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A Pakistani Officer's Thoughts On Afghanistan

S-2

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"Don’t Try to Arrest the Sea:

An Alternative Approach for Afghanistan
Mehar Omar Khan

Over the last three months that I’ve spent in the United States, I’ve heard with concern and trepidation the growing calls for a possible pull out from Afghanistan. No sane citizen of our world, let alone a Pakistani infantry officer who may soon end up being another name on an ever-growing list of the fallen soldiers in the war against terror, enjoys thinking about the painful possibility of our world’s greatest military power and history’s most inspiring nation retreating in the face of an onslaught by Kalashnikov-wielding bearded barbarians riding on the back of motorcycles, hungry horses and perspiring mules. What is being realized with increasing intensity is the pain of a seemingly endless and bloody war for almost a decade now; the pressure of a US public opinion that’s almost irreversibly weary of war (at least for now); the misery of a mismatch between resources and mandate; the rising groans of despairing allies unwilling to persevere and, the scary scarcity of success stories. However what needs to be realized is the fact that abandoning Afghanistan will be an unmitigated tragedy.

For the United States, I believe, Afghanistan is not a case of ‘success or failure’. The USA is too big and too powerful to fail against a collection of miserable fanatics holed up in the treacherous mountains of Southern Afghanistan. It’s instead a case of doing too much with too little care and attention. It’s a challenge (still quite surmountable) aggravated by ditching smart choices and contracting wrong compulsions.

The current US approach to fixing Afghanistan is impressive in detail but seriously flawed in design. Despite recent adjustments reflected most profoundly in Gen McChrystal’s Counterinsurgency Directive, the ship is still headed for rough seas. The overall design continues to be based on ‘mending and reforming’ Afghanistan the country – as a whole. The brass-tacks continue to be muddied by unclear strategic intent. The ‘reform route’ continues to be pursued ‘top-down’. Too many coalition personnel and too many international dollars still reside in Kabul or at best in the provincial headquarters. The majority of Afghans continues to stare angrily from the sidelines while a few thugs rule the streets and corridors of Kabul. Too many criminals continue to be respectable and powerful despite being in the neighborhood of so many well-meaning people. While too many US soldiers continue to die, radical surgery is still being pended in favor of cosmetics.

What is being tried is too much. What needs to be done is economizing the force and maximizing the effect. What needs to be done is to increasingly get smarter or leaner in physics and more effective and skillful in chemistry. What is being done is more and more of physics. What is needed is more skill. What is being poured in is more troops. US public opinion is rightly angry about all of this.

Why should young men continue to fall for a ‘losing cause’?

But is it a case of a ‘losing cause’ or one of a ‘badly managed success’. I believe it’s the latter. And it is with this belief that I want to suggest an alternative approach to what is being done. This approach is embedded in the belief that troops required to manage or govern Afghanistan will never be ‘enough’ and the right route is ‘bottom up’ and ‘hub to spokes’ and not the reverse. I also believe that promise and prosperity is the only magnet that can wean desperate people away from violence and that Afghanistan is too big to be made prosperous all-together. Hence the process of rebuilding and development will have to be ‘selective’ to start with.

The approach, suggested hereunder, is based on some ‘can’t do’ and some ‘can do’ principles for Afghanistan. The identification of what can be done has to be based on a dispassionate recognition of what can’t be done.

First, therefore, the ‘can’t do’ part:

Can’t ‘govern’ this country: It is historically incorrect to call Afghanistan a country or even a place. It has always been and is a people. Afghanistan represents a people who have always been divided and loosely managed; never properly ‘governed’ at any level even in the loosest sense of that word. Any effort to reverse that historical trend or reality will be a terribly misdirected investment of blood and money. Afghans, vastly ignorant as well as illiterate, have never been clever enough to submit to a central authority. ‘Liberal democracy’, ‘united vision’, a ‘social contract’, ‘tolerant co-existence’, ‘civil society’, ‘civil debate’, ‘national discourse’ – are all misnomers largely tossed around in a small section of expatriate community residing in the West. Hence, even the smartest bunch of people can’t govern this place as a whole.

Can’t ‘protect’ all Afghans: The emphasis in the ISAF

Counterinsurgency Directive on ‘protecting the civilians, instead of killing the Taliban’ in unachievable in its entirety. Coalition troops can never reach the numbers necessary to extend adequate protection to the populace across Afghanistan. It will only give an additional propaganda tool to the Taliban, in addition to increasing the range of their target zone. Every suicide bombing will now be seen and portrayed as a sign of coalition’s failure to deliver on its ‘promise’ of ‘protecting’ the people. And promises mean a lot in that medieval society. My proposed ‘approach’ addresses this dilemma.

Can’t have ‘total’ peace: In Afghanistan, peace has always been relative – both in time as well as space. In that unfortunate part of the world, ‘peace’ has mostly meant ‘less fighting’ or ‘fighting contained to a few a tribes in a few pockets’ or ‘bloodletting restricted to family feuds’. Afghans are fatally skillful in digging up reasons to fire and fight. No amount of money, time or effort can reverse this tragic historical reality in a space of few years. It will instead take sincere national leadership and international commitment spanning generations – something very hard to come by.

Can’t have ‘rivers of milk and honey’ flowing in a few years: After centuries of war, Afghanistan is now way ‘beyond a quick or economical repair’. Too much is required to be set right and built anew. Roads, hospitals, schools and colleges - nothing is there.

Attitudes, dreams, aspirations, ideals, sense of unity, and a ‘unifying’ sense of patriotism – again, nothing is there. It’s all broken; shattered by wounds and trauma inflicted by unkind times and endless misery. Brigades of straight-thinking US soldiers with scant support or commitment from Afghan ‘national’ leadership or international community (if there ever were two things by those names) can’t do it in decades, let alone years.

Can’t do it without Pashtuns: Like it or not, Afghanistan has always been a Pashtun country. Many as they are though, Uzbeks, Tajiks and Hazaras have always been the ‘outsiders’. Regardless of who holds the banner (the Taliban or anyone else) Pashtuns will never cease fighting unless given their leadership role in Kabul. They have always shed blood for the defense of their ‘right’ on the throne of Kabul. One can’t mess with that ‘right’ without incurring serious consequences. What we are facing in Afghanistan is ‘Pashtun Intifada’. It is only ‘led’ by bearded mullahs calling themselves ‘Taliban’. Take out Taliban and the insurgency will continue.

Now what ‘can be’ done:

The list is very short. Don’t try to arrest the sea. Create islands. Having gone well past the phase of breaking the back of Al-Qaeda and dispersing the Taliban, concentrate on ‘creating and building’ examples. Set the beacon and you’ll see that all the lost ships and boats will come ashore. Here’s how to do it.

First and foremost, believe that it’s not God that drives these people crazy; it’s poverty. Believe that Pashtuns don’t submit to the Taliban out of sheer love for the one-eyed Mullah Omar; its deprivation and fear that drives this herd to the first man holding the flag of power and promise. Raise your flag higher than the Mullah’s and the half-blind lunatic will be devoured by Pashtuns. What is being done is unfortunately not the right way of raising the banner. It defies the logic of ‘can’t do’s’ given above. The Pashtun face of the country is not sufficiently visible.

Kabul or the Provincial Reconstruction Teams will NOT work. Provinces are too big a governance laboratory for Afghanistan. Instead, pick a few districts (nothing more than that) in the heart of areas worst-afflicted by the Taliban-led insurgency. Invest heavily in these districts.

Do it in two phases; first craft the message, then two, let the message spread itself.

Here’s is how to create the message. In selected (preferably non-contiguous) districts, give them an honest and polished leadership from ‘amongst themselves’, a transparent and efficient court, a model Pashtun police heavily armed with both weapons and motivation, schools (separate for girls and boys), a few hospitals, electricity, money for farming and setting up small businesses through a few efficiently functioning banks, paved roads, a model transport system and, not the least, build a beautiful grand mosque and an FM station that recites Quran with Pashtu translation 24/7. If possible, build a few plants and job-creating projects around mineral mines and informal fire-arms industry. Let these people serve as an example for rest of the Pashtun country. Having created these models, international community can then work ‘upwards’ and ‘outwards’ to include more and more areas and tribes.

Simultaneously the governance, right from district up to Kabul must be painted with an unmistakable Pashtun color. As of now, Pashtuns are being seen and treated like Sunnis of Iraq. In reality they are a majority and deserve to be empowered like Shias in Iraq.

A few examples of model districts would unmistakably mean this: that the USA means good and only good; that Islam is not the sole monopoly of Mullah Omar; that Islam and Quran can co-exist with banks and schools and hospitals and businesses; that life without bloodshed is a good life and that what Americans do is better than what Taliban do or plan to do. The approach will give Pashtuns an irresistibly attractive reason to ditch the message and manipulation of the Taliban in addition to stripping Mullah Omar and his Al Qaeda cohorts off their narrative and their manifesto.

Militarily, the coalition must hold fast to these model districts as bases and let the Taliban fester and sulk in the outlying, ungoverned margins. Their lack of ability to give in their areas of influence what coalition gives in its area of control will delegitimize them in due course of time. This may sound like giving away vast swathes of land to Taliban. In reality, it means a considerable improvement on the current situation.

The Taliban structure of governance stands on a foundation of both fear and promise. The existing effort to pursue them everywhere leaves them surviving everywhere. They thrive on the coalition chasing their shadows. This new approach of excluding them from selected pockets will progressively deprive them of targets for violence and an audience for propaganda. Their brutalities in areas without coalition presence will discredit them while doing no harm to coalition’s image. Relative peace in coalition-governed districts will fuel discontent in Taliban-controlled districts. It will also give coalition and Afghan Forces the strategic advantage of operating from the ‘interior lines’ instead of having to hopelessly roll up the Taliban from the margins to the center.

Such ‘model district projects’ should not be the responsibility of the USA alone. Other members of the international community must also partake by taking up a district each.

These islands of peace and prosperity, though small, will be seen by all the lost mariners in the sea (of chaos and cruelty). It is my sincere belief that these model districts will serve as the ‘clarion call’. Pashtuns, hungry for food and promise, will come running and rally to the cause that gives hope of a better future, of peace and of return to the ‘throne of Kabul’.

Major Mehar Omar Khan, Pakistan Army, is currently a student at the US Army Command and General Staff College at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas. He has served as a peacekeeper in Sierra Leone, a Brigade GSO-III, an instructor at the Pakistan Military Academy in Kakul, and as Chief of Staff (Brigade Major) of an infantry brigade. He has also completed the Command and Staff Course at Pakistan’s Command and Staff College in Quetta.

S-2 Note: I haven't included a link here as this treatise comes from a competing website. I missed the article though. Ratus Ratus didn't. Thank you to him for this great find.

The website is an important one, though, to U.S. policymakers so there's little question that Major Khan's thoughts have had some critical thinkers well-versed looking at it. I believe his views have traction though possesses a few of its own flaws-namely the need to sustain a point of entry into Afghanistan for all that assistance that'll be directed to these select areas.

Still, Major Khan has raised some really interesting and valid points that I'd hope won't simply receive "lip-service" acknowledgement. I'm personally in favor of radical solutions in lieu of the orthodox and all-too-accepted bureacratic business-as-usual thinking that's tossed about, reviewed, adjusted, updated, and forgotten.

Kudos to him for his fine thoughts even if Major Khan, too, suggests that the pashtu are an absolute majority (They aren't).
 
S-2, i had posted this link in the musharraf interview thread for you!
 
Kudos to him for his fine thoughts even if Major Khan, too, suggests that the pashtu are an absolute majority (They aren't).

interesting piece indeed!
the pashtuns are a key for peace to happen in afghanistan - ignore them to your detriment! ....and yes they are the largest ethnic grouping in afghanistan.
 
Pretty much agree with the whole thing, although
Such ‘model district projects’ should not be the responsibility of the USA alone. Other members of the international community must also partake by taking up a district each.
had a special irony considering what we've been up to in Bamyan since the invasion.

A lot of it was pretty much what I was trying to sell Astralis on a while ago but which he didn't seem to have too much time for. Perhaps because I was using language such as 'tribes' and 'colonialism' rather than 'ethnic groupings' and 'real politic.'
I also need convincing that the US has the requisite skill sets for dealing with the local sub-tribe/tribes. You really need to defer to these guys as much as possible, to enhance their mana in the eyes of their people. It's about respect.

Damn good find, and kudos to Mehar Omar Khan
 
Kudos to him for his fine thoughts even if Major Khan, too, suggests that the pashtu are an absolute majority (They aren't).
I am not sure why I keep hearing this, unless there are other numbers out there on the Afghan demographic breakup that I am not aware off.

Farid Zakaria in his remarks on Karzai said the Pashtun made up 60% of Afghanistan!
 
I am not sure why I keep hearing this, unless there are other numbers out there on the Afghan demographic breakup that I am not aware off.

Farid Zakaria in his remarks on Karzai said the Pashtun made up 60% of Afghanistan!

that is a lie and i dont know where he got the number from. perhaps he had something in his mind to deepen the division among the ethnics of afghanistan. pashtons make up around 40% of the population and they are the largest ethnic group, followed by the tajiks who are around 30% and then hazaras i think 10-15% and uzbeks and other ethnic groups. language wise persian is around 50%, pashtoo around 35% and the rest is other small languages. there are only 2 official languages pashtoo and farsi(persian)
 
How really important is the matter of the Pashtun being a major or just making the 50% mark with respect to the significant problem in the area.

Bluntly NONE.

What Maj Khan has outlined is a significant concept in thought change. It is also one that I have noticed coming from other quarters as well.

Does it have relevance to Pakistan as well, possibly.
 
Great find S-2 and Ratus-Ratus!

I like the idea of focusing and consolidating areas rather than doing everything at once but am unclear about certain aspects:

--- At what stage does the "force" establish a political leadership in place? When does one decide that it's time for the transition?

--- How do we get rid of the Talibans. Are we advocating political maneuvers/discourse solely?

--- That whole bit about establishing schools, offices etc... S-2 you had posted a PBS documentary back a couple of weeks with an embedded journalist's voiceover. Somewhere in the first part of the documentary, he was with the foreign forces' and taking a round of a market they had seized control of. Surprisingly, no one from the local village was visiting it, rather they were going to the other markets. The Taliban had issued directives against it.

It's a small instance... but once again, how do you minimise the threat from the Taliban who would not let you establish any such "small-scale" governance even?
 
One of the critical aspect is ownership.

This is not covered clearly in the Maj's article.
Assets, be it schools, markets, irrigation ditches etc must belong to the community and be seen by the community as theirs.

That means getting the local village elders to determine the projects and do the work. Outside forces are there to at best provide initial protection and support with resources. Ok a simplified outline.
 
Gee!! do we have that kind of time and money? Far easier to break Afghanistan and give away pieces to Pakistan, Iran and perhaps Uzbekistan? I'm sure this idea will sound ridiculous after my first cup of coffee :coffee:.
 
the pashtuns are a key for peace to happen in afghanistan - ignore them to your detriment! ....and yes they are the largest ethnic grouping in afghanistan"

True and true.

But they are not a simple majority as Zakaria evidently suggests. At least not by the C.I.A. Factbook.

Ah, but let us settle down about this, please. The C.I.A. has downgraded in the last year it's estimate of Afghanistan's total population. Further, it has noted that the last census performed in Afghanistan was in 1979 and the next is scheduled for next year so we'll know better soon enough.

Are pashtus close to an absolute majority. I think so by anybody's estimate but I'm not satisfied yet that it is so. Don't really know if I will be in my lifetime, census or not in any case. Can't be easy to do with high accuracy in the midst of such upheavel so...

What's relevant is that pashtus should play a greater role in afghan politics.

Now, of course, some here would blame the reasons they don't on, variously, N.A. intrigue to prevent such. Maybe. They certainly have some incentive but, lo and behold, there IS an afghan Pashtu as President. Again. Hmmm...well, that IS one pashtu.

Just not the RIGHT pashtu to our demanding Pakistani friends.

Naturally, our Pakistani friends ignore that many pashtus, however much they'd LIKE to participate in the afghan political circus, live too close to pashtus like OMAR's buddies whom will never, ever agree to participatory politics and will whack your purple lil' fingers off if you do so anyway.

Gee, that seems to skew matters a bit but when it comes to our Pakistani friends here they never, ever acknowledge that there's this disincentive for pashtus to get very involved.

Maybe that's beginning to change with America's help-

Fragile Turnaround In An Enemy Stronghold-Boston Globe Oct. 25, 2009

Now, mind you, it's not like we haven't made a bevy of mistakes and continue to do so (hope you're reading A.M., mea culpa, mea culpa, ad infinatum ad nauseum:angry:) but pashtu participatory behavior has a few more inputs than simply those nasty N.A. bad-guys who hardly ever get THIS FAR SOUTH.

God bless our marines. They do a great job for being leatherneck dirt-bags...:lol:

Thanks.:usflag:
 
"Somewhere in the first part of the documentary, he was with the foreign forces' and taking a round of a market they had seized control of. Surprisingly, no one from the local village was visiting it, rather they were going to the other markets. The Taliban had issued directives against it."

That's beginning to change. See the Globe article above.

"In the three months since the Marines arrived, the school has reopened, the district governor is on the job, and the market is bustling. The insurgents have demonstrated far less resistance than US commanders expected. Many of the residents who left are returning home, their possessions piled onto rickety trailers, and the Marines deem the central part of the town so secure that they routinely walk around without body armor and helmets."
 
Showing commitment to stay is a biggie for sure.

The other issue is one that evidently isn't going away any time soon:

Despite repeated requests, the government in Kabul has not sent officials to Nawa to help on issues that matter most to local people: education, health, agriculture and rural development.
Kabul needs the same allocation of resources as the rest of the country per person and not a cent more. This should free up resources to provide to the local administrator.
Focus the money where it is needed and don't expect it to trickle through Kabul because it won't.

Also I'm aware that there's a tendency to treat ethnic groupings as tribes or homogeneous entities, eg Pashtu, Tajiks, Hazaras etc.

Consider this: Maori in New Zealand had sophisticated communication networks and trading routes both within the country and across the Pacific. Almost whenever Cook touched land the locals already knew he was coming. They were long regarded as a single ethnic group.
Here's a list of the actual tribes. Obviously the experiences of NZ and Afghanistan are completely different but it was only when the Govt. here started to devolve aid and treat with the individual Iwi rather than deal wholesale with 'the Maori problem' that progress began to be made in race relations and economic development. Ngati Toa is not going to pass on funds to Ngai Tahu, and Kabul is not going to pass on funds to Helmand. The dispersal of those funds and assets needs to be independent of the government of Kabul.
 
K,

I'm sorry that somehow I missed it in the Musharraf thread. Ratus Ratus literally jammed it up under my nose or I would have missed it again. Certainly not by intent or I wouldn't have bothered to post it here.

I did get into a discussion elsewhere and a variation of Major Khan's proposal seemed to creep in, in retrospect as I think back upon that discussion.

It has a great deal of merit.
 
This is the original article from Rajiv Chandrasekaran-

In Helmand A Model For Success-WAPO

There are an interesting series of slides detailing some of the community and, more importantly, local projects that the Nawan district locals have gone ahead and implemented without waiting for outside assistance.
 

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