Arab News

Taliban takeover of Afghanista­n was inevitable

- TRISHA DE BORCHGRAVE Twitter: @TrishadeB

Much of the heartbreak over the recent collapse of the Afghan government and Taliban victory is being channeled into public outrage. Past and present political and military leaders and opinion writers blame the Biden administra­tion for a botched exit and the US-led internatio­nal coalition of NATO allies for failing to deliver a sustainabl­e socioecono­mic and political legacy for Afghanista­n.

But a mixture of wishful thinking and denial among the very same military and political leaders disguised the fact that it was only a matter of time before the Taliban would retake power.

Since 2008, the yearly audits by the US Special Inspector General for Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion have been littered with examples of lack of accountabi­lity, questionab­le costs, failures of planning, constructi­on deficienci­es, and critical shortages for the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces.

The fact is that, for the last 20 years, tens of billions of US aid dollars have been redirected to Afghan military leaders, political grafters and tribal warlords, with much of it ending up in overseas property and other undeclared assets in more stable locations.

National Public Radio reporter Sarah Chayes covered the fall of the Taliban in 2001. She then moved to Kandahar and spent 10 years setting up two nonprofits to help women create independen­t livelihood­s. In 2010, she became an adviser on Afghanista­n strategic policy to then-US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Michael Mullen.

When I interviewe­d her in 2018, she explained how, as far back as November 2001, young people in Kandahar were telling her that the proxy militias the American forces had armed and provided with US fatigues were “shaking them down at checkpoint­s.”

By 2007, delegation­s of elders would visit her, as the “the only American whose door was open and who spoke Pashtun.” Chayes watched one of them smack himself on the face, while describing how “the Taliban hit us on this cheek, and the government hits us on that cheek.”

It didn’t take her long to conclude that Afghanista­n was not a country with a corruption problem, but one governed by a crime syndicate; a “mafia-esque system, in which money flows upwards via the purchase of office, kickbacks or ‘sweets’ in return for permission to extract resources… and protection.”

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All in all, the US poured up to $2 trillion over 20 years into a country incapable of disbursing funds into productive projects or of absorbing the benefits of fair elections and centralize­d governance.

As Afghanista­n rotted from the inside, Chayes and others warned US decisionma­kers that Afghans could not be expected to take risks on behalf of a government that was as hostile to their interests as the

Taliban were.

In the meantime, the Taliban regrouped, strategize­d, learned and enriched themselves. They too stole and siphoned American aid. Above all, they bided their time alongside a weak and undermined Afghan military, dependent for their survival on American and other foreign contractor­s.

Where were today’s furious critics during those years of supposed “reconstruc­tion,” of troop surges, anti-insurgency campaigns and valiant elections? Did they challenge the 2018 Trump administra­tion’s “peace process,” which, given the then-US president’s declared intention to leave the country, became an unwilling surrender by the Afghan government?

Who was kidding whom on the kind of resilience that was needed for the Afghan armed forces to operate independen­tly in countering the Taliban after the American departure?

We were not wrong to try to help grow Afghans’ political rights and institutio­ns, and to promote greater religious tolerance and improve the rights of women and girls. Large portions of the Afghan people were ready to overcome their troubled past and build a better future.

But, as Chayes points out, “fragile” or “failing” states are deceptive. They are run by sophistica­ted networks whose objectives are not to govern, but to enrich themselves.

And now, thanks to our hubris, the ingrained corrosion of Afghanista­n by those in power, and the misguided interventi­ons of Taliban supporters, the best we can hope for is that Afghanista­n under Taliban rule morphs into an Islamic republic where religious autocracy at least allows women to be educated and society some measure of social freedom, even if they are politicall­y powerless.

The priority is to ensure that the Taliban do not return Afghanista­n to being an incubator of internatio­nal terrorism, especially when hatched by cyber-savvy extremists still pursuing their weapons of mass destructio­n dreams. And, once again, women’s socioecono­mic rights will fall by the wayside.

 ?? Trisha De Borchgrave writes for print and online media and
is based in the UK. ??
Trisha De Borchgrave writes for print and online media and is based in the UK.

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