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Plan to Split Taliban Lures Obama Deeper Into War
WASHINGTON - Advanced reports on the Barack Obama administration's strategy to "peel off" a majority of insurgent commanders from the "hard core" of Taliban suggest that it will be presented as a political route to victory in Afghanistan that would not require U.S. and NATO troops to win militarily.
But experts warn that the strategy is unlikely to work. And by appearing to provide a political route to victory, the strategy is luring the administration into a renewed commitment to war in Afghanistan and diverting it away from a deal with the Taliban leadership aimed at keeping al Qaeda from having a presence there.
News reports this past week have raised the possibility of negotiations by Afghan, Saudi and Pakistani officials with the Taliban leadership that could result in an agreement not to allow an al Qaeda presence on Afghan territory in return for U.S. and NATO withdrawal and assurances that they will not intervene in the country as long as al Qaeda is kept out.
The strategy of splitting off "reconcilable" insurgents may make commitment to an indefinite continuation of the U.S. military effort more palatable to key U.S. officials, including Obama himself, who know that the war cannot be won through military efforts.
The new administration strategy was reported last week after briefings of Congressional leaders by Gen. David Petraeus, head of CENTCOM, and Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, the State Department special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Petraeus has been a strong supporter of the strategy of trying to divide the Afghan insurgency by offering money and jobs to those willing to accept the government in Kabul. He has said that his strategy of outreach to what he has described as "reconcilables" among the insurgents in Iraq might be applicable in Afghanistan as well.
The premise of the plan being advanced by administration officials, at least for public consumption, was articulated by Vice President Joseph Biden in a speech in Brussels last week. Biden said only 100 to 1,000 Taliban or al Qaeda members - representing about 5 percent of the Taliban insurgency - are "incorrigible", and that at least 70 percent were involved in the insurgency only because they are "getting paid".
Biden was reflecting the view of the insurgency held by senior military officials at the NATO regional headquarters in Kandahar. Officials there see the insurgency in the south as made up largely of "young freelance fighters who are motivated more by money than religious zealotry," according to a report by Rajiv Chandrasekaran in the Washington Post Sunday.
But that extraordinarily optimistic assumption is not shared by most experts on the insurgency in Afghanistan. A report by Carlotta Gall in the New York Times last Wednesday quotes "several Western diplomats and officials in Afghanistan, including those already in contact with the Taliban" as saying that attempts to split off individual commanders or groups from the Taliban leadership "would not work."
The reason, according to those officials, is that the plan would require those commanders to surrender and accept an Afghan government and a foreign military presence in which they have no trust.
Jonathan Landay of McClatchy newspapers reported from Kabul Sunday that experts on the Taliban express "serious doubts" about the splitting strategy, because insurgent leaders believe they are winning and the Hamid Karzai government is growing weaker.
In contrast to the reported premise that most insurgents are motivated by material gain, most specialists on the insurgency emphasised the dominant role of Pashtun anger at foreign military operations in their locality killing members of their family or tribe.
An alternative strategy of seeking a deal with the Taliban aimed at separating them from al Qaeda was first raised by New York University Afghanistan specialist Barnett Rubin and Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid in an article in Foreign Affairs magazine last December. The article proposed that NATO offer to end military action in Afghanistan if the Taliban agrees "to prohibit the use of Afghan (or Pakistani) territory for international terrorism."
Rubin and Rashid have been hired by Holbrooke as adviser and short-term consultant, respectively, according to a report by national security correspondent Laura Rozen at Foreign Policy.
The option proposed by Rubin and Rashid has now been given new credibility by reports that Saudi Arabia is engaged in an effort to persuade the Taliban to separate itself clearly from al Qaeda.
The London Times published a report by Christina Lamb Sunday that Prince Muqrin bin Abdul Aziz, the Saudi intelligence chief, visited Islamabad, Delhi and Kabul in January to talk to both Taliban and Afghan government officials.
Lamb also reported that Taliban Chief Mullah Omar had given his approval to peace talks with the Afghan government for the first time, citing a "mediator" with the Taliban, Algerian former Mujahideen fighter in Afghanistan Abdullah Anas and an Afghan government official involved in the negotiations as the sources.
The Afghan government negotiator told Lamb that government officials "have been in contact both with Mullah Omar's direct representatives and commanders from the front line."
Asked for a comment on this development, Rubin, the Columbia University expert, told IPS in an e-mail that the Lamb story "is accurate".
A report published by Strategic Forecasting (Stratfor) last week by director of Middle East analysis Kamran Bokhari and Scott Stewart also noted the Saudi intelligence chief's trip to Pakistan and Afghanistan. In meetings with actual Taliban commanders in both countries, the Saudis have offered financial support if the Taliban agrees to divorce itself completely from al Qaeda, according to the report.
Bokhari, a Pakistani specialist on Islamist groups, has had extensive contacts with high-ranking Pakistani and Saudi officials in the past.
The Saudi regime, once reluctant to crack down on al Qaeda, has pursued a very successful political strategy against al Qaeda within Saudi Arabia since 2003. Saudi Arabia has credibility with the Taliban leadership because of shared religious beliefs and because it is one of the few foreign governments that continued to recognise the Taliban after 9/11.
The Taliban chief, Mullah Omar, had rejected U.S. and Saudi pressures to expel Osama bin Laden from Afghanistan prior to the 9/11 attacks. But the question of ties between the Taliban and al Qaeda have been far less clear since the expulsion of both organisations from Afghanistan in late 2001.
Amin Tarzi, director of the Middle East Studies Program at the Marine Corps University in Quantico, Virginia, wrote in an essay for the 2007 book "Taliban and the Crisis in Afghanistan" that there was "no evidence of concerted cooperation" between what he called the "neo- Taliban" and al Qaeda in southern Afghanistan.
Some factions in the north and northeast, however, had "resurrected old ties with al Qaeda" to obtain funds, recruits and technical support, according to Tarzi.
Tarzi cited a comment by Taliban spokesman Mohammad Hanif to an Italian newspaper in March 2006 that the movement had "no operational ties" to al Qaeda, but that they had "tactical alliances based given circumstances and territorial situations".
As suggested in the Rubin-Rashid proposal, any deal with the Taliban will have to include a date for withdrawal of all U.S. and NATO forces. In October 2007, The Guardian reported that senior Taliban commanders in Helmand province had sent a list of demands to the Karzai government through intermediaries that included control of 10 southern provinces, a timetable for withdrawal of foreign troops and the release of all Taliban prisoners within six months.
Gareth Porter is an investigative historian and journalist specialising in U.S. national security policy. The paperback edition of his latest book, "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam", was published in 2006.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllBut think of the economic stimulus an eternal war in Afghanistan will provide.
You mean like the crime in Iraq?
Of course the Saudi, Pakistan ,Afghanistan policy is the way to peace.
Ha !! Yup .. the Good Lord Obama knows best.
Fucking brilliant. Throw billions more of our taxpayer dollars at the problem by bribing the insurgents to accept the US-puppet government. Yeah, that'll work. Most likely just as well as the taxpayer-funded bailout of the mega-corporations, banks, and insurance companies is working.
About 2 months after we have paid them all that money, they will just blackmail us for more, or go right back to fighting and letting Al Qaeda back in.
Imagine if the trillions spent on the Iraq war, the trillions spent on bailout $ for the criminal corporations who wrecked our economy, and the billions spent on no-bid "reconstruction" contracts to American corporations in Iraq and those 100,000+ mercenaries was instead given to the US citizens. Either directly - in the form of $782,000 per American citizen - or indirectly by investing all the dough in green energy technology/jobs, infrastructure, schools, rebuilding the almost-completely-outsourced manufacturing base in America, etc.
Yeah...just imagine...
"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag, carrying a cross."
Sinclair Lewis, "It Cant Happen Here", 1935
Great comment, Demon. Keep their feet to the fire!
Absolute madness!
Learn from Alexander, learn from the British, learn from the Russians, learn from our veterans, learn from millions and millions of Americans demanding the same thing! Get the hell out of Afghanistan and Pakistan and stay out! Get us out of Iraq, too, and leave Iran alone!
We've certainly got enough problems to solve at home without still more incursions into foreign countries. We are already bathing in blood, ours and theirs. ENOUGH!
It becomes increasingly apparent that our leaders have not a single clue as to Afghan mindsets or Taliban motivations. I would conjecture that , should the US military be out of Afghanistan and the negotiations undertaken by civilian officials things might go better than they will while our soldiers occupy that land.
Will the real Al-Qaeda please stand up.
The Parable Of The Old Men And The Young
by Wilfred Owen
So Abram rose, and clave the wood, and went,
And took the fire with him, and a knife.
And as they sojourned both of them together,
Isaac the first-born spake and said, My Father,
Behold the preparations, fire and iron,
But where the lamb for this burnt-offering?
Then Abram bound the youth with belts and straps,
And builded parapets and trenches there,
And stretchèd forth the knife to slay his son.
When lo! an Angel called him out of heaven,
Saying, Lay not thy hand upon the lad,
Neither do anything to him, thy son.
Behold! Caught in a thicket by its horns,
A Ram. Offer the Ram of Pride instead.
But the old man would not so, but slew his son,
And half the seed of Europe, one by one.
Paying them worked in Iraq. Now we're getting out. Considering we're only there for revenge and to protect Big Oil's pipelines it's not ideal, but its probably less expensive than fighting the losing war Bushite cons left us and we're buying good will at the same time.
I second that motion minitrue
of course 'they're' getting PAID Joe [70% taliban free-lance fighters motivated more by greed than religious zealotry]. Everybody IN the place is getting paid Joe, including your good old boy self. Joe tries to make it significant that 'Taliban' forces are getting paid. Or at least that it proves mercenaries are identifiably less than star wars alliance troopers..what.
Why is anyone in the army Joe?? Or blackwater/Xi. Cause they're getting PAID.
The only people that arn't getting paid are the poor stretched out insane locals trying to deal with another bunch of out-of-control wide-eyed boys striding about with their stupid guns taking pot shots at 'em.
Australia is involved with Afghanistan too. I have no idea why. Probably because America is.
Why are these two countries involved in Afghanistan. Access to oil or gas? Access to drug supplies? Keeping the armament industries going? All three?
We don't need to be there. Why don't we mind our own businesses?
http://www.dangerouscreation.com
The afghans have proven themselves over and over to be able to fight against foregin occupiers -- the US should get out NOW as they should in Iraq and Pakistan.
We are 8 years too late. Let's cut our losses and get out. Also, let's stop being the world policeman.
All together now: Mr. Obama is a shill of the plutocracy.
The only group making out with the continued war/occupation of Afghanistan is the plutocracy-the money men, the MIC.
Even if the USA/NATO wins, what is won? How does the citizen of the USA make out?
Get it?
There's no plan to split the Taliban.
There's no plan to win the Afghan war.
There's a propaganda strategy to submit Americans to the reality that the Pentagon wants to maximize this revenue stream and there's not a damn thing they can do to stop it.
No matter who the President is.