blogs.lse.ac.uk
<https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2021/08/16/the-talibans-victory-proves-t
he-west-has-failed-to-learn-the-lessons-of-the-past/>  


The Taliban's victory proves the West has failed to learn the lessons of the
past


Effie G. H. Pedaliu

8-10 minutes

  _____  

The Taliban has taken control of Kabul and declared victory in its attempt
to establish control over Afghanistan. Effie G. H. Pedaliu writes that the
rapid collapse of the Afghan government is set to trigger a major
geostrategic realignment.

As the Taliban seek to reestablish the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan and
the 'Stars and Stripes' is lowered at the Kabul American Embassy, I cannot
but think back to the 1997 SHAFR <https://members.shafr.org/about>
conference that I attended as a young academic. At the conference, John
Cooley, an American journalist, depicted a very dark picture of how the
Taliban would remain a threat for the security of the West in the years to
come.

Shortened attention spans, poor strategic thinking, bad policy decisions and
the legacy of Trumpist 'America First' foreign policy are coalescing to
obliterate the promises of a better future offered to the people of
Afghanistan and the hopes they fostered over the last 20 years. During this
time, the US, the British, their allies and every international institution,
from the UN to NATO, invested much 'blood and treasure' to turn the country
around.

Comparisons have been made between Saigon and Kabul. They make for good
copy, but they are false and misleading. In the 1960s and 1970s it was
American credibility that was at stake. Now, it is the trustworthiness,
reliability and relevance of the western model of governance. The damage
from the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban, once more, will be longer
lasting and more disruptive and destructive than the fall of Saigon.

Twenty years are not enough to allow a ravaged country to blossom again.
South Korea is a testament to this. In the 2,500 years from Alexander the
Great to the British and the Soviets, full control of Afghanistan has never
been achieved. Yet, this time there was hope that the future might be
different.

A new generation of men and women were being educated; they were introduced
to the values of human rights and democracy; they were growing up to share a
stake in a peaceful and orderly future. This generation was not given the
opportunity to show its mettle, as it had not yet matured to take on the
mantle of governing their country from the corrupt Kabul body politic. The
future and lives of 'the brightest and best' are now at risk. The UK
Chevening Fellowships for Afghans
<https://news.sky.com/story/uk-puts-visas-on-hold-for-devastated-afghan-stud
ents-awarded-scholarships-to-study-in-britain-12382034>  have been, for
example, reportedly, paused.

Valuable lessons from the past have not been learned. Wishful thinking seems
to have prevailed.

For some peculiar reason the rapidly evolving situation in Afghanistan seems
to have surprised many analysts and foreign ministries in both the US and
Europe. One wonders about the quality of the advice decision makers have
been relying on. It reveals narrow inputs based on a lack of pragmatism
feeding into foreign policy making. International historians have been
side-lined at a time when they could have helped their social scientist
colleagues by offering up long-term perspectives of how the modern world has
developed and not how one wishes it was. Valuable lessons from the past have
not been learned nor highlighted. Wishful thinking seems to have prevailed.

Diplomats were taken in by the double speak diplomacy of 'Doha' to think
that the Taliban had changed. What is happening now in the Afghan provinces
proves such assumptions were wrong. People have been massacred. Children
have been kidnapped. Girls have been sold as child brides. Women,
entertainers, historians and poets have been tortured and murdered. Public
hangings are taking place
<https://presswire18.com/please-help-us-dont-let-afghans-leave-this-world-fi
lm-director-sahara-karimi/> . Hundreds of thousands have been displaced.
Kabul is overflowing and people are taking the road to exile - if they can.

The UN Secretary General has asked Afghanistan's neighbours to keep their
borders open to avert a humanitarian catastrophe. Even if Iran and
Turkmenistan are willing to so and to build refugee camps for the numbers
required that are sustainable over the long term, they do not have the
resources to set them up without western help. No such humanitarian aid has
yet been organised nor it is easy for western countries to do so.

There is no adequate humanitarian presence in Kabul right now to keep the
refugees there safe. It is no surprise that those who believed western
promises and worked with the West to achieve them now feel betrayed and
abandoned. The EU has made no move yet and, in any case, it is not realistic
to expect it to cooperate with Tehran. America is still imposing sanctions.
There are no easy solutions here. Turkey has reached a refugee saturation
point.

A new wave of migration could soon be manifesting itself and not just to the
neighbouring countries of Afghanistan. The refugees will have only one
option and that is Europe. Soon this will be Europe's problem and Europe is
again unprepared. Syria, before the start of its civil war, had a population
of roughly 21 million people. Afghanistan has a population of nearly 38
million people. The once in a lifetime unprecedented refugee crisis of 2015
could be repeated if no urgent action is taken. How many EU governments are
strong enough to survive the new refugee influx? Can the EU overcome its
divisions over 'migration'? Do EU countries have the economic wherewithal to
accommodate the new wave?

The EU is unable to elaborate a foreign policy and does not seem able to
understand that it has external borders. In an unstable world, an entity
that cannot defend its borders is inherently weak and has a bleak future.
Germany, the strongest power of the Union, is still haunted by its past to
such a degree that it cannot formulate a foreign policy based on realistic
assumptions and realistic evaluations of the dangers it and the EU face. It
has decided to relegate foreign policy to the status of 'economic foreign
policy'.

These realities have led the EU to now watch the events unfolding in
Afghanistan stunned, indecisive and divided. On 5 August, six EU countries
<https://apnews.com/article/europe-afghanistan-migration-386a7150f322b9022b5
0e63dacd0d00c> , Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Greece and the
Netherlands 'urged the EU's executive branch to "intensify talks" with the
Afghan government to ensure that the deportations of refugees would
continue'. The events of the past few days suggest that what happened in
2015 was no one off.

The legacy of the West will be that of botched interventions in Afghanistan,
Iraq and Libya.

Afghanistan's plight signifies nothing less than a major geostrategic
realignment. The US and its allies are in retreat. China will be the main
beneficiary and there will be some gains for Russia too. However, the legacy
of the West will be that of botched interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and
Libya.

Yet, it did not need to be thus. Clear aims and exit strategies are always
part of the success of any intervention. It requires a clear understanding
that, once the decision to intervene is taken, there must be staying power,
achievable goals and a safeguarding of 'hearts and minds'.

Reports that the US has pleaded with the Taliban
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/12/us/politics/taliban-afghanistan-us-embas
sy.html>  to spare its Embassy in Kabul are a prudent, but also a
problematic course of action. It may be perceived as weakness and this is
not the right way to enter into Middle Eastern haggling. President Biden
decided to implement a decision
<https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-51689443>  taken by his predecessor.
He wanted out of Afghanistan and Trump's deal with Afghanistan in February
2020 offered him an exit option.

However, the Republican Party of today seems to have no truck with the truth
or reality. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has described President
Biden's strategy in Afghanistan as 'reckless' and former President Trump has
blamed him for the 'unacceptable' surge of the Taliban. This is
mind-boggling. Yet, Biden's strategy in Afghanistan is nevertheless a poor
advertisement for his slogan that 'America is back'.

The British, too, have a role to play. Few governments have the insight into
a country that the UK Foreign Office and its FCO-historians have at their
fingertips. One can only hope that the Johnson government becomes more vocal
rather than assuming the role of the bystander. As for the EU, it needs to
brace itself for meeting the uncharted waters ahead of it. It seems to be,
rapidly, running out of opportunities to get its act together. Only time
will tell if the nightmare of Afghanistan as a haven for anti-western
elements is coming back to haunt us.

  _____  

Note: This article gives the views of the author, not the position of EUROPP
- European Politics and Policy or the London School of Economics. Featured
image credit: European Council
<https://newsroom.consilium.europa.eu/permalink/p80480> 

  _____  

 

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