The World Desk

The World Desk

Michael Petrou writes about international news and Canadian foreign policy.

Why we risk losing Afghanistan

by Michael Petrou on Friday, November 14, 2008 12:26am - 35 Comments

Why we risk losing Afghanistan

I’ve spent the last two days with people who are or have been intimately involved with the war in Afghanistan since 2001. Their comments were off the record, so I can’t reveal their names, but they included current and former members of the Canadian Forces, DFAIT, the Privy Council Office, CIDA, the Afghan government, the U.S. Department of State, as well as several academics and members of various NGOs. Here are some of their observations:

- The security situation is a mess and is getting worse. The Taliban are spreading into more territory, and the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) doesn’t have enough troops on the ground to stop them. “You win counter-insurgency locally,” said one man in a position to know. But we don’t have enough soldiers to hold territory once the Taliban are pushed out. Too few soldiers means an over-reliance on air power – which inevitably leads to civilian casualties, more resentment, and an intensified insurgency.

- The Afghan government and army will not be able to secure the country on their own by 2011 – the date by which Prime Minister Stephen Harper has pledged to withdraw Canadian soldiers from Afghanistan. If our commitment is to amount to anything, it should be generational.

- There is too little coordination among the multitude of Western actors in Afghanistan, including NATO allies. Different countries have different agendas. Their armed forces and development workers are not cooperating or working toward the same goals.

- Dozens of countries have sent troops to be part of the ISAF mission, but deployments consisting of a few hundred soldiers, or fewer, are more trouble than they’re worth. They complicate attempts to forge a unified and cohesive mission without adding much in the way of manpower. Restrictive rules of engagement also limit their effectiveness. Afghans notice.

- Too much of the money that Western nations ostensibly spend on Afghanistan never makes it to Central Asia. It is spent in the countries where it was pledged, on consultants, researchers, and administrators. Money that does reach Afghanistan often ends up in the hands of overpriced contractors. Other funds are channeled to NGOs, bypassing the Afghan government. Afghan officials say their country will never have a strong and stable government unless it can deliver the services now typically provided by NGOs. Others counter that it’s necessary to fund NGOs rather than the government because of corruption.

- A successful counter-insurgency involves clearing territory, holding that territory by establishing a presence on it, and then building infrastructure and bringing assistance to the area with the goal of winning over the local population. Western armed forces in Afghanistan have been good at the first task – killing or driving out the enemy – but not the last two. This applies to the Canadians as well. Operation Medusa, for example, the Canadian-led offensive against a Taliban stronghold in 2006, was a military success but not a strategic one. Canadians and other NATO allies drove out the Taliban but were not ready to consolidate their success with development assistance. “We’ve been playing catch-up ever since,” said one man who’s now dealing with the repercussions of that oversight.

- Western soldiers were once seen as liberators by most Afghans. Now, they’re regarded as a necessary evil.

- The Taliban’s strategy is to wait us out.

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  • John

    I spend about 1.5 years recently in Kabul contracting for NATO/ISAF. The country is messed up on every level. The thinking is at the 7th century level with modern technology available. I actually saw a local riding a camel while talking on a cell phone. Talk about a mixture of eras. The lack of education seems to be the biggest problem for the citizens. Most cannot read so they have to listen to fanatical clerics for any interpretation of the Quoran. I cannot think of any realistic solutions. I’m glad there are wiser people in the word than me.

  • Alex

    The mission of NATO and Canadian Forces in Afghanistan is an expensive exercise in futility that plays into the hand of Radical Muslim propaganda that portrays it quite successfully as fight of Crusaders against Islam. The costs in human and financial resources are high and unfortunately it all is wasted and will not achieve any its objectives.
    It takes millions to build irrigation system, roads and bridges but only couple $100 worth of explosives destroys it. It takes years and many thousands of Dollars to train teachers and build schools but $10 worth of acid closes them. All the good intentions of western democracies will not win the hearts and minds of population in Afghanistan or in Iraq because it faces determined and ruthless resistance of radical Islam.
    Only Sadam Hussein of Iraq and Hafez el Assad of Syria were successful in fighting Moslem radicals. They succeeded because they were Moslems and the brutal methods that they employed to win the “hearts and minds” of the population and crush their adversaries.
    After all if it is true that the majority of Muslims are against the radicals and terrorists then they and not the infidels should spend human and financial resources to try to get rid Afghanistan of the Taliban and Al-Queida?
    But it appears that the Muslim majority with its large number of countries does not fight the radicals because it is supporting them, which has been confirmed by poll after poll and is evident by the support that Taliban enjoys in Pakistan.
    The change in human rights and in particular women rights can not imposed on the Moslem world by infidels but it has to come from within and has to be fought by themselves.
    There is hope this change will eventually come but it will not come in month or years it might take several generation and as much as we want it there is nothing that we can do to speed it up.
    In mean time we should withdraw ASAP from Afghanistan. We should stop sacrificing our brave soldiers. We should stop wasting our limited financial resources that in best case are embezzled by corrupt officials or may even fall straight in to the hand of Taliban. Instead of it we should concentrate on curbing home-grown radical Islam instead of encourage it growth by staying in Afghanistan.

  • Justin

    I think that the efforts our Canadian forces are doing in Afghanistan are vary good. However, it is sad to read about the politics that go on behind the scenes.

    Having more troops, more equipment, etc… would be a much greater help to accomplishing the mission. Our troops are better trained and better equipped than most US soldiers. The time and money that is invested into each infantry soldier, etc, is far more extensive than what the US invests. Canada has got to take part in some way with regards to implementing democracy in a foreign land such as Afghanistan: it is truly necessary!

    With Obama becoming the next President, thank God, we can look forward to the establishment of more forces and facilitation in the fight for peace in Afghanistan.

    I think pulling our troops out in 2011 is not a good idea because we need to invest more time in Afghanistan. Our military is learning and getting a chance to use the knowledge and weaponry that we as tax payers have been funding. Not only that, but our military will also get a chance to stream line itself towards an even better military.

  • Robert

    We need to see this through.

    To provide the stability and infrastructure to allow Afghanistan to stand alone.

    That might be ..20011…2013…20015..20016..

    It is a strategic mistake to give the Taliban an end date.

    If we leave too soon all the personal sacrifice our soldiers have made will have been in vain.

    So many of these soldiers have made the ultimate sacrifice…let us respect it and their memory by staying the course…until Afghanistan is strong enough to stand alone.

    The Taliban are commited to waiting why should we have lessor resolve.

  • http://www.google.ca M.uniformed

    Well, nice to read comments from different perspecives but my message is for Tony who should better not take help of his personal bias about Saudi Arabia, a country who donates generously to the poorest Islamic states,has the largest reservoirs of oil in the world by which capitalist nations are fed and most importantly has the lowest crime rate in the world.
    I hope the above mentioned points may negate some of the personal prejudice you have nurtured in your mind and you would think double before writing about any other country in future.
    Good luck, Tony.

  • Jim

    I find it mind-boggling how supposedly educated people are surpised by this turn of events. I’m beginning to think that it isn’t even in the consciousness of most westerners learn from the mistakes of others when it comes to the use of military force against a willful population. Do you all just think it is mere coincidence that Afghanistan has never been controlled by outside forces? And do you really think Afghan society, whose national sport is bushkazi (fighting over a goat carcass on horseback) is ready for western-style democracy? Canada is in Afghanistan to try to depose the Taliban, yes, but not for some altruistic humanitarian cause. The US wants to put a pipeline through, which they can’t do with the Taliban in control – because they can’t be bought off like so many other governments. The security of the pipeline is the main goal. Rights for women and a diversified economy are a corollary result at best.

  • George Orwell

    Where is common sense folks?

    Andrew, you say the Taliban is funded by the opium crop, and that swapping crops will starve the Taliban from funds. Um how so? Money is money whether from opium or sugar beets. If the farmers are supporting the Taliban it won’t matter what they are growing. Shoot the farmers.

    Then you talk about paying locals to snitch out the Taliban supporters. Hey I will tell you for free, it is the farmers. Shoot the farmers.

    Chris you justify the war because a few girls got burned with acid. Sad. But not any more sad as the hundreds if not thousands of casualties caused by bombing weddings and other civilians. You ask why the military is staging prison breaks, and flying Taliban leaders out of the country to safety, and the real purpose of the war. To secure a route for the Trans-Afghanistan Pipeline, and nothing else. Forget human rights, democracy and all that other b.s. propaganda designed to get public support.

  • Walter Robbins

    It is a fantasy that NATO is in Afghanistan to protect a non-existent and non-planned pipeline through that country.

    Back in 1998, the Unocal company had considered such a project, but dropped the idea completely. A company from Argentina had some interest in the idea, but also turned the page on it.

    Those who believe in the pipeline myth are indulging in pipe dreams.

    See my earlier posting regarding some more likely motivations for our presence in Afghanistan.

    WR

  • Matt. K. Duncan

    If narcotics, made from poppies, is providing financing for the Taliban, surely in this age, science can develop a natural predator to decimate the poppies. In this way we can eliminate poppies, support for the Taliban, a source of narcotics to users, and cause Afganistan farmers to plant potatoes, rutibaga. or whatever their pathetic soil will support . Let’s see the Taliban buy arms with turnips, and I’m not averse to shooting the farmers. Those who are not with us—————-

  • Alex

    Robert,
    In order to succeed we indeed might need to stay there as you wrote to 20016. But long before that maybe within 150 years we will be part of the North American caliphate and Taliban style government will rule Canada.

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