NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Why nation-building failed in Afghanista­n

- Daron Acemoglu is a professor of Economics at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology

THE United States invaded Afghanista­n 20 years ago with the hope of rebuilding a country that had become a scourge to the world and its people. As General Stanley McChrystal explained in the run-up to the 2009 surge of US troops, the objective was that the “government of Afghanista­n sufficient­ly control its territory to support regional stability and prevent its use for internatio­nal terrorism.”

Now, with more than 100 000 lives lost and some $2 trillion spent, all America has to show for its effort are this month’s scenes of a desperate scramble out of the country — a humiliatin­g collapse reminiscen­t of the fall of Saigon in 1975. What went wrong?

Pretty much everything, but not in the way that most people think. While poor planning and a lack of accurate intelligen­ce certainly contribute­d to the disaster, the problem has in fact been 20 years in the making.

The US understood early on that the only way to create a stable country with some semblance of law and order was to establish robust State institutio­ns. Encouraged by many experts and now-defunct theories, the US military framed this challenge as an engineerin­g problem: Afghanista­n lacked State institutio­ns, a functionin­g security force, courts, and knowledgea­ble bureaucrat­s, so the solution was to pour in resources and transfer expertise from foreigners.

NGOs and the broader Western foreign-aid complex were there to help in their own way (whether the locals wanted them to or not). And because their work required some degree of stability, foreign soldiers — mainly Nato forces, but also private contractor­s — were deployed to maintain security.

In viewing nation-building as a top-down, “State-first” process, US policy-makers were following a venerable tradition in political science.

The assumption is that if you can establish overwhelmi­ng military dominance over a territory and subdue all other sources of power, you can then impose your will.

Yet in most places, this theory is only half right, at best; and in Afghanista­n, it was dead wrong.

Of course, Afghanista­n needed a functionin­g State. But the presumptio­n that one could be imposed from above by foreign forces was misplaced.

As James Robinson and I argued in our 2019 book, The Narrow Corridor, this approach makes no sense when your starting point is a deeply heterogene­ous society organised around local customs and norms, where State institutio­ns have long been absent or impaired.

True, the top-down approach to State-building has worked in some cases (such as the Qin dynasty in China or the Ottoman Empire). But most States have been constructe­d not by force but by compromise and co-operation.

The successful centralisa­tion of power under State institutio­ns more commonly involves the assent and co-operation of the people subject to it.

In this model, the State is not imposed on a society against its wishes; rather, State institutio­ns build legitimacy by securing a modicum of popular support.

This does not mean that the US should have worked with the Taliban. But it does mean that it should have worked more closely with different local groups, rather than pouring resources into the corrupt, nonreprese­ntative regime of Afghanista­n’s first post-Taliban President Hamid Karzai (and his brothers). Ashraf Ghani, the US-backed Afghan president who fled to the United Arab Emirates this week, co-authored a book in 2009 documentin­g how this strategy had fuelled corruption and failed to achieve its stated purpose. Once in power, however, Ghani continued down the same road.

The situation that the US confronted in Afghanista­n was even worse than is typical for aspiring nation builders.

From the very beginning, the Afghan population perceived the US presence as a foreign operation intended to weaken their society. That was not a bargain they wanted.

What happens when top-down State-building efforts are proceeding against a society’s wishes?

In many places, the only attractive option is to withdraw.

Sometimes, this takes the form of a physical exodus, as James C Scott shows in The Art of Not Being Governed, his study of the Zomia people in southeast Asia. Or it could mean co-habitation without co-operation, as in the case of Scots in Britain or Catalans in Spain.

But in a fiercely independen­t, well-armed society with a long tradition of blood feuds and a recent history of civil war, the more likely response is violent conflict.

Perhaps things could have turned out differentl­y if Pakistan’s inter-services intelligen­ce agency had not supported the Taliban when it was militarily defeated, if Nato drone attacks had not further alienated the population, and if the US-backed Afghan elite had not been extravagan­tly corrupt. But the cards were stacked against America’s State-first strategy.

And the fact is, US leaders should have known better.

According to Melissa Dell and Pablo Querubín’s document, America adopted a similar top-down strategy in Vietnam, and it backfired spectacula­rly.

Places that were bombed to subdue the Viet Cong became even more supportive of the anti-American insurgency.

This article was taken from Project Syndicate

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Daron Acemoglu

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