Afghanistan minerals give US reason to stay
PRESIDENT Donald Trump, searching for a reason to keep the United States in Afghanistan after 16 years of war, has latched on to a prospect that tantalised previous administrations: Afghanistan’s vast mineral wealth, which his advisers and Afghan officials have told him could be profitably extracted by Western companies.
Trump has discussed the country’s mineral deposits with President Ashraf Ghani, who promoted mining as an economic opportunity in one of their first conversations. Trump, who is deeply sceptical about sending more US troops to Afghanistan, has suggested this could be one justification for the United States to stay engaged in the country.
To explore the possibilities, the White House is considering sending an envoy to Afghanistan to meet with mining officials. Last week, as the White House fell into an increasingly fractious debate over Afghanistan policy, three of Trump’s senior aides met with a chemical executive, Michael N Silver, to discuss the potential for extracting rare-earth minerals. Silver’s firm, American Elements, specialises in these minerals, which are used in a range of high-tech products.
Stephen Feinberg, a billionaire financier who is informally advising Trump on Afghanistan, is also looking into ways to exploit the country’s minerals, according to a person who has briefed him. Feinberg owns a military contracting firm, DynCorp International, which could play a role in guarding mines – a major concern, given that some of Afghanistan’s richest deposits are in areas controlled by the Taliban.
In 2010, US officials estimated that Afghanistan had untapped mineral deposits worth nearly $1 trillion, an estimate that was widely disputed at the time and has certainly fallen since, given the eroding price of commodities. But the $1 trillion figure is circulating again inside the White House, according to officials, who said it had caught the attention of Trump.
The lure of Afghanistan as a war-torn Klondike is well established: In 2006, the George W Bush administration conducted aerial surveys of the country to map its mineral resources. Under President Barack Obama, the Pentagon set up a task force to try to build a mining industry in Afghanistan – a challenge that was stymied by rampant corruption, as well as security problems and the lack of roads, bridges or railroads.
None of these hurdles has been removed in the last eight years, according to former officials, and some have worsened. They warn that the Trump administration is fooling itself if it believes that extracting minerals is a panacea for Afghanistan’s myriad ills.
“It would be dangerous to use the potential for resource exploitation as a selling point for military engagement,” said Laurel Miller, a senior analyst at the RAND Corp who served until last month as the State Department’s special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. “The barriers to entry are really quite considerable, and that kind of argument could fuel suspicion about America’s real intentions in Afghanistan.”
But for Trump, as a businessman, it is arguably the only appealing thing about Afghanistan. Officials said he viewed mining as a “win-win” that could boost that country’s economy, generate jobs for Americans and give the US a valuable new beachhead in the market for rare-earth minerals, which has been all but monopolised by China.
China already has a $3 billion contract to develop a copper mine about 40 kilometres southeast of the Afghan capital, Kabul. Officials said Trump was determined not to spend US lives and treasure in Afghanistan only to watch China lock up its rare-earth deposits, which are used to make products from wind turbines to computer chips.
Silver, the chemical executive, may head an effort to maximise the rights for US companies to extract these minerals, according to a senior official.
Trump’s interest also reflects how his military advisers have struggled to present him with other persuasive reasons to send troops to the country, where the United States has been at war since 2001.
The White House’s review of Afghanistan policy – led by Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and the national security adviser, Lieutenant General HR McMaster – was supposed to be finished by the middle of July. Instead, it bogged down after Trump expressed displeasure with a proposal from McMaster for a modest troop increase and a multiyear commitment to the country.
Policy meetings have become increasingly heated, officials said, as Trump and his chief strategist, Stephen K Bannon, have squared off against McMaster. Secretary of State Rex W Tillerson is also said to be unhappy with the current proposals.
Vice President Mike Pence, not Mc- Master, was set to lead a meeting yesterday of National Security Council principals on Afghanistan. Some officials said that reflected McMaster’s isolation; others said that the general welcomed Pence’s involvement and that the two were closely aligned on the policy.
But Trump, it is clear, is not. In June, he grudgingly agreed to give Mattis the authority to send additional troops – a number believed to be about 4,000 – as a stopgap measure to stabilise security in Afghanistan. But Mattis has not yet used his authority, perhaps reflecting his recognition that the commanderin-chief is uncomfortable with it.
When reporters last week asked Trump at a meeting at the Pentagon whether he planned to send more troops, he answered, “We’ll see,” and added, “ISIS is falling fast,” suggesting he viewed the counterterrorism threat in Afghanistan as declining.
Worried that Trump will be locked into policies that did not work for the last two presidents, Bannon and the president’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, have brought in outside voices, including Feinberg and Erik D Prince, a founder of the private security firm Blackwater International. Both have urged using more private contractors and giving the CIA an oversight role in the conflict.
In addition, Feinberg has reached out to people involved in the Obama administration’s effort to build Afghanistan’s mining industry. Some warned him that the prospects for a profitable business are worse now than in 2009, given the decline in commodities prices and the deteriorating security in areas where the deposits are believed to lie.