Negotiating With Islamist Terrorists
"As I read history, when a nation's problems become this complex and they are not solved, that could result in violence and revolutions and other unwanted things.""Water is very soft, but if you put it under pressure, it will explode."Burhanuddin Rabbani,1990 President of the Afghan Islamic Republic, head, Afghan High Peace Council"If the army collapses, and the army is divided along ethnic lines, then I think Afghanistan will be facing a time like in Rwanda.""You have millions of girls and women going to school and university, and it is impossible now to push them back."Azis Royesh, Afghan education activist
The Taliban bombing in Pul-e-Alam on Friday killed at least 24 people Reuters |
Throughout
its long history Afghanistan has been invaded and occupied countless
times. The country has known conflict and bloodshed on a fairly
continual basis. The occupation it now awaits is that of the Pashtun
Taliban, resurgent and prepared to mount a full-scale war against the
established government. That government is committed to an Afghan
version of democracy, the Taliban view that as despicable surrender to
Western values, and they are prepared to resume where they left off,
governing Afghanistan before the U.S.-led invasion following 9/11, in
pursuit of al Qaeda and Osama bin Laren.
Western
nations led by the United States, NATO members under the auspices of
the United Nations, routed the ruling Taliban that had kept the country
in the iron grip of Islamist sharia law where anything resembling the
values of the West was strictly proscribed, and women in particular were
considered mere appendages of men, with no life of their own, relegated
to home, kitchen and nursery. No education, no employment, total
poverty of opportunity, total dependence on men.
The
women of Afghanistan who prospered mightily with the presence of
occupying Western troops stationed in the country to keep pushing back
an ever-renascent Taliban, spring after spring, accessing education,
joining professions, living as equal a life as possible in a Muslim
society, now anticipate with dread the return of the Taliban.
The
U.S. and its allies have long wanted to depart Afghanistan, pulling out
all troops, For years the international community and humanitarian NGOs
helped modernize the country's civil infrastructure. Just as the
foreign military committed to training the country's national police and
military in best modern military practices with the intention of
teaching them to fend for themselves and commit solidly to protect the
embattled nation.
U.S. Black Hawk military helicopters fly over the city of Kabul, Afghanistan, on April 19. (Rahmat Gul/The Associated Press) |
After
the long weary years of preparing Afghanistan to look after its
interests as a civil society and its military to respond to violent
provocations, communication between the Taliban and the U.S. to arrange a
ceasefire and agreement leading to shared governance of the country --
not to reward or to trust the Taliban but in acknowledgement of the fact
that they remain strong and as lethal to accommodation as ever and in a
last-gap effort to create some hope before leaving, entrust the future
of the country to an accommodation between the government of Afghan
President Ashraf Gani and the Taliban for a rapprochement.
As
a signal of what lies in wait, all the while these negotiations were
being carried on -- between the U.S. and Taliban representatives, since
the Taliban leaders refused to acknowledge the authority of the Afghan
government, considering it a puppet of the U.S., violent attacks by the
Taliban against foreign troops, against the country's government and the
civilian population were ongoing. Scores of innocent people died in
Taliban suicide attacks all over the country.
Now
that foreign troops will depart entirely by September, the people of
Afghanistan gird themselves psychologically for the horrendous scenario
they know will result, when the Taliban embark on a mission to destroy
infrastructure tainted by Western design and purpose, target and murder
those whom they consider to have been too warmly involved with the
foreign presence, and settle scores with other ethnic groups before once
again settling in as government and a dark mantle of Islamist tyranny
settles in.
Afghan National Army soldiers search men at a road checkpoint on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Thursday. (Wakil Kohsar/AFP/Getty Images) |
According
to some knowledgeable estimates there will be an initial upheaval and
bloodletting. Some Afghan intellectuals foresee the possibility of the
country's partition, separating the majority Afghans from the Pashtuns
dominated by the Taliban. Pakistan's dark presence over Afghanistan has,
in effect, led to the formation of the mujahadeen, the terrorizing
Taliban that were originally trained by the Pakistan Secret Intelligence
Service in Pakistan's interests in retaining Afghanistan as a vassal
state.
Throughout
the 'peace' talks and the preparatons under way to see the foreign
presence in Afghanistan depart, leaving the country and its government
fully exposed to whatever the Taliban has in store, the slaughter and
bloodshed that never stopped, occurring even in the protected capital
Kabul, has more than adequately informed Afghans what the near future
holds for them. Of the 39 million population, 40 percent are Pashtun who
consider the ethnic Tajiks, Uzbeks, Almak, Turkmen and Hazaras inferior
and unequal.
The
month of Ramadan just concluded, 24 hours following the Eid holiday,
the government of Afghanistan recorded 110 attacks in 23 of
Afghanistan's 34 provinces. Nothing has changed about the Taliban and
their mission, nothing has changed for the Taliban; whatever methods
they made use of a decade ago remain the methods used today. As head of
the Afghan High Peace Council, Burhanuddin Rabbani was assassinated by
an emissary of the Taliban whom he assumed had arrived to discuss a
solution to the conflict but when the emissary detonated a bomb he wore
in his turban in September 2011, that hope faded.
It
has been kept in that condition ever since ... hope steadily fading ...
and now with the departure of foreign troops and the assurances to the
Afghan government that yes, most certainly, you'll reach an agreement,
working things out between yourselves, share government and all will be
well, assumes the proportions of a massive lie of face-saving. When
nothing will now save the people of Afghanistan from a violent upheaval
and ultimate tyranny in the living hell of full-blown terror ahead.
The withdrawal will be completed by 11 September BBC |
Labels: Accommodation, Afghanistan, Foreign Troops Departure, Government, Taliban, U.S.-led Invasion
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