanistan in 2005, I
bore witness to men and women, eligible to vote, flocking to the polls to cast
their vote, which the Taliban disputed, and in some instances they cut off the fingers of some who participated
in voting.
Despite all its shortcomings, Pakistan is
experimenting with democracy and learning the respect the will of its citizens.
Pakistan has come a long way from its past of military takeovers.
No matter who won
the election, Pakistan should make a bona fide attempt to change its policy
toward its neighbor Afghanistan by siding with the people, rather than a group
that has no legitimate right to rule. I am sure Pakistan will benefit more from
an elected government.
Bina Shah writes in the New
York Times opinion piece that Healthy
democracy seems more like an El Dorado that slips farther out of reach with
each election.
Yet despite all
this, it’s difficult to fully let go of the democratic idea. The train keeps
running in Pakistan, picking up hopeful new passengers along the way.
I call upon Pakistan’s
newly elected government to let this train move on, to cross into Afghanistan,
picking up more and more passengers. A peacfull, democratically elected
government in Afghanistan that connects Pakistan to central Asia is more in
Pakistan’s geo- economic long-term interests than that of supporting a group like
the Taliban.
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