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In Afghanistan, "Semi-Permanent" Bases Equal Fully-Permanent War
Did the Rabbani hit really kill peace talks?
Did the Taliban assassination of Berhanuddin Rabbani, the Chairman of the Afghan High Peace Council, bring a potentially permanent end of peace talks in Afghanistan?
Much of the mainstream media is covering Rabbani's death as the end of the peace process with the Taliban. (EPA)
You would have to believe that, based on media coverage of the event. The New York Times reported that the assassination had "struck a body blow to the peace process", and that theme dominated almost every story. Most stories included quotes from Rabbani supporters such as one in the Times article declaring: "The peace process is finished."
Dexter Filkins was more emphatic, opining in the New Yorker that the Rabbani assassination was a "blow to the very idea that reconciliation with the Taliban is possible - or even desirable." It could even be "the opening shot in the civil war that more and more Afghans believe could follow on the heels of the American and NATO withdrawal", Filkins wrote.
But this storyline is based on the premise that Rabbani and the High Peace Council had been offering the Taliban a good faith effort to negotiate a peace settlement. In fact, what Rabbani was offering was the same thing Gen David Petraeus had offered to the bogus Quetta Shura official a year earlier: A discussion that could not possibly resolve the overriding issue for the Taliban, which is the indefinite presence of US and NATO troops in the country.
Rabbani vs the Taliban
As the president of the Northern Alliance during its civil war with the Taliban from 1996 to 2001, Rabbani was among the most vociferous foes of the Taliban. He viewed even Karzai's rhetorical gestures toward "reconciliation" with the Taliban as a way of completing the process of Pashtun domination over Tajiks and other non-Pashtun minorities.
In February 2010, seven months before he was named to head the High Peace Council, Rabbani had declared to Canadian author and journalist Terry Glavin: "Bringing back the Taliban by some kind of reconciliation is not to bring about security. This is to play a card against others ... It is to bring an ethnic card into play in Afghanistan."
The only program for the Taliban Rabbani had embraced as Chairman of the HPC, in fact, was "offering amnesties and jobs to Taliban foot soldiers and asylum in third countries to leaders", as Reuters reported September 20.
The Taliban leaders had never believed that the HPC was intended to negotiate a political settlement. On January 12, 2011, the Taliban declared on the website of the "Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan" that they regarded the High Peace Council as serving solely "cosmetic" purposes as "part and parcel of the American war strategy".
The article cited, in particular, the fact the HPC "do not consider the withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan ... as an important item of the agenda".
More concretely, the Taliban complained that the HPC did not "follow a road-map that would lead to a decisive stage where peace and reconciliation will become ... indispensable".
That was an apparent reference to a proposal dubbed a "road map" to a settlement by four former Taliban officials, including Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, an early leader of the Taliban movement who spent two and a half years in the US detention center at Guantanamo Bay.
The "road map" proposal assumed that the United States would have to play the key role in any negotiations. It called for the United States to end its night raids and for the Taliban to stop attacks on government personnel and infrastructure as "confidence-building measures", after which the two sides would negotiate on the central issues of the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Afghanistan and the Taliban's renunciation of ties with al-Qaeda.
Only after they reached agreement on foreign troops and al-Qaeda would the negotiators tackle the question of an internal political settlement, which would revolve around changes to the Afghan constitution. The same Taliban commentary seemed to leave the door open to dealing with the HPC, but only if it dealt with the central problem of the foreign troop presence.
What pullout?
"If the peace council wants, in earnest, to usher in peace in Afghanistan," it said, it should confront the Americans on "whether they are ready to respect and accept a solution based on a pullout of their forces from Afghanistan".
That is not what happened, however, in the months that followed that Taliban statement on the HPC. The Council initiated contact with the Taliban in May, and over the next four months interacted frequently with, and developed trust in, its Taliban interlocutors. But the account provided of those contacts by Council Member Rahmatullah Wahidyar in his September 22 press conference is revealing - primarily for what it fails to mention. Rabbani and his advisers appear to have been unconcerned by the fact that the HPC could offer nothing to the Taliban on the central problem of US and NATO troops.
And when the Taliban contact informed the Council a week before the assassination that the Taliban leadership was now prepared to enter into talks with the Afghan government, the Council officials were not worried by the fact that such talks would have contradicted the consistent public and private Taliban position that that they could be no negotiations on an internal settlement until the issue of foreign troop presence was resolved.
These all-too-amiable contacts were taking place, moreover, against a backdrop of the Obama administration and Karzai maneuvering to keep US troops in Afghanistan indefinitely. In mid-March, US Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Michele Flournoy revealed - in Congressional testimony - the US intention to continue to carry out "counter-terrorism operations" from "joint bases" in Afghanistan well beyond 2014.
That announcement came just as the Obama administration was beginning a series of secret meetings with a Taliban representative in Germany and Qatar. They were explicitly understood to be "preliminary" rather than substantive talks, but the Taliban certainly posed the question whether the United States was prepared to offer a timetable for withdrawal in substantive negotiations.
The Taliban broke off the talks in May, and US officials later claimed that it was because the existence of the talks had been leaked to the media. But if the United States had said anything to persuade the Taliban that it was prepared to offer such a withdrawal schedule, the talks would certainly not have been so abruptly terminated.
As I reported in July, former Afghan Prime Minister Ahmad Shah Ahmadzai told me that a group of Taliban officials he had met earlier that month had said, once the Americans tell them 'we are ready to withdraw', they would agree to have peace talks.
'Strategic partnership'
By late August, however, the last ambiguity surrounding the US policy on troops in Afghanistan had been removed. The Telegraph's Ben Farmer reported August 19 that the Obama administration and Karzai were close to an agreement that would keep up to 25,000 US troops, including Special Operations Forces as well as US fighter planes and helicopter gunships, until at least 2024.
At that point, the Taliban and Rabbani both knew that the HPC had no power to negotiate a real peace settlement with the Taliban. It should be no surprise, therefore, that the Taliban took advantage of the opportunity to kill the credulous Rabbani. The only surprise is that Rabbani and his advisers could have actually believed that the Taliban were giving up their primary war aim so easily.
After all, the Taliban were continuing to show, month after month, that they could strike at targets in most heavily protected zones in Kabul and elsewhere - and that their targets included prominent political, administrative and security officials such as Rabbani.
When Karzai's national security adviser, Rangin Dadfar Spanta, revealed the outlines of the "strategic partnership" pact in early August, the Deputy Chairman of the HPC, Abdul Hakim Majid, made a highly revealing comment to The Telegraph's Farmer. He said he suspected the Taliban had "intensified" their insurgency in response to the news that Karzai was about to agree to allow the United States a semi-permanent military presence in Afghanistan.
That observation puts in sharp relief the profound lack of realism of the popular assumption that a "peace process" could have been underway in the context of the US-Karzai maneuvering to take US military presence off the negotiating table.
But we can now expect a cascade of stories for many months blaming the absence of Afghan peace negotiations on the Rabbani assassination - rather than on a fundamental policy decision by President Barack Obama to hold onto a semi-permanent military presence.
Comments
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13 Comments so far
Show AllSeemingly the U.S. armed forces will "withdraw" from Afghanistan at about the same speed the U.S. economy will "recover" from the great recession.
Porter such a crazy old idiot.
"his storyline is based on the premise that Rabbani and the High Peace Council had been offering the Taliban a good faith effort to negotiate a peace settlement."
he's peddling the crap that since the taliban didn't like the offer it's cool to assassinate the guy like maybe with this keen bit of taliban strategy it'll help bring peace.
such a crazy old idiot and just as delusional now as when he was denying that the Khmer Rouge was committing genocide.
The American corporate imperial military will leave Pipelineistan only after every molecule of natural gas, crude oil, and other resources in Central Asia are exploited for private profit. When and if pipelines are ever built it will require a permanent military presence to guard the routes.
Or at least that is the plan which has so far been a complete failure. And when the Russians attempted to export Afghan natural gas, the Afghans simply sabotaged their equipment. Etc.
Porter should at least devote a paragraph to explaining the plans to exploit Central Asian resources via Afghanistan.
Withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan will only take place when the USA deals with the underlying problem that it is trapped in an insane and DAFT war that cannot be won.
The US military can never fulfill its mission of completely preventing future terrorism by its enemies al-Qaeda and the Taliban (and so counter-terrorism must go on forever, and in more and more places around the globe because future terrorists can be anywhere and anyone).
For the US President, the options in Afghanistan are staying or retreating. He will always choose to stay, no matter how many times Kucinich tries to pass a law forcing him to do so (and notice that Kucinich is not taking responsibility for ending the war - he always wants the President to take the politically risky move).
I suggest again that we stop ignoring the law that started this insanity. Public Law 107-40 allowed Bush to invade Afghanistan and it allows Obama to wage war anywhere that someone see/imagines/creates al-Qaeda or the Taliban.
I suggest again that the way out is to get Congress to take that power away from the President by dealing with P.L. 107-40, and that since Barbara Lee is the only person to vote against that monstrous law she then should be the Peace candidate of the people. Peace and Jobs.
Barack Obama? The Democratic Party? It is so hard to believe that so many antiwar activists continue to vote for these American monster politicians? I know that we don't really have a democratic system in place but that hardly excuses the conduct of those who participate in it with their so-called 'votes'.
When Obama was campaigning for president he said he would continue to fight in Afghanistan and would pursue terrorists in Pakistan if the Pakistani government would not act against them.
He said it repeatedly and on television. The American people heard it and liked what he said. If those you call anti-war activists don't like that message, they certainly should not vote for Obama and instead should devote their efforts toward reforming the Pakistani government so that it stops nurturing terrorism.
Oh, how cute! a troll!
"He said it repeatedly and on television. The American people heard it and liked what he said."
Most voters, being low-information voters, were lulled by the hopey-changey fluff and didn't listen too closely to his positions on the various wars. Others thought -- foolishly -- that he was just pandering to the Heartland and didn't think he was serious.
"If those you call anti-war activists don't like that message, they certainly should not vote for Obama and instead should devote their efforts toward reforming the Pakistani government so that it stops nurturing terrorism."
And how do you propose we "reform" someone else's government?
by joining with all the anti-war activists world-wide and in Pakistan. an anti-war movement in one country can't possibly achieve the purpose.
Charity begins at home, troll.
it's very ....nice.... that you're able to repeat a cliche, but the one that you know isn't pertinent. Have a nap and try something else after your cookies and milk.
how sad for the citizens of Afghanistan that our soldiers are killing them so my president and his cronies can grow poppies, and sell heroin...
how sad for us that no reporter can see the poppies, or the heroin...
even those that claim to see so much...
I can only guess they wish to remain alive, so close their eyes...
how sad for you that you think writing that crap isn't bone-stupid
u.s. Business/Gov 101 syllabus
Scripted lying
Death for dollars
Bribery protocol
Perpetual war for perpetual profit
Navigating revolving doors
Commodified violence
Empathy ... Ha!
Choosing a law firm
Crafting legislation
Bugging out - Lear jets and security firms