The problem is not corruption…which has always existed and always well…it is
the stupid idea that the West can build a nation on an Islamic
foundation…pointless effort.

Like teaching pigs to sing: Annoys the pigs and wastes of time too.

B

 


http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/05/10/rotten_to_the_core

Rotten to the Core (Foreign Policy)

May 10, 2011

BY JUSTIN MANKIN 

Why does the West, after nearly a decade of war in Afghanistan, still have
no viable strategy for fighting corruption? 

Sitting in an Mi-8 helicopter, heading back to Kabul with American
poppy-eradication advisors, I recognized that I had just had my first
encounter with corruption in Afghanistan -- and the United States' dismal
efforts to address it. It was early 2005, just before the spring opium poppy
harvest, and I had been liaising with eradication advisors sent to villages
in eastern Nangarhar province, formerly a prolific poppy cultivator. A
well-implemented cultivation ban by the then governor, Haji Din Mohammad,
forced over a 90 percent reduction in planting. The few poppy fields I saw
were limited to remote areas and were still several weeks away from blooming
into fields of brilliant red and pink with white trim. Despite a transfer of
authority in the province, the outgoing governor and the incoming governor,
Gul Agha Sherzai, had orchestrated the most successful poppy ban and
eradication campaign in the country. In 2005, Nangarhar was a poster child
of the Afghan war on drugs. 

Unfortunately, both Din Mohammad's and Sherzai's enthusiasm for the
anti-narcotics campaign was a function of the huge profit opportunity it
represented. Opium prices in the country surged, making both governors'
reportedly considerable opium interests more profitable for their proxies
and supporters. But price control was not the only intent. Eradication
itself was a corrupt venture: Governors who were good performers attracted
more Western aid, which was all too easily siphoned off. The other half of
the game was soliciting bribes and protection payments from poppy farmers,
while only eradicating the crops of those who couldn't afford to pay. The
advisors I was with knew all this, but their interests rested with
eradication and cultivation targets, not with the perverse system of power
and profit their targets created. 

And so, even as the insurgency gained strength in southern Afghanistan,
thousands of similar scams spread through Afghan officialdom. Political
expediency, state weakness, opportunity, and an environment of uncertainty
have promoted a race to the bottom in Afghan accountability. Money has
become the Kabul government's raison d'être, with appointed positions like
provincial governor being bought and sold like shares in a company. 

The revelation that Osama bin Laden was residing in a Pakistani garrison
town has placed the issue of double-dealing by Pakistan's intelligence
services at the forefront of the U.S. public debate. But corruption by
Afghan officials also continues to undermine public trust in the government,
and the United States' aims in the region. 

"We are not trying to turn Afghanistan into Switzerland
<http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/03/16/ap/business/main20043672.shtml>
in a decade or less," Gen. David Petraeus, head of coalition forces in
Afghanistan, said in March
<http://www.c-spanvideo.org/videoLibrary/clip.php?appid=599704171> ,
managing the expectations of the U.S. House Armed Services Committee. "There
is a very realistic understanding of the conditions in tribal societies." 

But it is precisely the absence of a realistic understanding of how
corruption works in Afghanistan that has prevented the United States from
devising an effective anti-corruption strategy. Nearly a decade into an
increasingly unpopular war, international forces have yet to develop and
implement a strategy that distinguishes relatively harmless petty corruption
from efforts to subvert the state for personal gain -- the latter being the
stuff truly damaging to Afghanistan's social fabric and long-term viability.

The United States has doled out well over $50 billion in government
assistance to Afghanistan since 2001, but its efforts to rebuild the country
increasingly resemble a shell game from which only Afghan warlords profit.
Western support itself is part of the problem. In the absence of sound
policy, the international community has simply thrown money at the country,
undermining the very regime it has been attempting to build. 

The responsibility for this failure rests largely with the nature of the
counterinsurgency effort. Corruption has only recently become a priority on
Petraeus's laundry list of Afghan challenges -- despite the fact that
governance has technically always been part of the NATO International
Security Assistance Force (ISAF) remit. However, the international focus on
countering the Taliban insurgency and the imperative of training Afghan
security forces have left the intimately related issue of corruption to
fester at the bottom of the agenda. 

U.S. and NATO forces have long believed that anti-corruption campaigns were
someone else's problem. In the decade after the Taliban's fall, nascent
Afghan institutions and international agencies established a byzantine
network of anti-corruption efforts that suffered from overlapping and
conflicting mandates and gave the campaign a sense of incoherence and
confusion. Any Western diplomat, aid worker, soldier, or observer of
Afghanistan invariably has a story about banging his or her head against
bureaucratic walls when trying to call anything other than superficial
attention to the corruption he or she encountered. 

Under Petraeus, the military coalition has explicitly recognized that
endemic corruption is a driver of the popular dissatisfaction that the
Taliban feeds on for support and is a direct threat to the ISAF mission,
thereby establishing an anti-corruption shop under the ISAF commander last
fall. This means that international military forces are no longer ignoring
the corruption issue and, at least on paper, are making it a strategic
priority. Much of this work has required a hard look at the international
coalition's own role in engendering the corruption it hopes to fight, trying
to straighten out its messy contract-awarding process. 

As with all issues, there's a learning curve, but as much as any effort in
Afghanistan requires ISAF's proactive buy-in, the coalition still lacks the
critical tools and issue understanding to be effective in fighting
corruption, potentially making the results of an ISAF-led anti-corruption
campaign predictably disappointing. ISAF is just now developing an
anti-corruption strategy, and its shop is small, lacking the personnel,
internal support, analytical credibility, and mandate to effectively corral
all of ISAF and outside stakeholders onto the same page. 

But solving the problem of corruption in Afghanistan isn't just a matter of
institutional introspection, resolving the bureaucratic tangle, or reining
in reckless spending. It also requires the international community to
recognize and fix its failure to understand and define the nature of Afghan
officials' many corrupt activities. 

Definitions matter. Along with troops and money, the West has brought
certain prejudices and assumptions to Afghanistan. These ebb and flow like
catchy refrains among the in-country observers and are often mistaken as
meaningful insights. On my most recent trip in February, for example, the
oft-repeated leitmotif was: "The Afghan people are not inherently corrupt." 

This is entirely true -- no people are inherently corrupt -- but it misses
and dismisses the role of Afghanistan's history and society in giving rise
to the current manifestations of corruption. It also undermines realistic
estimates of what a successful anti-corruption campaign looks like. The
forms and function of corruption we see in Afghanistan are as much a
reflection of "Afghan society and history" as they are a perversion of it.
Just as international forces cannot expect to transform Afghanistan into a
modern Western democracy, they cannot hope to implement U.S. or European
corruption standards in the country. 

ISAF officially defines corruption as an "abuse of public authority for
private gain." But this definition essentially dismisses all Afghan politics
as corrupt. It isn't. Corrupt practices often serve a function beyond just
making corrupt actors rich -- they can also be an important means for people
to secure political and economic goods in the absence of a functioning
state. Given Afghanistan's 30-odd years of war, Afghans have become
incredibly savvy and pragmatic about meeting their needs in an environment
of tremendous uncertainty. 

Many supposedly "corrupt" activities address the development and stability
needs of both individuals and society. For example, whatever progress has
been made in knitting together a nation since 2001, Afghanistan remains
socially fragmented, and different parts of the country rely on strongmen to
raise and invest the capital for schools, roads, telecommunications, and
hospitals that no one else is building. They often do so in unsavory ways.
But it remains that all corruption, therefore, is not equally evil. Ismail
Khan, a former warlord and the current water and energy minister, is no
paragon of good governance; however, Khan has consistently ensured
reinvestment of licit and illicit activities into his home economy,
promoting economic growth and livelihood for many in Herat province. 

The international community oversimplifies the problem by failing to
distinguish between these different motivations behind corruption.
Incoherence in defining the problem has helped pave the way for most
Afghan-led anti-corruption drives to be nothing more than corrupt
enterprises themselves. In contrast with Khan, Gen. Daoud Daoud, former
deputy interior minister for counternarcotics and the current Interior
Ministry commander in the north, has used his position to strengthen the web
of the criminal protection enterprise, enshrining safe passage for many
Afghan officials' drug trafficking, if not into law, then certainly in
regulatory practice. On whether Daoud has taken his penchant for illicit
profit to his current position in the north fighting the Taliban, one U.S.
official with whom I spoke noted, "new suit, same dude." Daoud, like Din
Mohammad, Sherzai, and countless others before him, have just been rotated
into new jobs due to international pressure, in many cases serving to expand
their repertoire of corrupt activities. ISAF's superficial support of and
belief in the efficacy of such rotations reflects its general failure to
define and understand the problem. 

And so it remains that Western norms continue to implicitly color how the
international community deals with corruption in Afghanistan. No country's
corruption battle has been fought and won by outsiders, and this record is
unlikely to change in Afghanistan. But to even begin to create the space for
the Afghan government to combat corruption on its own, the West must be
willing to see the problem through Afghan eyes. 

There's increasing awareness of this in policy circles, as evidenced by
comments made by Rep. Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) to the House Armed Services
Committee in mid-March. Citing legal anthropologist Lawrence Rosen,
Thornberry said
<http://www.c-spanvideo.org/videoLibrary/clip.php?appid=599704170> , "The
idea of corruption in a tribal society is fundamentally different from the
way we view corruption." This is progress, but because of the difficulty of
dropping Western biases, the effort to understand Afghan corruption has
prompted a near pathological obsession with describing corruption's Afghan
manifestations, rather than its context and motivation. As a result,
proposed policy responses vacillate between the extremely specific and the
ludicrously general, leaving little conceptual space for a happy medium that
could result in a sound anti-corruption strategy. 

Focusing on corruption's intent rather than obsessing about its forms can
help distinguish the bad from the less bad and help identify effective
methods for international forces to intervene. When corruption is about
capturing parts of the state, like when Kabul's elites turned Kabul Bank
into nothing more than a slush fund for buying votes and Dubai mansions,
international action, not just local pressure, is needed. Other corruption
is simply about a need to cope with degraded institutions and the
deprivations of the status quo. A U.N. report
<http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/2010/January/corruption-widespread-
in-afghanistan-unodc-survey-says.html> last year failed to make this
important distinction. In taking a crucial bottom-up approach to assessing
corruption, the report implicitly painted the pervasiveness of low-level
bribery as representative of the Afghan corruption issue. And because
bribery is what most Afghans experience on a daily basis and prompts much of
the popular outrage against the government, the report drew significant
attention. But the local Afghan National Police official who demands more in
bribes because his paycheck is late due to a Kabul Bank collapse is driven
less by greed than by coping. Such bribery isn't representative of the most
threatening form of corruption -- it's really a symptom of corruption
fomented elsewhere. 

Given a more nuanced picture of Afghan corruption, what should ISAF target
first, and how should it do so? The above suggests that coalition forces
should devote their efforts not necessarily to the acts that prompt the most
popular outrage, but those that represent the greatest threat to the
long-term viability of the Afghan state. Today, this threat comes from power
brokers who seek to institutionalize behavior that damages development, such
as that by ministers and officials associated with the Kabul Bank crisis, an
event that likely represents the tip of the iceberg. 

The West must also adjust its expectations about what a successful
anti-corruption effort in Afghanistan looks like. For the foreseeable
future, it isn't going to be about Afghan institutions building
prosecutable, evidence-based cases, nor about naming and shaming Afghan
officials. Instead, a meaningful anti-corruption drive must be led by the
international community. 

Western authorities should not be afraid to use a heavy hand. The only
groups capable of challenging the monopoly of power enjoyed by
state-capturing officials are the international coalition's intelligence,
law enforcement, and military entities. The incentives for an Afghan
prosecutor to look the other way are too significant to overcome in the
short term -- at the end of each day, he travels home alone. But the means
for the international coalition to influence corrupt officials are myriad,
and if ISAF gets its bearings, it can target such officials where it will
hurt, forcing them to winnow down their corrupt activities. As things stand,
the lack of confidence in Afghanistan's cash-based economy flushes some $75
million to $100 million, by some estimates, out of Kabul International
Airport daily. The money leaves in hawaladar (moneylender) suitcases and
until recently, would board a flight offered by Pamir Airways, an airline
conveniently owned by officials at Kabul Bank (the airline's flights were
recently suspended due to safety concerns). This money goes to Dubai, where
it can also be targeted. 

Such targeting, if properly coordinated, would not only inject risk into an
Afghan official's corrupt activities, but also provide the strategic
leverage and credibility for the inevitable sit-down between a Western
representative and the corrupt official. In most cases, officials wouldn't
go to prison, nor would they be removed or rotated from office. But the
scope and range of their corrupt activities could be narrowed, perhaps
giving Afghans the confidence and tools to hold their officials accountable
on their own. 

This kind of heavy outside involvement has significant implications for
Afghanistan's national sovereignty, and many in the international community
will find such a strategy unpalatable. But given Afghanistan's evident
inability to deal with the problem, there is little choice. The connection
between corruption and the insurgency is undeniable, and the high cost of
the Afghan war means that ISAF must lead the fight in the near term.
Petraeus should give his little anti-corruption shop more power and
resources to do so effectively -- it is the only means to inject risk into a
riskless system. 

Under Petraeus's leadership, Western forces have finally recognized that
corruption relates directly to insecurity. It's time to act accordingly.





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