The Coming Civil War in Afghanistan

It's not inevitable, but it's more likely than ever before. Here's how to avoid the worst.

BY ARIF RAFIQ | FEBRUARY 3, 2012

By the end of this summer, the 30,000 U.S. troops "surged" into Afghanistan by President Barack Obama's administration will have returned home. And according to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, the remaining 68,000 American soldiers could end their combat role in Afghanistan by mid-2013, more than a year ahead of the White House's deadline for leaving the country.

America's war in Afghanistan is by no means over, but its end has already begun. That reality is clear to all Afghan factional chiefs and power brokers, who are preparing for the transition to a post-American Afghanistan. As Afghanistan's alliances and power dynamics shift, the risk of cvil, ethnic conflict breaking out in the country rises -- endangering not only Afghans, but their Pakistani neighbors as well. And ironically, talk of peace and a U.S. withdrawal is contributing to a widening gap between key Afghan factions, which, if not properly contained, could lead to a renewed civil war.

President Hamid Karzai's intentions remain one potential source of instability looming in Afghanistan's future. Karzai has said that he will retire from public office in 2014, but many Afghans believe he will remain in power through unconventional or extra-constitutional measures. The president reportedly supported U.S. plans to accelerate the withdrawal by a year, lending weight to the theory that he is looking for greater maneuverability to prolong his rule.

If Karzai steps down, his replacement -- should one not come from his own family -- is likely to adopt a more hostile approach toward the Taliban, increasing the odds that the insurgency will fester. Abdullah Abdullah, who came in second in the rigged 2009 elections and could throw his hat in the ring once again, is a major Taliban opponent. But if Karzai seeks to stick around, doing so will be no cakewalk. Karzai will face stiff resistance from both a parliament that increasingly demands an expansion of its oversight powers and a rejuvenated political opposition, the National Front for Afghanistan (NFA).

The NFA is a bloc of leaders from three major non-Pashtun communities -- the Tajiks, Uzbeks, and Hazara -- all of whom opposed the Taliban and Pakistan during the 1990s and remain hostile to both. As Karzai apparently seeks to hold on to executive power, the NFA is pushing for an overhaul of the country's political system. It advocates restructuring Afghanistan as a parliamentary democracy with proportional representation and locally-devolved power -- both of which would benefit non-Pashtuns.

Karzai, an ethnic Pashtun, seeks a political settlement with the three major insurgent factions -- all Pashtuns as well -- led by Mullah Muhammad Omar's Afghan Taliban. But the NFA, as well as a large bloc of parliamentarians from a diverse assortment of ethnic groups and political parties, are hostile to talks with the Taliban, and will at the very least demand a meaningful role in the peace process.

That remains difficult to imagine, as few Afghans aside from the insurgents remain involved in the peace talks. The most promising dialogue track has so far taken place outside of Afghanistan and involves the Afghan Taliban and the governments of Germany, Qatar, and the United States. The location of the Taliban's new office in Qatar was decided against the wishes of the Afghan government, which wanted the office to be in Ankara or Riyadh.

Karzai himself remains minimally involved in the talks and is trying to set up his own negotiations with the Taliban in Saudi Arabia. However, neither the Saudis nor the Taliban are keen on participating. The Saudis have distrusted the Taliban ever since it refused to hand over Osama bin Laden; they will engage the militant group only when it formally breaks ties with al Qaeda. The Taliban, meanwhile, want to cut out Karzai and engage directly with the United States to increase their negotiating leverage.

Karzai faces a difficult balancing act: He must first insert himself into a peace process the Taliban want him to have no part in, and then somehow manage to maintain ties with both the Pashtun Taliban and the non-Pashtun NFA. In any negotiations, the Taliban will undoubtedly push for greater implementation of Islamic law. But members of the NFA, female parliamentarians, and religious minorities such as the Hazara Shiites will resist what they will view as a possible reversion to second-class status.

Building trust between the NFA and the Taliban is key to a lasting political settlement in Afghanistan, but it will be no easy task. The Taliban believe that the NFA seeks a soft partition of the country under the guise of federalism, describing the group's leadership as "infamous warlords." And it is a giant and improbable leap for the Taliban to go from advocating the reestablishment of an authoritarian Islamic emirate to accepting the NFA's demand for a parliamentary democracy.

The underlying divisions between the three insurgent groups will also likely come out into the open if peace talks progress. In contrast to the Afghan Taliban, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's Hezb-i-Islami (HIG) calls for a republican-style Islamic government that is more reconcilable with today's Afghan constitution. And Hekmatyar, who briefly served as Afghanistan's prime minister until he fled the Taliban's advance in 1997, likely remains an aspirant for the country's leadership. Both the parliament and Karzai's cabinet are replete with ex-HIG members, and Hekmatyar could present himself as a more practical, Islamic alternative to Mullah Omar. As a result, Hekmatyar's tactical alliance with the Taliban will likely come to an end once the U.S. presence recedes.

The future of the infamous Haqqani network is also unclear. While it does not have a rich political history, it is a group with a radical agenda and potent reach. In a stable political environment, the Haqqani network is likely to remain on board with the Taliban. Amid a political vacuum, the Haqqanis could seek to claim space in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, posing a particular security threat in Afghanistan's southeastern Loya Paktia region and the adjacent Kurram and North Waziristan tribal areas across the Durand Line.

With Afghanistan's three major political blocs and three major insurgent groups moving in opposite directions, the country is facing the prospect of total fragmentation. Here's the worst-case scenario: The U.S. military reaches a settlement with the Afghan Taliban that does not address the country's political future, Karzai holds on to power illegitimately while pressing for his own peace deal with the Taliban, non-Pashtuns rise in opposition to both Karzai and the Taliban, and the national security forces fracture along ethnic lines. At the same time, the three insurgent factions turn against one another as the Haqqani network exploits the chaos and maintains a rear defensive position in Pakistani safe havens. Meanwhile, Pakistan's own domestic Taliban resurges and Islamabad faces yet another wave of terrorism and Afghan refugees.

Such a catastrophe should encourage leaders in Washington, Kabul, and Islamabad to do everything in their power to reach a broad-based political settlement. To avoid this scenario, the U.S.-Taliban talks should somehow be transitioned to an Afghan-led process involving not only the Karzai government but also the NFA. Afghans will have to come to a consensus about the future of their system of government and power-sharing, with final approval from a loya jirga or grand council.

A lasting Afghan peace might be a pipe dream in the short term, but both Afghanistan and the United States should try to coax Pakistan into making the Taliban more amenable to one. In return, Pakistan would get an official seat at the table. While there can and likely will be multiple, parallel negotiating tracks, they should ultimately lead up to a multi-party conference involving the Karzai government, the NFA, Pakistan, the United States, and each of the three major insurgent groups.

Finally, to contain the Taliban's ambitions, it is imperative that coalition forces and Kabul focus on improving the quality, not the quantity, of the Afghan national army and police. The 300,000 army soldiers and nearly 150,000 national policemen -- in addition to the country's unruly local militias -- are not only financially unsustainable, but also dangerous. The massive number of unpaid, armed troops in this conflict-ridden country is a recipe for disaster. The militias should be phased out, and the army professionalized to serve as a bulwark against fragmentation. Only then, perhaps, can Afghanistan avoid the perils of its post-American future.

Pete Souza/White House via Getty Images

 

Arif Rafiq is president of Vizier Consulting, LLC, which provides strategic guidance on Middle East and South Asian political and security issues. He writes at the Pakistan Policy Blog and tweets at @pakistanpolicy.

BEINGTHERE

8:18 PM ET

February 3, 2012

The U.S. Does Good Work - 2 for 2 ...

Civil disruptions in Iraq after the U.S. helped the country gain its democracy, and soon Afghanistan. Good for us.

It cost the U.S. only $300 million to hold an election in Afghanistan that we knew Karzai would win, although he wasn't our favored candidate. But like in Iraq, this election was Exhibit A that our efforts were paying off. "Look, the people of Afghanistan went out to vote. They are participating in democracy."

 

JOHNNCRICK

12:45 AM ET

February 4, 2012

The War Never Ends

Afghanistan should be rebuild back. Lots of civilian suffer from this war.

kids loft beds

 

MARTY MARTEL

8:07 AM ET

February 4, 2012

Afghan civil war will be controlled from Islamabad

History is going to repeat.

Another civil war after the withdrawal of another super power. And it will be controlled from Islamabad just like the previous one.

The Pakistani Army is convinced that history beckons it now; that its moment in Afghanistan has arrived, that its success there is directly proportional to American withdrawal. And they may not be wrong in that assessment.
There was a time after the USSR ’s withdrawal from Afghanistan when the average Pakistani truly believed that it was responsible for the defeat and subsequent disintegration of a superpower. For that reason Pakistan ’s Prime Minister of the time, Mr Nawaz Sharif, was often called ‘Fateh Kabul’, the vanquisher of Kabul . As and when America pulls out its troops, largely or completely, from Afghanistan , the people of Pakistan might take it as the final proof that they are directly, or indirectly, responsible for the defeat of two superpowers and their eventual decline.

The irony of the US-Pakistan relationship is that the US may set the agenda, but Pakistan invariably maneuvers the results. Despite an outward show of compliance, Pakistan is the decisive factor in this relationship. As the neck is to a face, Pakistan has invariably determined the direction in which America should turn. The latest case in point is Hillary Clinton’s visit to Pakistan in October, 2011. She had gone there accompanied by the defense and intelligence brass on a mission to force compliance, but Pakistani Generals seem to have stared them down.

Pakistan has been successful - of producing cadre of terror as in a hatchery, of funding them, of selecting targets for them to attack, of nuclear proliferation and of running drugs internationally. Whenever the international society has confronted it with evidence of its complicity, it talks its way out brazenly.

Iraq was bombed mercilessly for far less and Muammar Gadaffi consigned to brutal death for reasons that remain opaque. Now Iran is on watch for its supposed nuclear status. But Pakistan manages consistently to escape censure. It has crossed and re-crossed the nuclear Rubicon at will, it has broken almost every norm of diplomatic behavior, and it stonewalls all queries about the misdoings of its ISI. Yet it faces no opprobrium.

The question that the international community often asks itself is this: How is it that Pakistan is able to get away with being dangerous to the rest of the world? Its footprint is clearly linked to terror strikes in most parts of the world. As former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said, “Seventy per cent of terror plots in the UK have their source in Pakistan .” There may be a pause currently in terror attacks, but it is tactical and temporary.

Pakistan’s current attention is focused fully on Afghanistan . All terror activity is concentrated there with the single objective of making life difficult for the ISAF. American patience with Pakistan may be wearing thin but the harsh reality is that Pakistan doesn’t care. It knows that with the presidential election in the US drawing near, President Obama can’t escalate the war in Afghanistan . He will simply not be able to justify an increase in body bags to America . More crucially, Pakistan is convinced that America won’t be able to take it on militarily. The Pakistani Army has been so richly equipped and trained by the US that its soldiers may prove to be an equal match for any military force.

Whether the world likes it or not, Pakistani governorship of Afghanistan is more or less a given.

 

C. NANDKISHORE

10:17 AM ET

February 5, 2012

Taliban Bill footed by Saudi Arabia

Mr. Marty Martel has not touched the nerve centre: Wahhabism. Exported from America's alter ego, Saudi Arabia. Each Taliban is paid minimum of 6000 rupees per month. Where does the money come from? Saudi Arabia. Who foots the bill for madrasas in Pakistan? Saudi Arabia. Who pays for the guns of Taliban? Saudi Arabia. This money does not come from banks, but through hawala. Its hidden. Pakistan can't dole out this money, it can't even feed its people.

 

TARQUINIS

10:28 AM ET

February 6, 2012

Afghan War destabilizes Pakistan

Marty just does not get it. The basic problem is not bad people, but bad politics.

While it is certainly true that Pakistan is playing a double game here via the ISI, and supports this endless war in land locked central Asia only to the degree they must, it is because this war is dangerously if not fatally destabilizing Pakistan.

Afghanistan ethnic groups comprise of Pashtun 42%, Tajik 27%, Hazara 9%, Uzbek 9%, Aimak 4%, Turkmen 3%, Baloch 2%, and others about 4%. And about 60% of total Pushtu populations do not reside in Afghanistan, but in Pakistan.

See a map of the ethnic groups in Pakistan at: http://lrc.lib.umn.edu/largemap.htm

Note if you will, how "Pashtunistan" is split by the phoney Durand Line boundary, which they do not and never will regard. The Pushtu have been radicalized by thirty years of chaos and war. Their radicalized elements want foreign armies out. Yes, they are what we would see as a socially primitive society, but this is beyond our power to fundamentally change.

An unending "Protracted War" in land locked central Asia is futile and counterproductive for us, and far worse to Pakistan.

We have seen this movie before. We all know how it will end. And the sooner, the better for all.

 

TTAERUM

12:05 PM ET

February 4, 2012

Our President's missionary efforts in Afghanistan...

Imitation is always the best form of flattery, and Obama's imitation of Bush's surge in Iraq is no exception. Unfortunately, Afghanistan is not Iraq and Obama cannot part the seas.

Having driven al Qaida out of Afghanistan, we should have declared victory and "moved on". Obama had the opportunity to do that but decided that he, along with his trusty steed Biden, would gallop into the darkness. So, instead of simply having an unstable Afghanistan, we spent huge sums of money and lives, and we have an unstable Afghanistan. It doesn't take a degree in Accounting to figure out this balance sheet.

As all Intel reports have indicated, in the "new" middle east that Obama has created, Egyptians arrest Americans, Iranis believe we assassinated their nuclear scientists and smuggle in their refined oil(much like Turkey gets 15% of their oil), 95% of Pakistanis hate America, and Iraqis conspire with Iranis to shoot down our drones. It's not the "friendly skies" that Obama promised in Cairo and it can only get worse.

As we are seeing with "Fast and Furious", it will take a very long time to get to the truth. Generally speaking, the higher up the food chain these kinds of mis-steps go, as in the case of Solyndra, the longer it take to find out what really happened - you'll recall how long it took to get to the truth with Nixon and Watergate. Odds are there'll be a "fresh" revelations late in November.

 

ALANCHRISTOPHER

4:35 PM ET

February 4, 2012

Afghanistan's Civil Wars

Afghanistan has been fighting a civil war since the 1970's when the king was overthrown by his brother. Then, the communists overthrew him; civil war threatened the communists, so Russians intervened. Reagan and Casey made plans for 140 million islamic radicals with no plans for demobilization, and the civil war continued after the Russians left. The defeat of the Afghan communists let Afghans return to the Islamic Civil War, and 9-11 let the US and NATO become target practice for 13 years until the Islamic Civil War can resume in 2015. For the next 3 years, the US and NATO can train millions of Afghans to kill each other and keep everyone happy for centuries. In addition, the US has introduced land and air drones, so the US can send these arms into the conflict for testing in combat situations that creates improvements in the US ability to kill people. The US can fight all sides and avoid favoritism, and the US can sell arms to all sides to pay for testing weapons. Finally, Afghanistan grows poppies and produces opium, morphine, and heroin, The US has massive numbers of drug addicts, and Americans deserve the best drugs that money can buy.

 

AJOHN779

1:46 AM ET

February 5, 2012

India will try to hold in Afghanistan

Indian government will try to hold in Afghanistan as Indian's are trying their best effort to hold in Afghanistan and to push the Pakistan back as possible.

Pakistan is effective of making cadre of terror as in a hatchery, of funding them, of deciding on targets for them to assault, of nuclear proliferation and of jogging drugs internationally. Whenever the international society has confronted it with proof of its complicity, it talks its way out brazenly.

The Pakistani Army is convinced that heritage beckons it now; that its minute in Afghanistan has arrived, that its achievement there is certainly straight proportional to American withdrawal. And so they might not be wrong in that assessment. For that cause Pakistan ’s Prime Minister of the time, Mr Nawaz Sharif, was often named ‘Fateh Kabul’, the vanquisher of Kabul . As and when The united states pulls out its troops, mainly or completely, from Afghanistan , the people of Pakistan may well just take it since the last proof that they are directly, or indirectly, liable for the defeat of two superpowers and their eventual decline.

The concern the global local community frequently asks alone is this: How could it be that Pakistan is ready to get away with getting hazardous to your rest of the world? Its footprint is plainly connected to terror strikes in the majority of elements of the entire world. As former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown explained, “Seventy per cent of terror plots in the united kingdom have their source in Pakistan .” There could be a pause currently in terror attacks, but it is tactical and momentary.

AA Route Planner

 

KBC

9:55 AM ET

February 5, 2012

Afghanistan needs Taliban

The moment there is no Taliban in Afghanistan, the different tribes will start the war again among themselves. Right now it is Pashtun vs non Pashtun tribes.
The American presence is required, even nominally to keep the non Pashtun Afghans from fighting each other.

On a lighter side, Afghanistan has become the greatest experimental state for the philosophy of politics in last 50 years. It started off as a monarchy, then communist, then theocracy and finally democracy. All the way, it was chaos and deaths.

 

MUSTAFA YASA

6:04 AM ET

February 11, 2012

Taliban are not from Afghanistan

In a realstic look into the Afghanistan war and peace, you can realize that the War and peace is related to the Pakistan interest weather they are happy with the payable bills by Washington and UK or not.

Taliban was created by Pakistan and still fueled by Pakistan in their interest. those unhappy militants in Afghanistan are not more than one week of operation to remove, but the US and other international community are fighting the Pakistan and Al-Qaeda of Saudi Arabia in real.

If the Taliban were from Afghanistan the Peace chief was never attacked. As Mr. Rabani was a very strong Islamic Scholar in the region. I can assure that all of the attackers are trained and equipped in Pakistan, but its only the weakness of Afghan Security Forces to control the border and surrounding the Kabul City. It has been almost 13 years of Coalition forces in Afghanistan but the day they leave the Afghan Government will be failed and Pakistan will take over control the tribes.

there are no non-Pashtun tribes, its the northern alliance who are still surviving from the Pashtun tribes of Pakistan.
There has been never fight between the Pashtuns and non-pashtuns in Afghanistan but only pashtuns from Pakistan.

 

RIGHT2LIFE

8:10 AM ET

February 6, 2012

The solution of "the coming Afghan Civil War."

The only best policy to end the Afghan war is to respect the freedom of the different ethnic nations of both Pakistan and Afghanistan. The basic reason of Afghan war is the Panjabi`s effort to keep Balochistan in slavery with their views to steal the land, coast and the mineral resources of Balochistan. The Panjabi Talibans and Pashtun Talibans are the creation of Pakistani Army and ISI who shall never ever accept the fedaral system in Afghanistan to accept the "self-rule" of Tadjics, Azbeks, Hazaras, Baluchs and other minority ethnic groups of Afghanistan but instead of it, Panjabis with the co-operation of Drug-mafias of Pashtuns shall bleed them in the same way as Pakistani Army is killing Balochs.Now, if the "golden-bird"- Baluchistan- manages to fly from the cage of Pakistani slvery, the rest of Pakistan shall be automatically tamed. Pakistan shall follow the way of to be a real democratic State instead of the present "kosmetic democracy". Pakistan i.e. Panjab and potentially Sindh, shall abandon their expeditions against Afghanistan and shall try to keep cordial relations with Balochistan & Afghanistan for their survival and commercial interests i.e. import of Gas, oil and other commodities.If the western powers abandon Afghanistan and accept Pakistan as a "Security State", Pakistani Military, to continue their illigal occupation of Balochistan, shall never end their illigal involvement in Afghansitan`s internal affairs which shall result into an endless war in Afghanistan and the hair raising atrocities and voilation of human rights against the ethnic nations of both Afghanistan and Pakistan.The freedom of Balochistan is the key for peace in Afghanistan, Pakistan, South Asia and the whole world. Like Libya, NATO must keep the only option on the table to provide Air defence to help protect the freedom fighters in Balochistan untill the full freedom of Balochistan which was illegally occupied by Pakistan in the same way as Dictator Saddam of Iraq had occupied Kuwait.

 

JOHNTER

10:43 AM ET

February 6, 2012

The security situation in

The security situation in Afghanistan has deteriorated. Many parts of the country still remain hard to manage. The level of public optimism is much weaker today. The US announcement to pull out most como vender por internet of the troops by 2014 has left the people wondering as to what extent the Taliban would be undermined before the withdrawal. Washington has also lost leverage over President Hamid Karzai. The relationship with Karzai has not been totally unproblematic but now he is hedging on all sides.

 

URGELT

9:43 PM ET

February 6, 2012

Concise and Helpful

Good article.

I'm none too sanguine about the feasibility of preventing a civil war in Afghanistan, but glad to read such a concise political summary about the problem.

I don't think Karzai will last a month following the departure of American troops in 2013. Nor do I think that we can develop his police and military forces into professional and effective entities before we leave.

Obama isn't leaving Afghanistan early because we've been successful; he's leaving early to reorient US forces towards the looming conflict with Iran, which is much more central to US national security than Afghanistan ever was.

Did we learn our lesson this time? Nation-building doesn't work. Nations determine themselves; they can't be forced to accept our ideas at the barrels of our guns.

The civil war in Afghanistan that I think is likely to break out is, frankly, our fault. Again, we overestimated what we could accomplish with our military. They're great at breaking heads. But building modern and democratic nations should not be in their job descriptions, because they can't do that job.

 

KHUSHALKK

2:15 AM ET

February 11, 2012

Freee Afghanistan

Russia, the US, Pakistan, S Arabia, Iran, al Qaeda and the Nato countries all stand condemned on the bar of history for causing so much blood to flow in this poor, poor country. Being poor they were vulnerable to be manipulated. Geo-politics is red in tooth and claw. The statesmen of predatory countries just try to dress up their intentions and national objectives in words woven in silk. Presently we have a master weaver in theUS by the name of Obama. In this age the all pervasive Western media takes the cue from their unaccountable leaders and pulls wool over the eyes of their citizens to swallow the lies and deceipt.
For once the US, S Arabia, Pakistan, Nato, Iran and (India too this time) should leave Afghan Nation to sort out their differences. Do not underestimate the ability and statesmanship of Afghans. Their history is millenium years old and they have been dealing with great leaders like Alexander and great imperial powers.
Taliban should not be held in awe any more. They have been chastised by their own zealotry. They will be at peace with the world as they have openly said. Pakistan must know that Afghans will never be India's lacky and India should know that they will not be of Pakistan's either. Both are unnecessarily complicating the isuues by playing a zero-sum game.