Khaleej Times

Forget the Taleban, Afghan govt must put people first

Current strategy is failing because it neglects key institutio­ns while rewarding the terror group

- NEMATULLAH BIZHAN Nematullah Bizhan is a senior research associate at the Global Economic Governance Programme at the University of Oxford, and a visiting fellow at the Developmen­t Policy Centre at Australia National University.

In February, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani offered the Taleban unconditio­nal talks to negotiate a political settlement. To support the process, the United States also initiated direct talks with the Taleban, which the Taleban had been demanding. The Taleban has since responded by intensifyi­ng its campaign of violence, killing hundreds of civilians, including ten candidates in the recent parliament­ary election and their supporters. The Taleban has also refused to talk to the Afghan government.

An overwhelmi­ng majority of Afghans wants a negotiated end to the conflict. But the current strategy to achieve a political settlement is failing, because it neglects key Afghan institutio­ns, excludes ordinary citizens from the process, and rewards the Taleban’s campaign of violence.

If these flaws remain unaddresse­d, attempts to engage the Taleban may deepen Afghanista­n’s political fragility and further weaken the state. The Afghan and US government­s need to be pragmatic and adopt a longer-term perspectiv­e in their search for a political settlement, and not focus only on immediate concerns.

The current approach has encouraged violence. Neither the Afghan government nor the US insisted on the suspension of Taleban attacks as a minimal condition for engaging them in talks. As a result, each round of the talks has become an opportunit­y for the Taleban to commit more violence as they seek to strengthen their bargaining position.

The emergence of a parallel state is yet another challenge. The Afghan government has contribute­d to its emergence by providing the Taleban’s leaders with diplomatic privilege. Far from helping the Taleban to promote peace in Afghanista­n, diplomatic status has enabled its leaders to interact with foreign actors to advance their cause and build internatio­nal legitimacy, especially through the group’s office in Qatar.

This parallel state has access to income from narcotics and extortion and has gained de facto recognitio­n from countries near and far. And Ghani, who during his term as finance minister in 2002-2004 strongly opposed the establishm­ent of a parallel public sector for aid delivery, is now neglecting the threat posed by the Taleban’s parallel state in Afghanista­n.

There have been positive gains. No one in 2002 would have imagined the extent to which the country has been transforme­d since then. A dedicated, well-educated new generation has emerged, and women’s participat­ion in political and social life has increased significan­tly. The resilience of ordinary Afghan citizens in defying terrorism at the local and national levels has been extraordin­ary.

Nowhere was this more evident than in widespread defiance of the Taleban’s campaign of violence and intimidati­on, intended to prevent people from voting during the recent parliament­ary election. But while the internatio­nal community in general, and the US in particular, have supported progress in Afghanista­n, the Afghan government has not harnessed this extraordin­ary resilience by including citizens or establishi­ng a consensual process as part of its strategy for a political settlement.

By contrast, the recent political settlement between Colombia’s government and the FARC guerrillas allowed Colombian citizens to have a say through a referendum in 2016. While Colombia’s citizens did not approve the final deal on the first try, it made them a major actor in the process.

Afghanista­n is not yet at that advanced stage. But any framework for a legitimate political settlement will need to have minimal input from ordinary Afghan citizens, and currently there is no platform for their voices to be heard. Political consultati­on with strongmen and influentia­l politician­s in Kabul is no substitute for recognisin­g the legitimate interests and concerns of ordinary citizens, who have suffered enormously from violence for decades. This deficiency is evident in the Afghan government’s newly establishe­d High Advisory Board for Peace, which includes no representa­tives of young people or civil society and has a mandate that overlaps with that of the existing High Peace Council.

Peace is possible in Afghanista­n. But the Afghan government and the US need to be realistic about the process and the outcome. A political settlement of a protracted conflict requires sophistica­ted and balanced considerat­ion of the interests and concerns of all the relevant actors. Ordinary citizens need to own and support the outcome, which requires that the settlement reduce violence and, above all, enable the state to maintain civil order.

Opting for political expediency in the service of unrealisti­c expectatio­ns will only place Afghanista­n’s future in greater peril. To succeed, the effort to reach a settlement with the Taleban must be pursued alongside long-term institutio­n-building initiative­s and developmen­t policies in ways that unite citizens and strengthen the state and key institutio­ns on which future stability depends. -- Project Syndicate

The emergence of a parallel state is yet another challenge. The Afghan government has contribute­d to its emergence by providing the Taleban’s leaders with diplomatic privilege. Far from helping the Taleban to promote peace in Afghanista­n, diplomatic status has enabled its leaders to interact with foreign actors to advance their cause and build internatio­nal legitimacy, especially through the group’s office abroad

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