Towards a successful
transition in Afghanistan
M. Ashraf Haidari
January 31, 2012
Ten years after Afghanistan's reengagement in Afghanistan upon the fall of
the Taliban, the Afghan government and its nation-partners have made significant
progress in the reconstruction and stabilization of Afghanistan.
Indeed, some would argue that much more progress could have been made in the
country, if the attention and resources needed to secure the future of
Afghanistan, had not been diverted to Iraq, as early as 2003. Despite this fact,
however, the life of ordinary Afghans has fundamentally changed for the better,
thanks to the continued support of more than 40 countries building peace in
Afghanistan.
In 10 short years, President Hamid Karzai has expanded the writ of the Afghan
state, which had completely collapsed and ceased to exist for a decade, across
the country. The quality and quantity of the Afghan national security forces has
continued to improve, thanks to the United States and NATO for continuing to
train, arm, and equip them. Afghanistan's licit economy has steadily grown, with
more jobs created than ever before.
Access to education, healthcare, electricity, and clean water has expanded
manifold across Afghanistan. As a result, the current generation of Afghans,
which constitutes more than 70 percent of the population, is visibly healthier,
more educated, and more optimistic about their future. The recent Asia
Foundation public opinion survey in Afghanistan confirms that a plurality of
Afghans, some 46 percent of those surveyed expressed optimism? thinking that
their country is moving in the right direction
As Afghanistan's 10-year achievements remain a work in progress, Afghans and
their nation-partners are facing a number of serious challenges, which if not
addressed, can undo their shared gains so far. Therefore, the question of how to
ensure a successful transition to full Afghan control must be answered in the
context of Afghanistan's 10-year gains that must be consolidated, popular
optimism that must be maintained, and external security threats to Afghanistan
that must be addressed.
These major transition tasks are inextricably linked to one another,
requiring Afghanistan and its nation-partners to plan strategically and work
collaboratively to ensure the irreversibility of the transition process. A
few broad recommendations to be considered in this regard are worth discussing.
First, for transition to Afghan responsibility to achieve its main goal of
irreversibility, the protracted problem of insecurity must be resolved in
Afghanistan. This overarching problem has regional roots, even though it can be
argued that poverty, weak governance, narcotics, and corruption can contribute
to instability in Afghanistan. However, these vulnerabilities onto themselves do
not destabilize Afghanistan. But they are being exploited to broaden domestic
support for an external insurgency, which lacks a national cause and is widely
rejected and opposed by the Afghan people.
Hence, moving forward, one of the foremost goals of Afghanistan's involvement
in Afghanistan should be to help end regional interference in the Afghan
affairs. This effort calls for collective action on the part of all of
Afghanistan's nation-partners, whose own national security interests will be at
stake, if Afghanistan is allowed to slide back into a regional proxy
battlefield.
But the United States and its NATO and non-NATO allies should not make the
same mistake twice. When Afghanistan's post-Cold War reconstruction was
neglected after the fall of the Communist regime in 1992, the ensuing state
collapse and its attendant dangerous spillovers soon began undermining
Afghanistan's peace and regional stability.
So, besides enabling Afghanistan to defend itself against direct and indirect
foreign aggression, vigorous multilateral diplomacy, backed by the United
Nations Charter and armed with clear incentives and disincentives for regional
cooperation or lack thereof, must address the external causes of insecurity in
Afghanistan.
Parallel to this essential effort, Afghanistan's nation-partners must strike
the right balance between their security and development aid to Afghanistan.
Jobs, not so much bullets, will go a long way to weaken and even dismantle the
recruiting machine of the Taliban and their foreign backers in Afghanistan.
A successful transition strategy that is relevant to the needs of Afghanistan
should adopt an integrated approach to addressing the country's complex
problems. Simultaneous investment in building the capacity of Afghan state
institutions to deliver basic services to people, as well as in growing a
productive economy to create jobs for Afghanistan's youthful population, are the
key to ensuring the irreversibility of transition to the Afghan responsibility.
Second, for transition to lead into a decade of transformation after 2014,
the donor community must help institutionalize Afghan ownership and leadership
of the reconstruction and stabilization efforts. This requires them to adhere to
the principles of aid effectiveness, in accordance with the provisions of the
Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness. The Afghan government presented to the
Afghanistan's community its key national priorities, with efficient mechanisms
of aid delivery, in the areas of security, governance, and development, at the
Kabul Conference in July 2010.
Adhering to the commitments and pledges, which Afghanistan's nation-partners
made at that important conference, will go a long way in ensuring a smooth
transition to the Afghan responsibility. Finally, the fact that 10 years have
passed since Afghanistan's reengagement in Afghanistan itself presents a
strategic opportunity for all stakeholders to exploit in order to help
transition to Afghan control succeed.
By now, Afghanistan's nation-partners have built the institutional memory
they need to do ?no harm,? as they continue helping Afghanistan consolidate its
10-year accomplishments towards sustainability. Indeed, one of the key lessons
learned is the importance of strategic coordination and communication among all
stakeholders, Afghans and non-Afghans alike.
Afghanistan and its nation-partners must communicate, sincerely and
objectively, with one another, while they must be willing to coordinate or to be
coordinated in order to achieve their common goal of delivering integrated
results in security, governance, and rule of law, and economic development and
job creation in order to secure and develop Afghanistan on the long run.
Disjointed aid efforts, in the form of implementing thousands of ?quick fix?
projects, have miserably failed, however, wasting the precious aid monies of
taxpayers to Afghanistan. The way forward must avoid more of the same but draw
on the many lessons learned in order to ensure a sustainable and irreversible
transition to the Afghan responsibility.
M. Ashraf Haidari is the deputy assistant national security advisor of
Afghanistan, and was the chargé d'affaires and deputy ambassador of the Afghan
Embassy in Washington, DC.
The above article originally appeared in the
Central Asia Newswire. Reprinted here with permission from the author.
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