Military withdrawal is certain. Details of how troops will gradually
be reduced until full withdrawal is achieved in 2014 will be negotiated
with Afghan government partners and the International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) in the second part of the year. NATO troops are
not fleeing, according to the official line, but are gradually handing
over security responsibility to Afghan institutions.
This is, so they say, to ensure that the security gains
achieved since 2001 are not lost under sole sovereignty of the Afghan
government. The Afghan civil society will not play any role in this
transfer process. Nor will they have a voice in negotiations with the
rebels. To the degree that the international community is concerned with
the intra-Afghan agreement and security handover, so should it also be
concerned that the process does not harm Afghan civil society, but
rather ensure that it has an active voice in the process. Just as
security gains and management capacity should remain in Afghanistan
after 2014, so should political and social, i.e., civil societal,
expertise also be retained in the country. Therefore, on the one hand,
there is a need for an intensive dialogue with Afghan NGOs and binding
commitments, or in other words, a kind of civilian disengagement plan.
For this purpose, the second Bonn Conference and especially the
preliminary proceedings in Afghanistan are no doubt the last
opportunities. On the other hand, the federal government must finally
leverage its resources to strengthen Afghan civil society. Power lines,
roads and dams are certainly important - but democratic and human rights
awareness, political organisation capacity and education are more
important.
Many political development projects are still dependent on
military protection today. There is hardly an infrastructure project
that does not require constant security. Alone in the Paktia province,
Kabul's eastern neighbour, 59 workers and security guards died between
March and May 2011 from Taliban attacks. Even the German development
worker that was shot in December 2010 was engaged in road construction.
Civil aid workers are targets because the rebels view nearly each
successful development project as a strengthening of the government,
which is their enemy, even when the individual projects are aimed only
at civilian needs. If the federal government coupled civilian aid and
military action, as envisioned by the Federal Minister for Economic
Cooperation and Development, Dirk Niebel, this dilemma would be
compounded.
Instead of a so-called networked security, we need, through
2025, a civilian development strategy that does not require the presence
of foreign troops. Even now, each project that we begin must be able to
function without international assistance. This means that the projects
must be smaller, be less "hard" (e.g., infrastructure, economic
development), and be "softer" (e.g., education, supporting civil
society). The projects must be requested and accepted, in the best sense
of the word, by the Afghans. Our civil contribution in Afghanistan
should above all benefit civil society, and not necessarily the central
government, military, nor the local "strongmen." Our commitment is only
sustainable if it directly helps the people to improve their everyday
lives.
Unfortunately, we did not know in 2001, nor do we know in
2011, how the German contribution to such sustainable projects in
Afghanistan could be transferred to civil societal and local
capabilities. At the beginning, we did not know how long the road to
peace and a well-functioning society would be; today, the federal
government still does not exactly know how to best approach this path.
The Afghanistan mission began in 2001/2002 as a limited
military operation. It was, according to Ahmed Rashid, the "cheapest war
that America ever led." The target was al-Qaeda, whose home base was to be eliminated. That it
would be much easier to drive out the Taliban and al-Qaeda than to find a
new government was only clear to a few at the beginning. The ISAF's
military strategy was determined by the action in the field. The
civilian part of the plan, however, was not automatically a part of the
strategy.
The magnitude of the task on the civilian side of the
operation was unknown, at least to German politicians. Consequently,
German involvement was poorly planned. The then Defence Minister Peter
Struck said in the plenary of the Bundestag on 16 November 2001, "It is
now about focussing international efforts on securing order in the
troubled land." His cabinet colleague, Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul,
demanded from the Northern Alliance that they reinstate women's rights.
At this point however, the strongmen of the Northern Alliance argued
more about how they would split the newly won territory among
themselves, rather than with the Taliban. In Mazar-i-Sharif, the forces
of General Dostum and from Mohammed Atta were pitted against each other,
while 150 km further east, in Kunduz, the Taliban still held their
ground. There was no sign of order to be secured, nor of a government
that could be supported.
Throughout the debate that decided if and how Germany would
participate in the NATO mission in Afghanistan, the speakers all had a
militarily supported relief operation in mind. Nobody thought that the
international community would stay ten years in order to build a
political community from the ground up.
As a consequence, ten years of improvisation ensued. Thanks
to the efforts of individuals, many good things have been achieved in
select areas. The goals of German involvement - democracy, security,
human rights - were and still are not associated with individual
instruments and specific support measures. An example: German aid to
Afghanistan will be dispersed in two instalments in 2011. According to
Minister Niebel in May, hinging aid disbursement to certain conditions
will "strengthen Afghan democratic and reform efforts." The federal
government revealed in June that the second instalment is indeed tied
"to a general acceleration of the customs clearance and registration
process of vehicles and equipment to three months. Whereupon the rapid import of vehicle fleets will certainly have no influence on democratic forces in Afghanistan.
Obama's announcement to withdraw one-third of U.S. troops from Afghanistan by mid-2012 follows the famous advice of U.S. Senator George Aiken on the Vietnam War: "Declare victory and get out." We cannot proceed as such on the civilian side. The Afghan people must stay in the country and we must help them cope with the consequences of more than three decades of war. We decide now and over the next few months what will remain of the international and German commitment for the Afghans, when NATO forces withdraw in 2014. If we continue as before, hardly anything that we started in Afghanistan will be sustainable. Military withdrawal will then coincide with a civilian collapse.
Tom Koenigs is a Member of the German parliament and chairman of its committee on human rights and humanitarian aid. He was UN Special Representative for Afghanistan from 2006-07. This article was co-written with Jan Free, who works for Koenig's Bundestag office.
This article was first published by the Boell Foundation and is licenced under a Creative Commons Licence.




October 19, 2011
jihene kochrad, student, Bronze Contributor (12)
Afghanistan was not destined to be like a poor country, if we see only its name, it ‘s composed of “Afghanite”, a wonderful blue Gemstone present with abundance in the beautiful Afghanistan’s mountains.
Only education can change the reality and prove the consideration on what the country can offer and how can they improve their situation.
Especially women who will dare in the future to see modernity without fair and negative obsessive hostility..
Normally, the illiteracy is in the rural regions. For this, I think adopting the traditional way to make Afghan carpets can be a way for constructing schools and having the necessary tools of studying.
Social society can invest in this project and give other beautiful image of this country. These women who have normally the stereotype of pessimist colors outside of her house,. can create and send other message of liking life and hope.
It can be a good reason for feeling that what did she inherited from her mother and grandmother is helping her to construct a bigger culture and to have a perspectives of success.