Arab News

Is US agreement with Taliban an admission of failure?

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There is something very hurried and sudden about the planned US withdrawal from Afghanista­n, despite the 17-year war being America’s longest conflict overseas. Perceived as an irresponsi­ble policy decision, President Donald Trump recently received a bipartisan rebuke, as the Senate voted overwhelmi­ngly to oppose his planned withdrawal of US military forces from Syria and Afghanista­n.

When the US originally sought a “coalition of the willing” to invade Afghanista­n in 2001, the war’s public aims were to dismantle Al-Qaeda and deny it a safe base of operations in Afghanista­n by removing the Taliban from power. Should the US and NATO pull out today, conflict in Afghanista­n will not end. The Taliban will face no obstacle in increasing their attacks on Afghan civilians, leading to a conflict infinitely more ferocious than the civil war of the 1990s, which created the conditions for Afghanista­n to become a haven for terrorists.

The US military is at an impasse. Unable to either dislodge entrenched Taliban forces or leave the Afghan authoritie­s in a position where they may comfortabl­y retain control, Trump plans to negotiate an exit from Afghanista­n without the US having achieved its objectives.

However, to the White House, the “forever war” increasing­ly seems an intractabl­e conflict. The carte blanche that Congress afforded President George W. Bush in 2001 resulted in a sprawling set of military engagement­s. By the end of this year, the cost of the wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq, along with spending on related veteran care, will reach almost $6 trillion — a financial hemorrhage that even the world’s leading superpower cannot sustain. With such concerns, it is little surprise that the president, with an election on the horizon, is seeking an exit from a conflict that he did not start.

Rather than making America a safer place, the experience­s of Afghanista­n will continue to haunt US forces. And, once they have withdrawn, the ensuing vacuum will inevitably allow another extremist terrorist phenomenon to emerge under Taliban rule.

Even though the longest war in American history may soon be coming to an end — following the agreement between the US and the Taliban that was recently concluded in Doha — Afghanista­n is in no way ready to be abandoned. A weak and corrupt central government has allowed Afghanista­n to re-emerge as one of the world’s largest opium producers, while it also has one of the lowest life expectanci­es in the world.

American efforts to seek an accord with the Taliban are in many respects an admission of failure. George Orwell once said that “the quickest way of ending a war is to lose it,” and the US intelligen­ce community’s most recent Worldwide Threat Assessment is indicative of this sentiment, referring to the country’s longest-standing conflict simply as a “stalemate.”

As the US seeks to withdraw in adverse circumstan­ces, comparison­s with the Paris Peace Accords that ended the Vietnam War are commonplac­e. However, perhaps a more relevant comparison concerning the Afghan quagmire is the Soviet Union’s withdrawal in 1989. Just as the US today, the Soviets could no longer shoulder the responsibi­lity and expense of Afghanista­n at a time of declining power, leaving the country in a worse state than they found it.

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