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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, October 12, 2001 |
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Afghanistan after the Taliban
By T. Sreedhar
SINCE THE last week of September, the media has been debating the
post-Taliban scenarios for Afghanistan. We have also been hearing
from people like Gen. Pervez Musharraf that the ``Taliban's days
are numbered''. Suddenly the media is also reporting that some of
the chieftains of provinces in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan are
deserting Mullah Mohammad Omar and taking a neutral stand. All
this implies that the Taliban Government in Afghanistan will
collapse after the U.S. military operations. This may be
possible. But one has to wait and watch.
What is interesting are the post-Taliban scenarios being
discussed in the media. The most prominent of these is the return
of King Zahir Shah, in exile since 1973 in Rome, to Afghan
refugee camps first and next to Kabul. At a press conference on
September 27 in Islamabad, Mr. Francis Vendrell, personal
representative of the U.N. Secretary-General, said ``though 90
per cent of Afghanistan in controlled by the Taliban, it does not
mean that they have 90 per cent support of the people. Majority
of the Afghans are hostages in their country''. On a possible
solution to the crisis, Mr. Vendrell said all Afghans should have
a role in an interim broad-based Government. ``I found King Zahir
Shah to be in good health and willing to work for the betterment
of his people... he is the only ruler who has not harmed the
Afghan people,'' he added.
The U.N. thus is projecting him as head of state for a
transitional government. He will consult Afghan elders and
convene a Loya Jirga to get the decisions taken ratified. As the
days pass, support to King Zahir Shah is increasing. There are
reports that even some representatives of the Northern Alliance
have called on him in his Rome villa and extended their support
to him.
However, there is opposition to his return from Iran. The Islamic
Revolution in Iran in 1979 overthrew monarchy. The Iranians
perceive return of monarchy in neighbouring Afghanistan as a
grand design by the U.S. to attempt a similar thing in their
country. Second, Gen. Musharraf is also apparently planning for a
moderate Taliban coming to power in Kabul which will coopt
minorities in the governance of Afghanistan. It will not be
Pashtun-dominated, like Mullah Omar's Taliban, but will be a
broad-based Government of all ethnic groups in Afghanistan.
Pakistan plans to achieve this by politically eliminating Mullah
Omar from the scene by stage-managing a coup in Kabul and
Kandahar. This is because Pakistan perceives that any other
Government, including that of King Zahir Shah, would be
detrimental to its interests in the region. As a step in this
direction, Gen. Musharraf declared Pakistan a frontline state for
the U.S. and its allies in the fight against terrorism.
The third alternative being discussed is that since none of the
factions in today's Afghanistan represents the will of the
majority of people there, it is better to keep it as a U.N.-
administered area for some time and then initiate steps for a
democratic political process. This line of argument is advanced
by those who feel that two decades of bloody civil war has
fractured the Afghan polity. And therefore a cooling-off period
is required. Some are even saying normality can be restored only
if neighbours and their surrogates in Afghanistan are not given
any authority in a future setup. Lastly, a few are arguing that
Afghanistan must be handed over to the Organisation of Islamic
Conference to evolve a suitable political apparatus to govern it
for a transitory period.
No one has defined as yet what should be the parameters for a new
Government and how it should be formed. The turmoil in
Afghanistan is largely because Pakistan was given the
responsibility of reestablishing a proper Government in Kabul. To
install a Government amenable to it, Pakistan resorted to three
things. One, in the first five years after the Soviet withdrawal,
Pakistan virtually played musical chairs with the Afghan
leadership. Even at the slightest doubt about the person in
authority in Kabul, the Government was toppled and another was
brought in. How Pakistan played one leader against the other is
now part of Afghan folklore. Two, to serve its interests,
Pakistan created the Taliban exclusively of people dependent on
it for anything and everything. After creating the Taliban, it
systematically eliminated all the Opposition political groups.
Around 1996, people like Ghulam Ishaq Khan, former President of
Pakistan, talked in terms of a confederation of Pakistan and
Afghanistan. Three, by 1997-98, the Taliban had become an
instrument of Pakistan's foreign policy to achieve its
objectives. Pakistan went to the extent of violating U.N.
sanctions covertly by sending its military advisers to assist the
Taliban. The terrorist training camps that came up in Afghanistan
became complementary to similar camps being run in Pakistan and
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. The similarity between the elaborate
planning that went into the hijacking of the Indian Airlines
plane in December 1999 and the September 11 bombings indicates
that Pakistan is not above board regarding the Taliban-Al-Qaeda
networking.
To avoid a repetition of a Taliban-type phenomenon creeping into
Afghan polity again, or as a matter of fact, even in Pakistan,
the international community must ensure that there is a broad-
based Government in Kabul to begin with and if possible extend
that effort to Islamabad; that any Government that comes to power
must ensure good governance; and encourage the democratic process
to start in Afghanistan. This too should be extended to Pakistan.
The international community responded in the above fashion in the
case of the Kurds in Iraq after the 1991 Gulf War. The situations
may not be identical but it is still an option worth trying.
All this is possible when the Taliban Government collapses. Till
now, it has defied all threats. The Taliban supremo is even
warning the U.S. that it may suffer the fate of the Soviet Union.
As though these threats were not enough, Jaish-e-Mohammad, one of
the arms of the Taliban-Al-Qaeda combine, attacked the Jammu and
Kashmir State Assembly building in Srinagar on September 29. The
timing of the action is extremely important. When the U.S. and
its allies were talking in terms of eliminating the Taliban-Al-
Qaeda combine, one of its wings struck in not-too-far-off
Srinagar.
The attack also took place on the eve of the External Affairs
Minister's visit to the U.S. The hectic parleys that took place
between India and the U.S. since then indicate that the Srinagar
incident is being viewed as a local development. If the Taliban-
Al-Qaeda combine realises this, the next act could be closer to
U.S. interests.
In addition, one should also remember that the resources required
by the Taliban-Al-Qaeda are nominal. According to counter-
terrorism experts, to destroy an area of one square kilometre
through conventional means, $2000 is required; half the amount if
nuclear weapons are used and probably one-fifth for a terrorist
attack. Recall the events of August 1998. The U.S. embassies in
Dar-es-Salaam and Nairobi were destroyed by a suicide squad. The
truck and the explosives loaded in it must have cost at the most
$8000. The U.S. responded by firing cruise missiles at the
hideouts of those responsible. The value of the property
destroyed is valued at less than $100. All this makes one
conclude that the means adopted by the U.S. and its allies to
deal with terrorism and the violence of the Taliban-Al-Qaeda
combine have to be unconventional.
(The writer is Senior Research Associate, Institute of Defence
Studies and Analyses, New Delhi).
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