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Soviet lessons from Afghanistan

Friday, November 5th, 2010

by Dr. Cheryl Bernard

The top-secret minutes, now declassified, make for a gripping, terrifying read.

Here they are, the top policymakers, meeting behind closed doors to discuss what to do about the worsening situation in Afghanistan. There is disagreement, born of frustration—the whole enterprise has become incredibly costly; it is dragging on, and unsavory compromises increasingly seem inevitable.

Some argue for a push forward, the commitment of even more forces. Others think it’s time to negotiate with the extremists. Some just want to get out. “We can leave quickly, saying that the former leadership was to blame for everything,” one official suggests, but is overruled. There are security concerns as well as the matter of international respect and credibility. To pull out, the argument goes, will embolden extremists everywhere.

Reading these minutes but blotting out the names and the dates, you might think you are reading Bob Woodward’s recent book, ‘Obama’s Wars’. But these documents detail a debate among another “innermost” circle—the Soviet Politburo debating the faltering policy in Afghanistan during the 1980s.

And the parallels are striking.

First off, there was the problem of holding the territory that had been won in battle. Soldiers can drive the insurgents out but as soon as the troops “return to their bases, the regions fall back under the control of the rebels,” as one official notes. Leaving smaller detachments behind to “hold” the territory didn’t work, and pursuing and killing the insurgents led to too much collateral damage. “In the course of those operations, the houses and fields are often destroyed, the civilian population is killed, and in the end everything remains the same,” an expert noted.

So there was talk of a military surge combined with a program of “tribal engagement,” seeking the backing and cooperation of local tribal leaders. Once an area had been stabilized, there would be a push for economic development to garner the support of the local population.

But then there was the problem of the local security forces.

“I do not believe even for a moment that an Afghan army can be created, regardless of how much we invest in it. Nonetheless, we do not have an alternative,” as one official bitterly complained.

“Our efforts over the last eight years have not led to the expected results. Huge material resources and considerable casualties did not produce a positive end result—stabilization of the military and political situation in the country,” another concluded.

The leaders in the Afghan government had turned out to be neither competent nor trustworthy. Instead of doing what was best for their country, they engaged in petty squabbles and were busy enriching themselves. The information they provided was unreliable and they fought among themselves.

Meanwhile, the Afghan president acted erratically and doubts had arisen about his mental health. “A deep political crisis of the Afghan society is obvious,” one participant glumly concluded.

And then there was Pakistan. Its government needs to be pressed much harder, the group agreed. Pakistan had to stop allowing the insurgents to operate from its territory across the border.

At the conclusion of the increasingly anguished meetings came the inevitable session when the group finally abandoned all hope of success in Afghanistan and decided to withdraw before even more precious resources were squandered and more lives lost.

The surge only had only brought more exposure, more casualties and more resentment on the part of the Afghans. The difficult terrain defeated modern military technology. Plus, Afghan society was too divided and the leadership too inferior to capitalize on any military gains. It was time to leave. “There is a reason why people say that each person is a unique world, and when that person dies, that world dies forever,” the surprisingly emotional, philosophical official statement noted.

It is hard to read these documents and hold on to the honest hope that we can do better. The Soviets, who were far from stupid or inept, had world-class regional experts and strategists and anthropologists and linguists on their team. There are no ideas or any alternative strategies that the Soviets didn’t try. The only real difference between what is in the Kremlin documents and the contemporary U.S. policy debate is that we know how the first debacle ended.

The circumstances that defeated them were nearly identical to what we are facing today—from malicious obstruction by regional rivals to the double-dealing by Pakistan. Afghanistan has been called the graveyard of empires; it is perhaps more accurate to call it the graveyard of hubris.

Former Soviet premier Mikhail Gorbachev has vehemently urged the U.S. to end its Afghan intervention and withdraw its forces as quickly as possible, stating that victory is impossible. Gorbachev isn’t just any random pundit. His perestroika changed global politics, ended the Cold War, and won him a Nobel Peace Prize. As a leading policy maker, who experienced the Soviet Union’s own painful Afghanistan venture and ultimately oversaw the withdrawal of Russian troops from that country, he may be assumed to have some insights to contribute.

In the U.S., however, the twin reactions to his advice have been: disinterest and cynicism. The few commentators who could be bothered to react at all mostly attributed his remarks to sour grapes—the Soviet Union suffered a huge, even catastrophic setback in Afghanistan, and the U.S. operating through its Afghan surrogates was largely responsible, they imply, so he just wants to see us suffer the same fate.

A dispassionate comparison of the two superpower interventions, however, suggests that motives and agendas aside, Gorbachev’s advice—and particularly his plea that we “learn from the Russian experience”—deserves very serious consideration.

Reading the Kremlin documents, it is clear: Gorbachev’s warning is worthy of very serious consideration.

Dr. Cheryl Benard is a writer based in Washington, D.C., and the president of The Bamiyan Project, a nonprofit organization that supports cultural activists in areas of conflict and post-conflict. From 2001 until 2009, she was the director of the Alternative Strategies Initiative at the RAND Corporation. Her books include ‘Civil Democratic Islam’, ‘Women in Nation-Building’, and the forthcoming ‘Behind the Wire, Detainee Operations in Iraq.’ This article originally appeared in The Daily Beast.

US polls: what it means for the community

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

By Bilal Qureshi

Pakistani community in America is watching the mid-term elections in America with fascination as for some of them; it is a great exercise in human freedom.

For this community, this election is also the source of anxiety because of its impact on Washington’s relationship with Islamabad. Some argue that it will further complicate a very tense relationship, some worry that a change in balance of power will drive both parties to take a very hard line towards Pakistan for domestic political reasons. Few of the Pakistanis hope that ‘drone attacks will end’ and many in the community believe that Pakistan will be forgotten as the divided Congress will focus on winning the (more…)

Where is the system?

Saturday, October 2nd, 2010

by I.A. Rehman

The greatest threat to Pakistan is posed neither by the flood havoc nor by the commonly perceived clash of state institutions. It is presented by the apparent collapse of the collective mind, for if the all too visible free-for-all in thinking could be brought under control no problem will be insurmountable.

The government has been declaring day in and day out that it will do everything to save the system while the diverse opposition factions that are gunning for the government also claim to be interested solely in protecting the system. Neither side, however, cares to notice the increasing points of divergence between its definition of the system and the citizens’ understanding of it.The system has all along been under strain from three factors. First, Pakistan has paid a heavy price for the failure of its elected governments to adopt a system of governance materially different from authoritarian models. Second, all contenders for power have been found incapable of breaking out of the curse of majoritarianism; at best they are amenable to pressures for intra-elite compromises that exclude the country’s overwhelming majority from decision-making or sharing the fruits of representative governance. And, third, the tendency to ignore the demands of political propriety in favour of the legally permissible exercise of authority has rendered nearly all governments in Pakistan vulnerable to attack on more than one ground.

To the above-mentioned traditional sources of instability and confusion about the system have been added three factors of wide import; first, the failure to protect the system against its subversion by quasi-religious extremists; second, the widening disparity between priority lists prepared by authority and the public; and, third, a total mismatch between the government’s concept of efficiency and people’s expectations.

The government is right in saying that its predecessors were responsible for creating and nourishing militancy in the name of belief but it cannot repel the charge of failure to measure the social dimension of the phenomenon. If militants could use some parts of Pakistan as havens in the Musharraf period, today there is hardly any area that is not available to them. Not that the government is unaware of the threat the increased social acceptance of religious militancy presents, but it has not even begun to mobilise a countervailing force that political workers and civil society activists could muster.

The result is that the system is yielding to a dangerous extent to pseudo-religious hard-liners on foreign policy issues (especially concerning relations with the US and India). It is also making things difficult for itself by viewing a straightforward case of helping Dr Aafia Siddiqui through the eyes of extremists.

The disagreement between the custodians of power and the people over priority issues is evident to everyone. The list of achievements belatedly issued by official blurb-writers will appeal only to a segment of the educated class. It is unlikely to impress the masses who have lost hope of escape from poverty, joblessness, disease and exploitation. An arrangement that is seen to have been designed only to promote the interests of the privileged and which leaves the poor and the marginalised out in the cold will not be accepted by the people as a reliable system of governance that deserves to be saved.

Likewise the divergence of views on the system’s efficiency. Everyday the people are told that this minister or that has taken note of an atrocious crime, that somebody has called for a report within 24 or 48 hours, or that the police have been ordered to arrest a killer or a robber, as if this is all that effective governance requires. The people are sick of such bad jokes. To them the proof of the administration’s inefficiency is the photograph in the media of petrol being sold at kiryana shops without even a whimper from the establishment.

Unfortunately, the poverty of the mind on the official benches is matched by similar poverty on the part of challengers who do not wish to admit that they are more keen to scuttle the government’s boat than to save the system. They do not realise that endless speeches on the points of discord between the state institutions do not yield the essence of the system that everyone pretends to be trying to save.

In the hullabaloo that has been going on for several weeks the question as to who can really save the system continues to be wrongly answered. Those who think that parliament, or the judiciary, or the defence establishment, or a powerful foreign patron acting alone can save a democratic system only betray their ignorance of the dynamics of modern politics.

What any intervention by the actors mentioned above can save will at best be a self-serving compact among the various vested interests, it will surely not be a democratic dispensation. A democratic system can be saved, assuming that such an order has been established, only by the people. A regime that ignores people’s alienation will always find itself unable to face opposition not only from outside but also from within its own ranks.

Strangely enough, the entire ongoing debate is about the fate of the executive, which is only one part of the system. Very little attention is being paid to the judicial system which is facing threats from quite a few sources. The biggest threat to the system of justice is coming not from the anaemic executive but from its unwise friends.

Laws are being interpreted more ferociously in the media than in the courts. A great noise is being made about judicial activism while justice has flourished more by judicial restraint. Senior advocates are competing with eight-day old experts in proclaiming what the judiciary will or will not put up with. Nobody seems to remember the days when a retired high court judge — and a good judge he had been — was convicted of contempt for hailing a superior court judgment, or the dictum that no judiciary has scaled the heights of respect and popularity by solely relying on the power to punish for contempt.

How will the system of governance survive if well-organised forces go on egging the judiciary to take what Faisal Siddiqui, in his excellent study in these columns recently (‘Judicial revolution’, Sept 24), described as the “path to the Orwellian doublespeak of labelling the unconstitutional as constitutional?”

U.S. Embassy launches campaign to correct errors in Pakistani media

Monday, June 28th, 2010

by Karen Brulliard

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN — Some reports are deemed “a paranoid fabrication,” such as the claim that all Pakistanis are stripped naked in U.S. airports.

Others are “false and malicious,” such as the one about the Americans moving Pakistani Taliban leaders to Afghanistan to prepare them for a battle against Pakistan’s army.

So says the U.S. Embassy here, which for nearly eight months has issued statements countering every major error about American foreign policy that it finds in Pakistan’s boisterous media.

It’s a herculean task that embassy officials say has been undertaken by no other U.S. mission in the world — because nowhere else, those officials say, does U.S. policy face such disdain and misrepresentation.

The statements — called “Corrections for the Record” — are issued a handful of times a month. Whether they are effective is hard to measure, though embassy officials express confidence. Taken together, the missives serve as a chronicle of the uphill battle the U.S. government faces in Pakistan in its sometimes clumsy efforts to influence opinion.

Much is at stake. The Obama administration views Pakistan as a crucial partner in its fight against Islamist terrorism, and it has spent the past year trying to convince Pakistanis that the United States is a steadfast, well-intentioned ally. So far the public has not been swayed: A recent Pew Research Center survey found that 17 percent of Pakistanis view the United States favorably, and only 8 percent expressed faith in President Obama — his lowest rating in 22 countries surveyed.

The corrections have challenged widely believed theories in a nation with a penchant for conspiracies: that Americans were behind deadly bombings (“absurd, baseless”) or plotting a “massive infiltration” by U.S. Marines of Pakistan’s militant-riddled tribal areas (“entirely false”).

The correction campaign comes as the media in Pakistan grow in size and influence. As of 2002, there was one state-owned television station in Pakistan. Now there are more than 90 private channels, many of which feature roundtable-style political debate, plus countless newspapers, magazines and journals.

The content is raucous and the journalists are free, within certain nebulous limits; many avoid criticism of the powerful security establishment, though they savage the civilian government. The United States, which is expanding its footprint here, often features as an all-powerful schemer, a depiction embassy officials complain is exacerbated when Pakistani journalists do not seek the American side of the story.

Some observers, though, say the real problem is the two nations’ spy novel-like relations. Secrets surround so many aspects of the relationship that the resulting vacuum is easily filled by rumors.

Against that backdrop, some Pakistani journalists say, official embassy denials carry little weight. “Our government does not have a history of giving out information. If the U.S. pulls another Pakistan on the Pakistani media . . . it’s only natural they would be hostile,” media analyst Adnan Rehmat said. “The hostility stems from this space where secrecy is the norm.”

That attitude has been compounded by confirmations — in the American press — of reports that initially seemed to be wacky conspiracy theories, said Huma Yusuf, a columnist for Dawn newspaper. Those CIA drones that strike militant mountain hideouts? Turned out they are indeed allowed by Pakistan, despite the government’s public denials. The rumors about U.S. troops on Pakistani soil? American officials confirmed in 2008 that U.S. commandos had conducted a ground raid and more recently that about 200 Special Forces are training elements of Pakistan’s military.

Still, Yusuf said, many of Pakistan’s newly minted journalists are learning as they go, and “making stuff up” is a common way to generate news.

“If you can take even the slightest thing and turn it into a story that proves the U.S. is the evil demon . . . it’s going to sell papers,” Yusuf said.

Embassy officials say that they have stepped up interaction with Pakistani media but that the embassy’s press shop — set to grow to five people by next year — is small for the job.

The U.S. special envoy for the region, Richard Holbrooke, has met with Pakistani journalists on many of his visits, as have many U.S. lawmakers while passing through, said Larry Schwartz, the embassy’s senior spokesman. They often focus on the less-clandestine aspects of the U.S.-Pakistan relationship, such as aid for power plants and schools, even if the news media do not.

“We really are trying to develop a meaningful and supportive relationship with this country,” Schwartz said. “The distortions that we see in the media do need to be countered.”

In this duel, the embassy says its biggest foe is the Nation, an English-language newspaper. It has published photos of houses it says were rented by menacing American operatives employed by the security company Blackwater; in one case, according to a U.S. Embassy correction, the resident was a U.S. aid worker.

More recently, the newspaper reported what it called “stark confirmation of the vicious U.S. agenda”: Police had detained a U.S. military official driving an “ammunition-laden vehicle” and “trading heavy weaponry.” The embassy retorted that the truck carried “equipment” used in Special Forces training, with the consent of authorities.

Shireen Mizari, the editor of the Nation, responded to questions about its coverage and the embassy corrections in her column.

“If the police confirm a piece of information, we have no reason to doubt it,” she wrote of the article about the truck. Regarding the house photos, she wrote that “if we see anyone doing something suspicious, it is our job to report it.”

But the market for English-language newspapers is small. Television, where 70 percent of Pakistanis get their news and anti-Western venom flows, may be the biggest arbiter of public opinion. The embassy rarely issues corrections about television reports, which are too numerous to monitor.

Even so, the Americans might want to lighten up, Rehmat said. Given the surge in programming, most has nothing to do with the United States, and some is even positive, he said. Instead of corrections, the embassy should focus on getting more American scholars, scientists, artists and athletes — not just Washington officials — into Pakistan to mingle with journalists.

“For us, America is either Obama or Bush, or it’s 50 Cent and Michael Jackson,” he said. “We’re missing all the other amazing spectrum.”

——

This story originally appeared in The Washington Post

US says Secretary Clinton’s remarks misinterpreted

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

By Ali Imran – APP

The United States said Monday Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s statement on consequences of a Pakistan-linked terrorist attack on American soil has been misrepresented in the media, with a top official empahsizing that the remarks in no way indicated any impact on flow of US economic or military aid for the key ally.

“As for Secretary Clinton’s interview on (CBS channel’s) 60 Minutes (program), I think that perhaps it was not fully understood for what she was saying by some people who didn’t see the full text or didn’t appreciate what she was saying,” US Special Representative Richard Holbrooke said.

The special envoy was commenting on interpretation of Secretary (more…)

Yet another Pakistan miracle

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

By Sol W. Sanders – World Tribune

The Battle of Pakistan is underway. While slower minds concentrate on the Israel-Arab conflict, the largest Muslim nation — 150 million — is near a death rattle.

For ironically, like Israel, Pakistan is a miracle with multitudinous contradictions. It was, after all, a poetic notion that the British Indian Empire was two “nations”, one overwhelmingly majority Hindu, one minority Muslim. Muslim leadership turned after dominating “Indian” nationalism for almost a century before Mohandas Gandhi arrived, arguing the two communities could not live together. In fact, Pakistan’s founders maintained a “modern” state could only be created in the (more…)

Is US-Taliban dialogue likely?

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

By Tahir Ali

Afghan President Hamid Karzai wants to win over the moderate Taliban insurgents and leaders by offering them money, jobs, protection, and amnesty. But the million dollar question is: will his plan succeed. I think it won’t for various reasons. The strategy was used in Iraq with significant results. However it is either unlikely to happen at all or may not succeed in the war-torn Afghanistan though it probably will generate considerable debate in the media. The coalition obviously aims to divide and weaken the Taliban-led struggle. British foreign secretary David Miliband has also publicly stated that the aim of the Western countries was to divide the Taliban and overcome their resistance.

The coalition only wishes a respite in attacks against the coalition forces there and wants peace but on the basis of its own terms and desires. Will the Taliban or Hikmatyar, rather Afghans, agree to it? They, as we all know, have their preconditions to enter into a meaningful dialogue. Both Taliban and Hikmatyar –the two biggest forces that matter there –have made their support to a negotiated (more…)

Tickets to the endgame

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

A high-level delegation of Pakistanis is due to sweep into Washington for the restart on March 24th of a “strategic dialogue” with America. The Pakistanis have muscled their way to the table for what looks like a planning session for the endgame in Afghanistan. The recent arrest of the Taliban’s deputy leader, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, and a clutch of his high-ranking comrades, has won them a seat.

The Pakistani team, led by the foreign minister, will include both the army chief and the head of the army’s spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). America has upgraded its own representation at the talks, last held in mid-2008, from deputy-secretary to secretary-of-state level. The dialogue is supposed to cover the gamut of bilateral issues, including help for Pakistan’s fragile economy, and even, on its ambitious wish-list, civil nuclear technology.

But the future of Afghanistan is the most pressing topic, and in Pakistan that issue is always controlled by the powerful army and the ISI. Pakistan believes that the Americans are coming to understand its fear of encirclement: (more…)

Economics key to countering extremism

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

By John Milburn – Associated Press

The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told a crowd of military officers Thursday that soldiers can’t solve the world’s political or economic problems alone.

Adm. Mike Mullen told officers at Army’s Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth that getting the global economy on its feet is a key to beating back extremist groups.

“So that in a secure environment, parents raise their kids to a higher standard of living. It is a universal desire on the part of parents to do that,” Mullen said.

The military has played a role in helping restart the Iraqi and Afghan economies by providing security, rebuilding infrastructure and helping residents rebuild down to the street level through various loan programs. (more…)

The Ballot Box: The Lyin’ Tamer

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

A Republican political consultant and spin doctor once gave a young reporter a piece of advice.  ”When dealing with a politician think like a lion tamer.  Have you ever asked yourself why a lion tamer goes into the ring with a loaded gun at his side? That’s because he knows that even though he’s been around the same lion day after day – and may even have raised the creature since it was a cub – he realizes that at the end of the day the lion is still a lion.”

No doubt working with and around politicians is a risky business.  Consider the tawdry, never-ending saga of John Edwards and his merry band of enablers, chief among whom is former Edwards aide Andrew Young, now out baying for blood.

Young and his wife appeared on ABC’s 20/20 recently to empty the X-rated clown car. (more…)



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