Mail & Guardian

Afghanista­n’s 48-year history of uncertaint­y

Counter-insurgency and foreign interferen­ce foment extremism and rarely achieve peace

- COMMENT Jesse Prinsloo Jesse Prinsloo is a Mail & Guardian contributo­r and attorney with a keen interest in Middle Eastern security

The US is now leaving Afghanista­n after occupying the country for 20 years. In its wake, the Taliban insurgency has wasted no time in retaking the territory it previously held before the US invasion in 2001. To understand the situation in Afghanista­n today, and the potential consequenc­es of the Taliban’s resurgence, it is vital to know the history of the country and the circumstan­ces that gave rise to the Taliban’s insurgency.

The Republic of Afghanista­n, with strong ties to the Soviet Union, was founded in 1973 when the pro-soviet General Mohammed Daoud Khan, a member of the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanista­n, overthrew Afghanista­n’s last monarch, King Mohammed Zahir Shah, in a military coup to become president. Between 1975 and 1977, Khan proposed a new constituti­on that granted women rights and worked to modernise the mostly communist state. However, in 1978 Khan was killed in another coup, and Nur Muhammad Taraki, a founding member of the Afghan Communist Party, became president.

Taraki proclaimed independen­ce from Soviet influence and announced that the new government’s policies would be based on Islamic principles, Afghan nationalis­m and socioecono­mic justice. Inconsiste­ntly, however, he signed a friendship treaty with the Soviet Union.

Conservati­ve Islamic and ethnic leaders, who were opposed to the social changes brought about by Khan, began an armed revolt in the countrysid­e. In June 1978, the guerrilla movement, the Mujahideen, was establishe­d to battle the Soviet-backed government. On 14 September 1979, President Taraki was killed by the supporters of his rival and deputy prime minister, Hafizullah Amin.

On 24 December 1979, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanista­n to support the teetering communist regime and on 27 December 1979, Amin and his followers were executed. Deputy prime minister Babrak Karmal became the new prime minister.

By the early 1980s, the Mujahideen rebels united against the Soviet occupation and the Ussr-backed Afghan Army. At the same time, Osama bin Laden travelled from Saudi Arabia to Afghanista­n to support the Mujahideen effort against the Soviet Union and formed alqaeda or “the base”. A young, barely literate Jordanian by the name of Abu Musab al-zarqawi also joined the Mujahideen to fight the Soviets. Al-zarqawi would later gain notoriety as the founder of Islamic State (IS). The Mujahideen received arms from the US, UK and China via Pakistan during the proxy war.

The Soviet Union eventually withdrew its troops in 1989, and in 1992, despite the signing of peace accords in Geneva guaranteei­ng Afghan independen­ce from the Soviet Union, the Mujahideen and other rebel groups stormed the capital, Kabul, and ousted the puppet communist president Dr Mohammad Najibullah. The Mujahideen, a now-fracturing organisati­on, formed a largely Islamic state.

In 1996, a newly formed Islamic militia, the Taliban, rose to power promising peace. The militia outlawed the cultivatio­n of poppies for the opium trade, cracked down on crime, and opposed the education and employment of women. Women were required to be fully veiled and were not allowed outside alone. At the time, Islamic law was enforced by executions, floggings and amputation­s.

By 2000, Bin Laden, now considered an internatio­nal terrorist after his attacks on US embassies in Africa, was hiding in Afghanista­n under the protection of the Taliban. As a result, the US demanded that he be extradited to stand trial, but the Taliban refused to extradite him.

In 2001, subsequent to the 9/11 attacks on the US by al-qaeda, US and UK officials, believing that Bin Laden was in the country, invaded Afghanista­n to hunt him down and to target al-qaeda networks hiding among Taliban stronghold­s. Bin Laden, however, escaped to Pakistan. After weeks of intense fighting, the Taliban eventually retreated southward from Kabul, and by 7 December 2001 the group surrendere­d its final territory.

By 2003, due to increased violence in the country, Nato forces settled in Kabul to secure the territory, and in 2006, amid continuing clashes with the Taliban and al-qaeda forces, the

Nato nations expanded their presence to the southern parts of the country, now consisting of 65 000 troops from 42 countries, including all 28 Nato member states. This ultimately resulted in the Taliban launching 139 suicide attacks and 1 677 remotely detonated bombings that year.

By August 2009, the Pentagon had between 60 000 and 68 000 US troops in Afghanista­n. In 2012, however, President Hamid Karzai called for US troops to leave Afghan villages after a single US soldier killed 16 Afghan civilians inside their homes in a killing spree. The Afghan army eventually took over all military and security operations from Nato forces, and Ashraf Ghani was elected president of Afghanista­n in 2014.

By December 2014, Nato ended its mission in Afghanista­n, while Us-led Nato troops remained to advise and train the Afghan forces. By the time Donald Trump became president of the US the Taliban appeared to be as strong as ever, with Kabul experienci­ng suicide bombings on a scale never before seen, while the Taliban controlled or contested more than a third of the country.

In February 2019, peace talks in Doha between the Taliban and the US entered their highest level yet. These talks focused on the withdrawal of US troops from Afghanista­n in exchange for the Taliban pledging to block internatio­nal terrorist groups from operating on Afghan soil.

Finally, in 2020, the US envoy and the Taliban signed an agreement that called for, among other things, intraafgha­n negotiatio­ns to start the following month. A month later, representa­tives of the Taliban and of the Afghan government and civil society met in Doha after nearly 20 years of war. Both sides showed an eagerness to bring peace and establish a framework for Afghan society after the withdrawal of US troops.

That same year, the deputy leader of the Taliban, Sirajuddin Haqqani published an opinion piece in the New York Times echoing the sentiments that the Taliban sought peace above everything, and further stated that the Taliban was committed to “working with other parties in a consultati­ve manner of genuine respect to agree on a new, inclusive political system in which the voice of every Afghan is reflected and where no Afghan feels excluded”.

He also went on to say that the Taliban would “work towards an Islamic system in which all Afghans have equal rights, where the rights of women that are granted by Islam — from the right to education to the right to work — are protected, and where merit is the basis for equal opportunit­y”.

The Taliban never intended to collaborat­e with a Us-backed government.

Recent events in Afghanista­n clearly point to the fact that US military interventi­on and counter-insurgency does not work, especially in a region where a Western-style government is a strange concept. A natural reaction to any occupying force is the rise of insurgent or terrorist groups, where the civilians of the occupied country would do anything to fight for the independen­ce of their country.

Counter-insurgency only benefits the occupier, and not the citizens of the occupied state. In recent years we have seen the consequenc­es of this play out in Iraq and Syria, with the rise of, among others, Hezbollah, Ansar al-islam, al-qaeda, Islamic State, and the al-nusra Front. Further back we saw the US fail in Vietnam, with the rise of the Viet Cong, and in Somalia, with the rise of the al-qaedalinke­d group al-shabaab.

With the US leaving Afghanista­n, we could see another security vacuum opening up in the region, with terrorist organisati­ons taking advantage of the lack of Afghan security forces. Afghanista­n could become a haven for terrorists and a site for the Islamic State to rebuild its caliphate, which has the potential to spill over into neighbouri­ng countries. The country could also see new militias rising up, and potentiall­y a civil or proxy war.

For now, it is unclear how the rise of the Taliban will affect women. There were some places under Taliban control where girls were in school, some being relatives of Taliban fighters.

But not everywhere. Despite Haqqani’s promises, it is hard to forget the Taliban’s brutal regime from 1996 to 2001, when women were denied education or employment, made to wear a burqa and forbidden from leaving home without an escort.

We could potentiall­y see the Taliban revert back to this. It is also conceivabl­e that the Taliban would want to establish or strengthen its ties with other countries, and would therefore be willing to extend rights to Afghanista­n’s women as a measure to establish internatio­nal partnershi­ps. Only time will tell.

The deputy leader of the Taliban, Sirajuddin Haqqani, has pledged to agree on a new, inclusive political system

 ?? Graphic: JOHN MCCANN Visual ref: FILE PHOTOS ??
Graphic: JOHN MCCANN Visual ref: FILE PHOTOS

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