I have been asked several times one question: How did the Taliban manage to conquer so quickly its long lost power ?
The answer
is simple. The American way of dealing with a lost war is to withdraw its
forces. The Afghan way of dealing with it is to change sides as quickly as
possible.
The Afghan
way of war has created confusion among foreign political and military leaders
in the past 20 years, but never more so than during the past few weeks as
the Taliban swept through the country,
capturing city after city without facing serious resistance.
Intelligence
agencies had generally assured western leaders that the Afghan government had
the soldiers and weapons to make a fight of it. They did so, even after
president Joe Biden announced on 14 April that
all American troops would be out of Afghanistan by
the 20th anniversary of 9/11. Biden said that a Taliban victory was not
“inevitable” and Boris Johnson added that the Taliban had “no military path to
victory”. Experienced politicians do not make such confident predictions unless
their intelligence chiefs have been telling them the same thing.
The reason
so many well-informed people got it so wrong is that they were comparing the
military strength of the two sides. But the Taliban victory was not military so
much as political. Analysts now wring their hands and explain that Afghan
soldiers often were not paid and lacked supplies of food and ammunition. It is
also true that the Afghan army had become accustomed to calling in close
American air support and felt bereft without it.
The
political triumph of the Taliban came about because Afghans with power –
military commanders, civilian officials, tribal leaders, local warlords –
decided that the US had done a deal with the Taliban and they would be wise to
follow suit as quickly as possible. They saw president Donald Trump make
concession after concession in negotiations with the Taliban in Qatar without
the Afghan government getting anything in return. Biden confirmed this approach
when, for domestic political reasons, he decided to grandstand in announcing a
complete US pull out.
The most
striking feature of the Taliban seizure of power is that it took place with so
little fighting. This was the case even in what were once the heartlands of
anti-Taliban resistance before their overthrow by the US-backed Northern
Alliance in 2001. Easily defended mountain strongholds in the Hindu Kush and
large anti-Taliban cities like Herat and Mazar-i-Sharif fell after a few days
fighting or without a shot being fired.
The speed
and ease of the Taliban advance was self-fulfilling as Afghans became convinced
that they were going to be the winners. Deals were done with powerful warlords
– or their underlings – who had been expected to resist. This repeated the
pattern of the 1990s when the Taliban first took power in the country. At that
time cities and towns often changed hands because the Taliban simply paid their
enemies to go home. It would be surprising if this has not happened again.
These
changes of allegiance sped the Taliban on their way to Kabul, but the loyalty
or neutrality of their new fair-weather adherents is shallow. They will expect
to retain their old control under the loose authority of a Taliban central
government. Moreover, it may be difficult for the largely Pushtun Taliban to
rule Tajik, Uzbek and Hazara areas without conceding a high degree of autonomy
to them. The risk-laden alternative for the Taliban would be to use extreme
violence against Afghanistan’s minorities, but the Tajik, Uzbek, Hazara and
other smaller groups collectively make up not far from 60 per cent of the
population.
The Taliban
have one important advantage in holding onto power. For the moment, no foreign
power or neighbouring state looks likely to support an anti-Taliban resistance
movement with arms and money. They won power in the 1990s because of backing
from Pakistan and lost it in 2001 because the US backed the Northern Alliance.
The US,
Britain and other states warn that they will not tolerate Afghanistan becoming
once again a haven for terrorists, as it was when Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda
were based in the country.
But this
time round the Taliban is eager to win international recognition as the
legitimate government of Afghanistan. They would pay a heavy price in terms of
international isolation if they host al-Qaeda or Isis.
Another
argument against other jihadi organisations again congregating in Afghanistan
is that 20 years ago, when Osama bin Laden had his headquarters and camps
there, an alliance with him was a two-way street. The Taliban gave him refuge,
and he gave them money and a core of fanatical fighters. It was, after all, two
al-Qaeda suicide bombers who assassinated the Northern Alliance leader Ahmad
Shah Massoud, just prior to 9/11.
But the
Taliban no longer need help from al-Qaeda and there is every reason why they
should reject a renewed alliance. On the other hand, there may be Taliban
commanders who feel ideologically akin to al Qaeda and its clones and will give
them covert aid, in case Kabul doesn’t not get the economic help the Taliban
need to develop their country.
The Taliban
are visibly astonished by the completeness of their victory and will take time
to digest and consolidate it. The outside world will be wondering what to make
of the new Afghan regime and what will be the implications of its success for
them and for the region.
It is in the
interests of the Taliban for the moment to show a moderate face, but they have
fought a ferocious war for two decades, taking heavy casualties. There will be
many in their ranks who do not wish to dilute their social and religious
beliefs for the sake of politically convenience. Despite the amnesty just
declared by Taliban leaders, many will seek vengeance against former government
supporters whom they have long denounced as traitors.
Just like in any other revolution ; beginning with the French in 1789. It will be hard to avoid casualties. Let’s only hope there will be much less than the 75.000 Afgan military deaths and about 71.000 Afgan civilian lives lost during USA’s and OTAN's 20 years of occupation.
PALESTINA
INTERACTIVE: Palestinian Remix
Palestinian Center for Human Rights
International Solidarity Movement – Nonviolence. Justice. Freedom
Defense for Children
Breaking the Silence
BRASIL
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário