The Jerusalem Post

Building Afghanista­n after 2014

-

P• By KAILASH K. PRASAD ublic support for most wars comes with an expiration date. In Afghanista­n in 2001, where a punitive expedition would have sufficed, an exemplary case of “mission creep” took over and the domestic support predictabl­y waned fast. Ten years and half a trillion dollars later, political will, too, has ebbed considerab­ly and there is now a foreseeabl­e end to American combat operations in Afghanista­n. The latter half of 2014, if Barack Obama can have his way.

Long-term stability in the region is of course far from assured. And though for some, the limited success of the Internatio­nal Security Assistance Force’s (ISAF) nation-building efforts will factor very marginally when gauging overall success in Afghanista­n, the consequenc­es of leaving with a government in place whose area of influence is heavily circumscri­bed could be severe.

Equally important, it is unlikely these consequenc­es will be limited to the Afghan state. The recent call from the Russian foreign minister, warning NATO not to leave a volatile Afghanista­n, is among the more visible expression­s of the latent fears many of the country’s neighbors harbor.

To ask the ISAF to stay now, however, seems ludicrous. They are tired. And if the public reaction to the inadverten­t Koran-burning incident is any indication of the general sentiment, it seems they’re no longer really wanted. Also, the ISAF has achieved limited but very welcome success on the counter-insurgency and developmen­t assistance fronts. Afghanista­n is no longer a hub for global terrorist activity and there have been some improvemen­ts in health, education and economic well-being. This makes an WILL STABILITY always require a food dose of these? Afghan security personnel leave the area after a battle with Taliban insurgents who took over a building in Kabul. A BETTER-EQUIPPED and better-trained local security force might have a slightly better chance at making temporary inroads to areas where the center has little relevance. However, as former ISAF commander US Gen. (ret.) Stanley Mcchrystal remarked, the military aspect of even the best counter-insurgency campaigns can do little more than provide the time and space for a civilian government to take root.

To help ensure this civilian government stays relevant in the periphery it needs to outcompete its rivals in providing services. Improvemen­ts in transparen­cy, health care, primary education, electricit­y, sanitation and access to clean water would give the average Afghan a reason to believe it is better with a strong government at the center.

Seeking greater external engagement is one way Kabul can achieve some of these goals more efficientl­y.

Considerin­g that India and Russia have faced terror attacks from groups operating in the Af-pak region, and given the potential vulnerabil­ity of China’s western territorie­s to separatist and extremist influence, there is incentive for these actors to help create a stable Afghanista­n.

The potential for mutually beneficial bi-lateral relationsh­ips has not been lost on Afghanista­n’s neighbors. So far India has invested more than $1 billion in education, infrastruc­ture and health. Russia has embarked on a number of hydroelect­ric projects and a major housing project that aims to build one million square meters of living space a year. A consortium led by the Steel Authority of India could invest nearly $6 billion in developing the Hajigak mine. China has invested over $4 billion in the Aynak copper mines, and will build a rail line connecting Kabul to Torkham and Mazar-e-sharif as part of the agreement.

Some of these investment­s aim to access Afghanista­n’s $3 trillion undergroun­d treasure-chest. They will yield significan­t tax revenues, which if invested with even moderate competence will help the center outcompete its rivals.

However, bilateral engagement alone – at least of the sort seen thus far – threatens sub-optimal gains for all involved. If India wishes deeper engagement, because Beijing will almost certainly echo Pakistan’s concerns – New Delhi will have to contend with Islamabad’s fears of geostrateg­ic encircleme­nt.

Even if Pakistan were taken out of the equation, there is a significan­t amount of distrust between India and China. Which means each will be wary of inroads the other tries to make. China and Russia, too, have conflictin­g interests in the region. Without multi-lateral engagement, a lot of compromise is likely. The biggest loser could be Afghanista­n.

For all the distrust that exists, there are a few objectives which beg collective action and promise to pay ample dividend. Engaging Afghanista­n multi-laterally would not only yield greater internal stability and a reduced terror threat externally, but the exercise could prove to be a welcome trust-building measure among three emerging powers.

The writer has an M.A in Internatio­nal Security and Terrorism from the University of Nottingham in the UK.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel