Daily Trust

The Afghan absurdity

- Bello Basiru Gwarzo bbgwarzo@gmail.com

In those days when we practiced as journalist­s, one of the havens or digression­s from the domestic front was Afghanista­n. Today, Afghans are on television fighting to enter American cargo planes to America. This is after 20 years of American “presence” in their country; a presence that they did not like and which made Americans and their Kabul government­s target. Nothing demonstrat­es the popularity of the Taliban than the collapse of the “Afghan army” and the “Afghan government” within seconds of American departure. So, I remain firm that the American President, Joe Biden, made the right decision to quit NOT at the time the Kabul government planned to escort him.

Please listen to Biden and read him on his decision to quit Afghanista­n and show me his fault lines: “We talked about how Afghanista­n should prepare to fight their civil wars after the US military departed, to clean up the corruption in government, so the government could function for the Afghan people. We talked extensivel­y about the need for Afghan leaders to unite politicall­y. They failed to do any of that. I also urged them to engage in diplomacy, to seek a political settlement with the Taliban. This advice was flatly refused…Mr. Ghani (the exiled President of Afghanista­n) insisted that the Afghan forces would fight. And obviously he was wrong.”

After all, Afghans did not invite America. America invited itself to Afghanista­n to defend its interest. Who can defend Afghanista­n better than the Afghans? The Taliban has greater control over the population than the elite that purported to have the interest of Afghanista­n at heart. Americans should have since realised that Washington had been heavily subsidisin­g the government­s of foreign countries and it is time to end it. On one hand, keeping such government­s in power against domestic forces is more costly. On the other hand, if you give refuge to hundreds of people in America and many of them turn out to be more sympatheti­c to their country than they are grateful to America, would you just simply turn around and apologise to the American people?

The world should better recognise the Taliban and engage them constructi­vely than to fight them frontally or undermine their authority by imposing economic sanctions. It was President Bush II that removed them from power; not an Afghan popular front. THEY ARE BACK IN POWER!

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria