Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
My opinion is that FATA region must go to Afghanistan but KPK may remain with Pakistan.
There is a serious policy discussion being undertaken by the political elites in Kabul and the narrative is what I have summarized earlier.
Now we need to be objective about the Durand Line as must Pakistan be about Kashmir, the ground realities point to facts that there is no going back, the sooner the region realize the sooner we can move forward.
The same goes for Pakistan, the sooner it realizes that Kashmir is now an integral part of India the sooner it can move forward.
What matters most for Afghanistan is that it under no circumstances wants to be a battle ground for regional rivalries anymore.
The question still being asked by Afghans is whether the Durand Line and the perceived Indian influence is the pinnacle of Pakistani paranoia towards Afghanistan? Afghan diplomats report that on several occasions Pakistani counterparts told them that their sphere of influence goes on to Salang mountain pass. If that is the thinking then will Pakistan be ever satisfied?
Furthermore the question still stands to the ability the of the Pakistani civilian government whether then can force the hawks in the military to buy into this kind of setup?
I'd like to answer this thread without predictions of what will or will not happen but with salient facts and in certain cases how these facts compare to similar facts in other nations such as Pakistan.
1. There is currently 30%-40% unemployment in Afghanistan - this is chronic
2. The Soviets left a 400,000 strong security apparatus that was much more capable than today's ANA - I'd encourage you to study the order of battle of the Afghan Air force the Soviets left behind - pretty impressive
3. The Afghans have a far more anemic base of technocrats when compared with Pakistan - An anecdotal comparison is of the number of engineering and technical professionals found in Pakistani Diaspora vs. say Afghan Diaspora: how many Afghan engineers, doctors, etc. do you know? - compare that to Pakistanis
4. The Afghans have a very anemic higher education system - just consider Pakistan's engineering and technical colleges: NUST, UETs, GIK, LUMS, etc. Afghanistan has not been able to build a single university that is remotely as capable (I would encourage you to read my comments at the bottom of the article on foreign policy
5. Afghanistan has a society that has been bathed in almost 40 years of war
6. Afghanistan (at least according to Afghans) has a significant neighbor (Pakistan) with whom tensions are escalating and will probably continue to escalate with Pakistan taking significant countermeasure (to quote General Stanley McChrystal)
7. Markets are amongst the greatest predictors of futures: The Afghan refugees in Pakistan don't seem to be rushing to claim their piece of the Afghan Gold rush, because one simply will not exist (the prefer to persist in Pakistan which itself is a very troubled country)
8. Natural Resources in conflict ridden places tend to fall prey to the resource curse
9. The West is leaving - despite statements to the contrary the mood in the US, especially *inside the beltway* is one of hurried exit
10. The Afghan political process has not been able to evolve to a level that a modern state needs (compare this to Pakistan).
11. Given a choice between Pakistan and Afghanistan - the world will always choose Pakistan - simply because the prospects of a failed Pakistan are scary (they keep Obama up at night) - the prospects of a failed Afghanistan - sad but we have several Somalias in the world - what's one more
Now here is the bottom line:
.. Compare how Afghanistan stands in comparison to Pakistan
.. Pakistan is faring rather poorly to put it mildly
.. Now extrapolate that to how you expect Afghanistan to fare ... sadly the prognosis looks rather bleak
Lets not discuss the past for both your country and mine has a poor track record. You talk about the Ballouch and the TTP operating from Afghanistan and forget that Fata is currently the HQ for global terror infrastructure which has carried out over 700 sucided bombings in Afghanistan and has killed thousands over the last 10 years, bottom line lets put the history to the books and find a solution that can get your country and mine out of this mess.
As said we are willing to head to your legitimate demands and we expect that you do the same. Fair ?
Under the tenure of Dr Najeebullah the Afghan army, the police and Khad numbered around 80K, plus militias from Dostum.
The Afghan state collapsed not because the Mujahedeen defeated them on the battlefield but because the Soviet Union changed gears and stopped funding Dr Najeeb’s regime, which I don’t see the West doing to Afghanistan now. As a matter of fact the all out Mujahedeen attack, orchestrated by the likes of Hamid Gul met a crashing defeat in Jalalabad. Please do keep in mind that the Mujahedeen facing the Dr Najeeb’s government were more formidable comparing to the Talibs of today.
What differentiates Afghanistan for today from the one in the 1990s is that Afghans have tasted the bitter memories of the civil war, the rule of the Taliban, the destruction of their cities and social fabric, they under no circumstance want to go back. The 10 years rule of President Karzai although not perfect but has provided the Afghans with a breathing space where they have access to the Internet, over 30 TV stations, over 100 radio stations. There over 10,000 young Afghans abroad pursuing Bachelors, Masters and PhD, they have seen the world, are well connected and use Facebook and Twitter. This phenomenal shift although seldom discussed in the media has a tremendous effect on the Afghan psyche.
In short there is no going back for Afghanistan back to dark days of the Taliban or the Civil war, the sooner the region realizes the better. Afghans are willing to head to the legitimate demands of the neighbors but will not bow down or let go of the achievements that they have made over the last 10 years.
Remember neighbors may think that they have all the cards but they forget that they are also burning in the very fire that they have so well made.
Bottom line, the perspective of the Afghan side has been laid clearly and the ball is in the court of the neighbors to decide what kind of Afghanistan they want to see, a friendly Afghanistan or an Afghanistan ruled by chaos which in the end will burn you too.
Accepting durand line is suicidal for any afgan ruler. The best they can do is say it in private to pakistani leadership.
@A-Team -- here is an except from hereUnder the tenure of Dr Najeebullah the Afghan army, the police and Khad numbered around 80K, plus militias from Dostum.
At its peak the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) numbered closed to 400,000 towards the end of the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, with significant operational capabilities and equipment. This is close to the US-NATO target for ANSF post-2014.
I think you are making the mistake of conflating two very separate classes of issues:
1. What should be done, what is right, what is fair, what is moral what will benefit everyone, etc.
2. What is achievable, what is realistically possible, what type institutional change is possible, etc.
The AfPak reality, sadly is:
1. The Pakistani deep state seems to be convinced that an Afghanistan under an administration that emerges from the current set up will be strategically detrimental to Pakistani Interests - this seems to be the overwhelming consensus on all sides of the debate
2. The Pakistani deep state seems convinced that a Power sharing formula - similar to the one in Lebanon is probably the most advantageous to its interests over the near to mid term (10 years) where the taliban are one party in the Afghan dispensation
.
@A-Team -- here is an except from
Admittedly I have not checked out the guys references and he does do a good job of providing links at the bottom of the page - would be interested in seeing your resources that point to the contrary.
Accepting durand line is suicidal for any afgan ruler. The best they can do is say it in private to pakistani leadership.
My opinion is that FATA region must go to Afghanistan but KPK may remain with Pakistan.
New Recruit
When you talk of Lebanon-style setup then you give weight to the views of the hawks on the Afghan side, for instance Amrullah Saleh the ex-intelligence chief has been saying all along that Pakistan will not stop unless it has a Hezbullah type buffer in Afghanistan mainly in the Pashtoon built...if that is the case then we should say good bye to the good neighborly relations for good.
My figure is based on the first hand knowledge of several army generals who served in the higher echelons of Dr Najeeb's defense ministry .