Why The
Afghan War
Is
Unwinnable
By Gwynne
Dyer
14/10/08
"Chatham
News" --
-
The main
purpose of
British
generals, it
sometimes
seems, is to
say aloud
the things
that
American
generals
(and British
diplomats)
think
privately
but dare not
say in
public.
Things like:
"We're not
going to win
this war."
That was
what
Brigadier
Mark
Carleton-Smith,
the senior
British
commander in
Afghanistan,
said last
week at the
end of his
six-month
tour in
command of
16 Air
Assault
Brigade. His
force saw a
great deal
of combat
and lost 32
killed, but
it didn't
lose any
battles.
Regular
troops
rarely lose
battles
against
guerrillas.
But there
were no
lasting
successes
either —
which is
also typical
of wars
where
foreign
troops are
fighting
local
guerrillas.
Carleton-Smith
did not say
that the
foreign
forces in
Afghanistan
will lose
the war. He
said that
they could
not deliver
a "decisive
military
victory."
The best
they might
do, over a
period of
years, would
be to reduce
the Taliban
insurgency
"to a
manageable
level . . .
that's not a
strategic
threat and
can be
managed by
the Afghan
Army."
This will
not be news
to any
professional
soldier who
knows the
conditions
in
Afghanistan.
The question
is whether
it comes as
a surprise
to American
and British
politicians
(including
Barack Obama)
who still
promise
"victory" in
the Afghan
war. Because
if victory
is not
possible,
then in the
end the
Afghan
government
will have to
talk to the
Taliban and
negotiate a
peace
settlement.
"If the
Taliban were
prepared to
sit on the
other side
of the table
and talk
about a
political
settlement,"
Carleton-Smith
continued, "
then that's
precisely
the sort of
progress
that
concludes
insurgencies
like this.
That
shouldn't
make people
uncomfortable."
For the
truth is
that the
foreign
forces are
backing one
side in an
Afghan civil
war. If the
war cannot
end in a
decisive
victory for
one side or
the other,
then it must
end in a
negotiated
peace that
is
acceptable
to both
sides.
The reason
neither side
can win is
that they
are too
evenly
balanced,
and each can
hold its own
territory
indefinitely.
The United
States
allied
itself with
the main
northern
ethnic
groups,
Tajik, Uzbek
and Hazara,
who together
account for
about 60
percent of
the
population,
in order to
drive the
Taliban from
power in
2001. But
the Taliban
were and
still are
the major
political
vehicle for
the Pashtun,
who are
about 40
percent of
the
population.
The Pashtun
were
traditionally
the dominant
ethnic group
in
Afghanistan,
but in 2001
they were
effectively
driven from
power by the
other ethnic
groups and
their
Western
allies. That
is why they
are in
revolt. The
area where
Western
troops are
fighting
"the
Taliban" are
all the
areas of
southern and
eastern
Afghanistan
where
Pashtun are
in the
majority,
and nowhere
else. In
practice,
the
foreigners
are fighting
Pashtun
nationalism.
That is why
they cannot
win.
On the other
hand, and
for the same
reason, the
Taliban
cannot win a
decisive
victory
either. They
never
established
control over
northern
Afghanistan
even when
they ruled
in Kabul in
1996-2001,
mainly
because the
other ethnic
minorities
saw them as
an
exclusively
Pashtun
group.
Moreover,
most non-Pashtun
who did fall
under their
rule were
alienated by
their
intolerance
and
brutality,
and would
certainly
not welcome
them back in
sole power.
But a
negotiated
peace deal
must give
the Pashtun
a fair share
of power at
the center,
and that
means giving
the Taliban
a share of
the power.
This is
still seen
as
unthinkable
in most
Western
capitals,
but it is a
thoroughly
traditional
Afghan way
of ending
the periodic
ethnic
bust-ups
that have
always
plagued the
country, and
it will
happen
sooner or
later.
Does this
mean that
Afghanistan
will
re-emerge as
a base for
international
terrorism?
Unlikely,
since it
would not be
to the
advantage of
any Afghan
government,
even one
that
included
Taliban
elements, to
attract that
kind of
international
opprobrium.
Besides,
international
terrorists
don't need
"bases" to
prepare
their
attacks; a
few rooms
will do.
Brigadier
Carleton-Smith
did suggest
that the
foreign
troops need
to stay
longer: "If
we reduce
our
expectations
then I think
realistically
in the next
three to
five years
we will be
handing over
tactical
military
responsibility
to the
Afghan army
and in the
next 10
years the
bulk of
responsibility
for
combating
insurgency
will be with
them." There
are two
things wrong
with this
argument.
One is the
notion that
Western
countries
are willing
to take
casualties
in
Afghanistan
for another
three, five
or 10 years.
The other is
that the
Afghan
government
is not
getting
stronger.
In a
recently
leaked
diplomatic
cable, the
deputy
French
ambassador
in Kabul,
Francois
Fitou,
reported
that the
British
ambassador
there, Sir
Sherard
Cowper-Coles,
told him
that the
strategy for
Afghanistan
was "doomed
to failure.
In Sir
Sherard's
view, "the
security
situation is
getting
worse, so is
corruption,
and the
government
has lost all
trust." The
usual
denials
followed,
but that is
exactly what
British
officials
there say in
private.
So it would
make sense
to announce
a deadline
for pulling
out the
foreign
troops and
start
negotiating
for a final
peace
settlement
in
Afghanistan
now. Waiting
is unlikely
to produce a
better deal.
Which is
probably why
President
Hamid Karzai
said last
week that he
had asked
the king of
Saudi Arabia
to mediate
in
negotiations
with the
Taliban.
Gwynne Dyer
is a
London-based
independent
journalist
whose
articles are
published in
45
countries.