Title: Briefing on Afghanistan
1Briefing on Afghanistan
- Barnett R. Rubin
- AFNORTH
- 3 December 2003
2I. Mission of ISAFSecurity for State Building
- Help Afghans provide security as they build
institutions to do so themselves. - Effective provision of security requires
- Military (ministry of defense)
- Police (ministry of interior)
- Legitimate government accountable to people
- Economy supplying legal livelihoods and adequate
tax base
3ISAF Mandate in the Bonn Agreement (Annex 1)
- Security the responsibility of Afghans.
- Request international aid in establishment and
training of new Afghan security and armed
forces. - Till then, UN-mandated force for Kabul and
environs, expanded elsewhere as appropriate. - Parties to Bonn agree to withdraw all military
units from Kabul and other urban centers or other
areas in which the UN mandated force is
deployed. Not implemented.
4Security from what for what?
- Security from
- Factional pressure to assure that capital is
national center. - External attack (Taliban, al-Qaida,
Hizb-Hikmatyar) - Security for
- Peace implementation, e.g. for DDR
- Training of new security institutions
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6II. Land, people, nation
- Territory arid, mountainous, sparsely populated
- People dispersed, rural, urbanizing, with
multiple sources of identity - Economy poor, agricultural-pastoral, trade,
criminalized - Nation Long history, strong identity, weak
institutions
7Territory Satellite View of Afghanistan
8Drought and Vegetation
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10People Sources of Identity
- Family Patrilineal, Patriarchal
- Qawm solidarity group
- Clan/Tribe
- Ethnic Group
- Location (region, province, valley, city)
- Religion Islam, Sunni/Shia, Sufism
- Party/Faction
11Family and honor
- Patrilineal, patriarchal family is basic social
unit. - Creates close solidarity groups by lineage.
- Marriage is political and economic alliance of
two lineages. - Men must defend honor of family and home.
Implications for searches.
12Qawm solidarity group
- Many potential units, mobilized by leadership and
patronage. - Kinship as idiom of solidarity inherited,
created, fictive. - Leaders khan, malik.
- Ethnicity situational and fluid, multilayered.
- Institutions shura, jirga
13Approximate location of ethnic groups (National
Geographic). 10 named groups.
14CNN Ethnic map (4 named groups) Beware of
ethnic percentagesNo census no definition of
ethnic membership no definition of
population.Hot political issue whose
Afghanistan is it?
15CIA ethnic map (11 named groups)
16BBC Ethnic map (9 named groups)
17Islam
- Central identity
- Sects Sunni/Hanafi, Shia, Ismaili
- Worship, law, Sufism
- Islamic politics local alliances, national
parties, ulama, shura. - Islam and state Key issue not whether state is
Islamic, but who determines what is Islamic.
18Major parties/factions
- No legal parties as yet.
- Current factions remnants of jihad, regime
militias (Jamiat, Junbesh, Shura-yi Nazar). - New parties forming (Nehzat, royalists, others)
- Regionally based factions.
- Anti-regime groups Taliban, Hizb-i Islami of
Hikmatyar, al-Qaida (Arab and other non-Afghan)
19III. State and power
- Descended from Pashtun tribal empire established
in 1747. - Pre-1978 Rule by Pashtun dynasty through
ethnically mixed centralized, weak state. - Last 25 years
- Collapse of state
- Empowerment of non-Pashtun militias
- Formation of transnational networks
- Pashtun reassertion by Taliban
20Centralized administration, weak state
- Power centralized in executive
- No provincial or local governments
- Weak state pre-1978 domestic revenue 6, state
expenditure 10 of GDP - Balance covered by foreign aid
- Informal self-government at local level. Local
shuras built by UN, NGOs.
21Legal administrative map
- Territory divided into 32 provinces, 300
districts. - Governors, district heads appointed by center.
- All revenue, foreign aid belongs to center.
22Rough de facto power map(omits Eastern
Afghanistan)
- Warlords head ethno-regional militarized
patronage networks - Official positions military/civilian
- Control of resources
- Foreign aid
- Legal duties and taxes kept illegally
- Parallel economy
23IV. International intervention and the Bonn
Agreement
- Afghanistan on 10 Sept. 01 Taliban vs. NA
- International response to 9/11/01
counter-terrorism, regime change - Bonn Agreement timetable, benchmarks
- Defining success in Afghanistan building a
sustainable state - Back to ISAF mandate
24Afghanistan on 10 Sept. 2001
- Taliban Islamic Emirate controls most of country
- Who are Taliban?
- Response to warlordism after 1992
- Start as Qandahari group (Deobandi mullahs)
- Link to Pakistan more than an ally
- Pashtun reassertion
- Growing links to al-Qaida
25Resistance to Taliban (UF/NA)
- Mostly non-Pashtun
- Supplied by Iran, Russia, through C. Asia
- US non-lethal aid, intelligence cooperation,
after embassy bombings of August 1998 - No effective unified command
- Holds UN seat, tenuous international legitimacy
- Dialogue with Zahir Shah in Rome
26Other groups/processes
- Zahir Shah/Rome group
- Cyprus, Peshawar groups
- NGOs, civil society
27US response to 9/11
- Overthrow Taliban regime if do not give up
al-Qaida leaders - Arm and fund UF/NA commanders plus others
(Pashtuns, e.g. Hamid Karzai) to fight with US
aid through Special Forces and CIA - Result on ground revival of warlordism
28Bonn Agreement (Dec. 5, 2001)
- Not a peace agreement
- UN mediated agreement on forming government after
overthrow of Taliban - Occurred after NA/Shura-yi Nazar occupation of
Kabul, revival of warlords. - Established legal framework for power,
incorporating facts on ground.
29Legal/political framework of Bonn
- Restore 1964 constitution without king,
parliament - Interim administration under Karzai (6 months)
- Emergency Loya Jirga chooses transitional
administration - Constitution, elections by June 2004
30Political deal of Bonn
- Shura-yi Nazar controls power ministries, cedes
head of state to Qandahari Pashtun from Rome
group - Regions controlled by commanders allied with US
to fight Taliban, al-Qaida, mostly NA - Zahir Shah returns, opens LJ
31Rough de facto power map(omits Eastern
Afghanistan)
- Warlords head ethno-regional militarized
patronage networks - Official positions military/civilian
- Control of resources
- Foreign aid
- Legal duties and taxes kept illegally
- Parallel economy
32Situation by theater
- Kabul and national government
- Northeast (Shura-yi Nazar, Jamiat)
- East (Jalalabad Hazrat Ali, Hajji Din Muhammad,
the Kunar/Nuristan problem) - Southeast Tribal fragmentation, Taliban
- South Changes in Qandahar? Taliban
- West Herat Ismail Khan vs. center
- North Mazar Dostum vs. Atta
- Center Bamiyan Khalili, excluded no more
33Basic contradiction (1) of post-Bonn
counter-terror vs. peace building
- Counter-terror military campaign allied with
warlord militias in Pashtun areas - State building make Afghanistan permanently
immune to terror by building legitimate state,
removing or transforming warlords, bring Pashtun
leaders into power coalition - Need for Pashtun inclusion vs. empowering
non-Pashtun anti-Taliban allies - Control of Kabul by Fahim/Shura-yi Nazar vs.
political need to demilitarize.
34Basic contradiction (2) of post-Bonn politics
without state building
- ELJ Insecurity and failure to make government
more representative - Effect on constitutional drafting fear of
intimidation - The revival of the Taliban
- The impossibility of elections
35Elements of state building
- New security forces subject to rule of law
- Reform of MoD, MoI
- Afghan National Army (ANA)
- Disarmament, Demobilization, Reintegration (DDR)
of existing forces - Means disempowering UF/NA
- Establishing national control of provincial
administration, revenues
36Obstacles to state building
- Weak resource base of government
- Ineffective administration
- With US military aid, warlords captured parallel
economy - Drugs leading producer of opium half GDP
- Gems (emeralds, lapis lazuli)
- Customs, smuggling, transit trade
- Timber, arms, more
37Poor road network
38Reconstruction delayed, nearly invisible
- A. Government of Afghanistan estimate of needs
over five years (15 billion). Source
"Afghanistan High Level Strategic Forum,
Brussels, 17 March 2004, Chairman's Summary,"
http//www.af/resources/mof/adf-ahsf-artf/ahsf/AHS
F20Chairmans20summary.pdf. - B. Baseline World Bank/Asian Development Bank/UN
Development Program preliminary estimate of needs
over five years from (10.2 billion). Source
World Bank, http//lnweb18.worldbank.org/
SAR/sa.nsf/Attachments/ ex/File/n-ex.pdf. - C. Total pledged at the International Conference
for Reconstruction Assistance to Afghanistan in
Tokyo, January 2002, for first five years of
reconstruction (5.2 billion), plus additional
pledges by the US and others (preliminary total -
7 billion). A more accurate tally of new
pledges should be available in late February,
after the second pledging conference. Sources US
Government, Transitional Government of
Afghanistan, Afghan Assistance Coordination
Authority (AACA). - D. Total committed as of 15 November 2003 (5.4
billion). Source AACA -
- E. Total disbursed as of 15 November 2003 (2.9
billion). Source AACA. - F. Total disbursed for reconstruction projects as
of 15 November 2003 (2.04 billion), excluding
humanitarian assistance, defined as refugee/IDP
aid, food, and relief commodity distribution, and
coordination costs of international agencies.
Source AACA. - G. Total disbursed for reconstruction projects
that have begun as of 15 November 2003 (1.8
billion). Source AACA. - H. Total expenditure on reconstruction projects
that have been completed as of 15 November 2003
(.11 billion). Source AACA.
39Current political issues
- Who has power?
- Weakening Panjsheris MoD reform, ANA, MoI
reform, DDR - State building and Pashtun technocrats UF vs.
Ministries of Finance and Interior - Constitution and future government
- Form of government and ethnic balance
- Rights and judiciary
- Islam and the state
- Degree of centralization
40Regional environment pre-9/11
- States
- Pakistan sponsor of Taliban
- Iran, Russia, Tajikistan sponsors of NA
Uzbekistan and Dostum - Non-state actors, networks
- Pakistani parties
- Al-Qaida
- Traders, smugglers, refugees
41Regional environment post-9/11
- US-coalition presence a deterrent to open
regional interference - Skepticism over US commitment keeping options
open - Pakistans choice partner or target
- Ally against al-Qaida
- Sanctuary and support for Taliban
- Iran multiple tracks
- Russia support for NA
42US policy reluctant nation builder
- Two policies in conflict DoD, State
- The Congressional critique
- Belated policy shift accelerate success
- Shift from war to stabilization coordinate
military with political - Double reconstruction funding
- Change rules of engagement on green on green
- Support ISAF expansion
- Focus on the south
43ISAF indispensable leverage for state building
- In Kabul
- Oversee withdrawal, DDR of Fahims forces
- Support MoI to establish security in city
- Establish external security, prevent infiltration
- In Provinces
- Leverage for administration change
- Security for DDR
- Security for reconstruction of administration
44PRTs, ISAF expansion, reconstruction
- Provincial Reconstruction Teams
- Origin in coalition experience
- Relation of security to reconstruction
- Inadequacy of PRTs
- ISAF expansion
- PRT/PST as unit of expansion
- Need for uniform mandate
45ISAF PRTs, PSTs and reconstruction
- Principal mandate stabilization under national
control - Provide environment for SSR and administrative
reform - Security for reconstruction actors
- Focus on civil affairs activities others can or
will not do, such as building government offices,
courts
46Strengthen national, not necessarily central,
government
- Liaison through MoI general
- Meet regularly with local shuras, elders,
together with administration - Focus on stabilization, patrolling, strengthening
government response to security threats
47NATO Condemned to success
- The only exit strategy success
- Local support for the goals of the operation is
strong - Providing, deepening, and expanding security
necessary to deepening and expanding peace
process, state building, to provide sustainable
resistance to re-establishment of terror bases