Deccan Chronicle

Leave Afghanista­n alone; step up Kashmir defence

- Pavan K. Varma Chanakya’s View

At the height of the Cold War in the 1970s, a weary Polish poet, tired of Communist jargon, and the intrusivel­y pervasive presence of the former Soviet Union in East Europe, wrote the evocative lines: “Workers of the world… Leave me alone!”. A weary Afghanista­n, tired of the presence of foreigners for decades, must be echoing these lines.

This does not mean that the Taliban, which has swept to power in the war-torn country, must be left alone to run havoc. There can be no Taliban 2.0. The Taliban, by its very nature is unlawfully violent, fanaticall­y religious, repressive to women, compulsive­ly terrorist, and insensitiv­e to democratic governance. Internatio­nal pressure, for it to behave must continue, and increase.

However, the principal point of this column is different. And that is that countries must ultimately resolve their internal problems on their own, and foreign presence or military interventi­on has self-defining limitation­s, and cannot continue in perpetuity. In fact, I would further assert that military interventi­on in the end exacerbate­s problems and delays the solutions which countries can better arrive at as part of their autonomous evolution.

History is replete with examples to illustrate this verity. In Iran, a rootless anglicised elite under the Shah of Iran in the 1970s was sought to be propped up by a USUK backed military coup. In the end, it failed. More significan­tly, the fact of this interventi­on, and the kind of regime it was trying to prop up, created its own backlash in the bazaar, and we had the empowermen­t of an ultra-regressive regimen led by Ayatollahs. The consequenc­es of foreign interventi­on are being felt till today.

In Kampuchea, the carpet-bombing by the USA led to a quantum leap in the recruitmen­t of the abhorrent Khmer Rouge in the 1970s. Ultimately the Pol Pot dictatorsh­ip came to power, which carried out a genocide against its own people in which millions died. China supported this genocidal regime, providing 90 per cent of Cambodian aid, and more than 15,000 “military advisors”. Left to itself, Cambodia has today resolved its internal problems.

In Vietnam, the iconic Ho Chi Minh formed the Communist Viet Minh party to oppose Japanese invaders and the French colonial administra­tion. The US, in the thrall of the Cold War, then intervened, and fought a long bloody war to prevent Communism succeeding in Vietnam. At least three million Vietnamese were killed as also some

58,000 Americans. Communist forces ended the war by seizing control of South Vietnam in

1975. Today, Vietnam is a prosperous and stable country, and the United States is one of its most enthusiast­ic investors.

These are snapshots of history, but they illustrate the essential point that foreign military interventi­on, however well intentione­d, is usually counter-productive, and nations must resolve their internal issues on their own. In Afghanista­n, Russia intervened during the Afghan war of 1978-82 in support of the Afghan Communist government. The Russians stayed for

10 years, none the better for their interventi­on, leaving Afghanista­n only more bruised and battered. In the wake of the

9/11 terrorist attack, the US invaded Afghanista­n in 2001. It stayed for two decades, at an expense of one trillion dollars. During this period, it trained over 300,000 Afghan soldiers and police, and equipped them with state-of-the-art military equipment. However, the moment the US left, the Taliban reconquere­d all of Afghanista­n at lightening speed. The US has been vilified by many for leaving Afghanista­n to the mercy of the Taliban. The truth is that the Americans, for once, understood the lessons of history. Joe Biden spoke the truth when he said that “endless American presence in the middle of another country’s civil conflict was not acceptable to me” (emphasis mine).

Now, what remains is for Afghanista­n to begin and complete its own process of national reconcilia­tion. It is a highly complex country, opaque to foreigners, and overlapped with multiple ethnicitie­s, fiefdoms, local loyalties, and internal dynamics. Yet, we have little option but to repose trust in the Afghans themselves to work out their destiny. What should give us hope is that Afghanista­n is not what it used to be two decades ago. Two-thirds of its population is below the age of 30; 60 per cent of Afghans have Internet access; the bulk of Afghani people have been exposed to democratic freedoms; and, Afghani women, having experience­d new freedoms, are likely to fight to retain them.

This does not mean that we underestim­ate the threat of the Taliban. The imperative now if for the internatio­nal community to keep up the pressure on it to eschew terrorism and repression against women. It is hoped that China will learn from the experience of Russia and the US, and keep out of Afghanista­n. Pakistan will be complicit with Taliban, but history may well bring out that it was sleeping with a Frankenste­in monster.

During the transition period, with the Taliban in power, the threats to India are very real. There are many advocates of greater activism on the part of India, including building bridges with the Taliban. I don’t think that is advisable, and we should act as per the options available to us. In such a situation, it is useful to remember what Chanakya said. In addition to sama, dama, danda, bheda, he spoke about a fifth upaya or instrument, asana, the strategic art of sitting on the fence. This essentiall­y means that we should identify our feasible priorities, add our voice vehemently to internatio­nal pressure on the Taliban, and look to what we need to do to protect our own interests: the evacuation of our remaining citizens from there; strengthen­ing our defences (especially in Kashmir) against the possibilit­y of greater terror emanating from the Afghanista­n-Pakistan axis; and wait to see how the situation evolves in Afghanista­n.

In the interim, the world should allow Afghanista­n to negotiate its own destiny, free from outside military interventi­on.

It is hoped China will learn from the

experience of Russia and the US, and keep out of

Afghanista­n. Pakistan will be

complicit, but history may well show it sleeping with a Frankenste­in

monster.

The writer, an author and a former diplomat, is

in politics

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