http://tinyurl.com/26cduad

 


Militancy and the U.S. Drawdown in Afghanistan


September 2, 2010 

 

STRATFOR BOOK

*       Afghanistan
<http://astore.amazon.com/stratfor03-20/detail/1452865213?fn=5917046674>  at
the Crossroads: Insights on the Conflict

Related Special Topic Page

*       The <http://www.stratfor.com/theme/war_in_afghanistan?fn=6817046611>
War in Afghanistan

By Scott Stewart

The drawdown
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100830_iraqs_security_forces_after_us_wi
thdrawal?fn=9717046652>  of U.S. forces in Iraq has served to shift
attention toward Afghanistan, where the United States has been increasing
its troop strength in hopes of forming conditions conducive to a political
settlement. This is similar to the way it used the 2007 surge in Iraq to
help reach a negotiated settlement with the Sunni insurgents that eventually
set the stage for withdrawal there. As we've discussed elsewhere, the
Taliban
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100830_afghanistan_why_taliban_are_winni
ng?fn=1217046690>  at this point do not feel the pressure required for them
to capitulate or negotiate and therefore continue to follow their strategy
of surviving and waiting for the coalition forces to depart so that they can
again make a move to assume control over Afghanistan.

Indeed, with the United States having set a deadline of July 2011 to begin
the drawdown of combat forces in Afghanistan - and with many of its NATO
allies withdrawing sooner - the Taliban can sense that the end is near. As
they wait expectantly for the departure of the International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) from Afghanistan, a look at the history of militancy
in Afghanistan provides a bit of a preview of what could follow the U.S.
withdrawal.


A Tradition of Militancy


First, it is very important to understand that militant activity in
Afghanistan is nothing new. It has existed
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100212_border_playbill_militant_actors_a
fghanpakistani_frontier?fn=8817046654>  there for centuries, driven by a
number of factors. One of the primary factors is the country's geography.
Because of its rugged and remote terrain, it is very difficult for a foreign
power (or even an indigenous government in Kabul) to enforce its writ on
many parts of the country. A second, closely related factor is culture. Many
of the tribes in Afghanistan have traditionally been warrior societies that
live in the mountains, disconnected from Kabul because of geography, and
tend to exercise autonomous rule that breeds independence and suspicion of
the central government. A third factor is ethnicity. There is no real Afghan
national identity. Rather, the country is a patchwork of Pashtun, Tajik,
Hazara and other ethnicities that tend also to be segregated by geography.
Finally, there is religion. While Afghanistan is a predominantly Muslim
country, there is a significant Shiite minority as well as a large Sufi
presence in the country. The hardcore Deobandi Taliban are not very tolerant
of the Shia or Sufis, and they can also be harsh toward more moderate Sunnis
who do things such as send their daughters to school, trim their beards,
listen to music and watch movies. 

 
<http://web.stratfor.com/images/maps/Afghan_Pakistan_ethnic_800.jpg?fn=26170
46671> 



 
<http://web.stratfor.com/images/maps/Afghan_Pakistan_ethnic_800.jpg?fn=26170
46671> Militancy and the U.S. Drawdown in Afghanistan

 
<http://web.stratfor.com/images/maps/Afghan_Pakistan_ethnic_800.jpg?fn=26170
46671> (click here to enlarge image)

 

Any of these forces on its own would pose challenges to peace, stability and
centralized governance, but together they pose a daunting problem and result
in near-constant strife in Afghanistan. 

Because of this environment, it is quite easy for outside forces to stir up
militancy in Afghanistan. One tried-and-true method is to play to the
independent spirit of the Afghans and encourage them to rise up against the
foreign powers that have attempted to control the country. We saw this
executed to perfection in the 1800s during the Great Game between the
British and the Russians for control of Afghanistan. This tool was also used
after the 1979 Soviet intervention in Afghanistan and it has been used again
in recent years following the 2001 U.S. invasion of the country. The Taliban
are clearly being used by competing outside powers against the United States
(more on this later).

But driving out an invading power is not the only thing that will lead to
militancy and violence in Afghanistan. The ethnic, cultural and religious
differences mentioned above and even things like grazing or water rights and
tribal blood feuds can also lead to violence. Moreover, these factors can
(and have been) used by outside powers to either disrupt the peace in
Afghanistan or exert control over the country via a proxy (such as
Pakistan's use of the Taliban movement). Militant activity in Afghanistan
is, therefore, not just the result of an outside invasion. Rather, it has
been a near constant throughout the history of the region, and it will
likely continue to be so for the foreseeable future. 


Foreign Influence


When we consider the history of outside manipulation in Afghanistan, it
becomes clear that such manipulation has long been an important factor in
the country and will continue to be so after the United States and the rest
of the ISAF withdraw. There are a number of countries that have an interest
in Afghanistan and that will seek to exert some control over what the
post-invasion country looks like. 

*       The United States does not want the country to revert to being a
refuge for al Qaeda and other transnational jihadist groups. At the end of
the day, this is the real U.S. national interest in Afghanistan. It is not
counterinsurgency or building democracy or anything else.
*       Russia does not want the Taliban to return to power. The Russians
view the Taliban as a disease that can infect and erode their sphere of
influence in countries like Uzbekistan and Tajikistan and then move on to
pose a threat to Russian control in the predominately Muslim regions of the
Caucasus. This is why the Russians were so active in supporting the Northern
Alliance against the Taliban regime. There are reports, though, that the
Russians have been aiding the Taliban in an effort to keep the United States
tied down in Afghanistan, since as long as the United States is distracted
there it <http://www.stratfor.com/russias_window_opportunity?fn=1217046642>
has less latitude to counter Russian activity elsewhere.
*       On the other side of that equation, Pakistan helped foster the
creation of the Pashtun Taliban organization and then used the organization
as a tool to exert its influence in Afghanistan. Facing enemies on its
borders with India and Iran, Pakistan
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100316_afghanistan_campaign_part_3_pakis
tani_strategy?fn=1117046681>  must control Afghanistan in order to have
strategic depth and ensure that it will not be forced to defend itself along
its northwest as well. While the emergence of the Pakistani Taliban and the
threat it poses to Pakistan will alter Islamabad's strategy somewhat - and
Pakistan has indeed been recalculating
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/pakistan_new_phase_militant_proxy_saga?fn=
5017046637>  its use of militant proxies - Pakistan will try hard to ensure
that the regime in Kabul is pro-Pakistani.
*       This is exactly why India wants to play a big part in Afghanistan -
to deny Pakistan that strategic depth. In the past, India worked with Russia
and Iran to support the Northern Alliance and keep the Taliban from total
domination of the country. Indications are that the Indians are teaming up
with the Russians and Iranians once again.
*       Iran also has an interest in the future of Afghanistan and has
worked to cultivate certain factions of the Taliban by providing them with
shelter, weapons and training. The Iranians also have been strongly opposed
to the Taliban and have supported anti-Taliban militants, particularly those
from the Shiite Hazara people. When the Taliban captured Mazar-e-Sharif in
1998, they killed 11 Iranian diplomats and journalists. Iran does not want
the Taliban to become too powerful, but it will use them as a tool to hurt
the United States. Iran will also attempt to install a pro-Iranian
government in Kabul or, at the very least, try to thwart efforts by the
Pakistanis and Americans to exert control over the country.


A History of Death and Violence


It may seem counterintuitive, but following the U.S. invasion of
Afghanistan, the casualties from militancy in the country declined
considerably. According to the International Institute for Strategic Studies
Armed Conflict Database, the fatalities due to armed conflict in Afghanistan
fell from an estimated 10,000 a year prior to the invasion to 4,000 in 2002
and 1,000 by 2004. Even as the Taliban began to regroup in 2005 and the
number of fatalities began to move upward, by 2009 (the last year for which
the institute offers data) the total was only 7,140, still well-under the
pre-invasion death tolls (though admittedly far greater than at the ebb of
the insurgency in 2004). 

Still, even with death tolls rising, the U.S. invasion has not produced
anywhere near the estimated 1 million deaths that resulted during the Soviet
occupation. The Soviets and their Afghan allies were not concerned about
conducting a hearts-and-minds campaign. Indeed, their efforts were more akin
to a scorched-earth strategy complete with attacks directed against the
population. This strategy also resulted in millions of refugees fleeing
Afghanistan for Pakistan and Iran and badly disrupted the tribal structure
in much of Afghanistan. This massive disruption of the societal structure
helped lead to a state of widespread anarchy that later led many Afghans to
see the Taliban as saviors. 

Following the Soviet withdrawal in 1989, the communist government in Kabul
was able to survive for three more years, backed heavily with Soviet arms,
but these years were again marked by heavy casualties. When the communist
government fell in 1992, the warlords who had opposed the government
attempted to form a power-sharing agreement to govern Afghanistan, but all
the factions could not reach a consensus and another civil war broke out,
this time among the various anti-communist Afghan warlords vying for control
of the country. During this period, Kabul was repeatedly shelled and the
bloodshed continued. Neither the Soviet departure nor the fall of the
communist regime ended the carnage. 

With the rise of the Taliban, the violence began to diminish in many parts
of the country, though the fighting remained fierce and tens of thousands of
people were killed as the Taliban tried to exert control over the country.
The Taliban were still engaged in a protracted and bloody civil war against
the Northern Alliance when the United States invaded Afghanistan in 2001.
During the initial invasion, very few U.S. troops were actually on the
ground. The United States used the Northern Alliance as the main
ground-force element, along with U.S. air power and special operations
forces, and was able to remove the Taliban from power in short order. It is
important to remember that the Taliban was never really defeated on the
battlefield. Once they realized that they were no match for U.S. air power
in a conventional war, they declined battle and faded away to launch their
insurgency. 

Today, the forces collectively referred to as the Taliban in Afghanistan are
not all part of one hierarchical organization under the leadership of Mullah
Mohammad Omar. Although Mullah Omar is the dominant force and is without
peer among Afghan insurgent leaders, there are a number of local and
regional militant commanders who are fighting against the U.S. occupation
beside the Taliban and who have post-U.S. occupation interests that diverge
from those of the Taliban. Such groups are opportunists rather than hardcore
Taliban and they might fight against Mullah Omar's Taliban if he and his
militants come to power in Kabul, especially if an outside power
manipulates, funds and arms them - and outside powers will certainly be
seeking to do so. The United States has tried to peel away the more
independent factions from the wider Taliban "movement" but has had little
success, mainly because the faction leaders see that the United States is
going to disengage and that the Taliban will be a force to be reckoned with
in the aftermath.

Once U.S. and ISAF forces withdraw from Afghanistan, then, it is quite
likely that Afghanistan will again fall into a period of civil war, as the
Taliban attempt to defeat the Karzai government, as the United States tries
to support it and as other outside powers such as Pakistan, Russia and Iran
try to gain influence through their proxies in the country. 

The only thing that can really prevent this civil war from occurring is a
total defeat of the Taliban and other militants in the country or some sort
of political settlement. With the sheer size of the Taliban and its many
factions, and the fact that many factions are receiving shelter and support
from patrons in Pakistan and Iran, it is simply not possible for the U.S.
military to completely destroy them before the Americans begin to withdraw
next summer. This will result in a tremendous amount of pressure on the
Americans to find a political solution to the problem. At this time, the
Taliban simply don't feel pressured to come to the negotiating table -
especially with the U.S. drawdown in sight. 

And even if a political settlement is somehow reached, not everyone will be
pleased with it. Certainly, the outside manipulation in Afghanistan will
continue, as will the fighting, as it has for centuries.

 

Reprinting or republication of this report on websites is authorized by
prominently displaying the following sentence, including the hyperlink to
STRATFOR, at the beginning or end of the report.

"Militancy
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20100901_militancy_us_drawdown_afghanistan>
and the U.S. Drawdown in Afghanistan is republished with permission of
STRATFOR."



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