Let’s learn what happened in Afghanistan, so we can do better in phase 2 of our Long War

Summary: Today’s must-read is a retrospective on NATO’s expedition to Afghanistan, even more important today as we begin the second phase of our Long War. It opens with a shocker and gets even better. The reviewer has deep in experience in Afghanistan; the author has even deeper experience. The combination provides powerful insights while cutting through the accumulated lies of the past 14 years. Yet their clear sight of the need for action blinds them to the simple fact that foreign armies almost never defeat foreign insurgencies. How much blood must be spilled in vain before we see this?

Afghanistan war

Afghanistan: โ€˜A Shocking Indictmentโ€™” by Rory Stewart

New York Review of Books, 6 November 2014

Review of No Good Men Among the Living:
America, the Taliban, and the War through Afghan Eyes
by Anand Gopal

Ashraf Ghani, who has just become the president of Afghanistan, once drafted a document for {his predecessor} Hamid Karzai that began:

There is a consensus in Afghan society: violenceโ€ฆmust end. National reconciliation and respect for fundamental human rights will form the path to lasting peace and stability across the country. The peopleโ€™s aspirations must be represented in an accountable, broad-based, gender-sensitive, multi-ethnic, representative government that delivers daily value.

That was 12 years ago. No one speaks like that now โ€” not even the new president. The best case now is presented as political accommodation with the Taliban, the worst as civil war.

Western policymakers still argue, however, that something has been achieved: counterterrorist operations succeeded in destroying al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, there has been progress in health care and education, and even Afghan government has its strengths at the most local level. This is not much, given that the US-led coalition spent $1 trillion and deployed one million soldiers and civilians over 13 years. But it is better than nothing; and it is tempting to think that everything has now been said: after all, such conclusions are now reflected in thousands of studies by aid agencies, multilateral organizations, foreign ministries, intelligence agencies, universities, and departments of defense.

But Anand Gopalโ€™sย  shows that everything has not been said. His new and shocking indictment demonstrates that the failures of the intervention were worse than even the most cynical believed. Gopal, a Wall Street Journal and Christian Science Monitor reporter, investigates, for example, a US counterterrorist operation in January 2002. US Central Command in Tampa, Florida, had identified two sites as likely โ€œal-Qaeda compounds.โ€ It sent in a Special Forces team by helicopter; the commander, Master Sergeant Anthony Pryor, was attacked by an unknown assailant, broke his neck as they fought and then killed him with his pistol; he used his weapon to shoot further adversaries, seized prisoners, and flew out again, like a Hollywood hero.

As Gopal explains, however, the American team did not attack al-Qaeda or even the Taliban. They attacked the offices of 2 district governors, both of whom were opponents of the Taliban. They shot the guards, handcuffed one district governor in his bed and executed him, scooped up twenty-six prisoners, sent in AC-130 gunships to blow up most of what remained, and left a calling card behind in the wreckage saying โ€œHave a nice day. From Damage, Inc.โ€

Weeks later, having tortured the prisoners, they released them with apologies. It turned out in this case, as in hundreds of others, that an Afghan โ€œallyโ€ had falsely informed the US that his rivals were Taliban in order to have them eliminated. In Gopalโ€™s words:

“The toll โ€ฆ 21 pro-American leaders and their employees dead, 26 taken prisoner, and a few who could not be accounted for. Not one member of the Taliban or al-Qaeda was among the victims.

Instead, in a single 30-minute stretch the US had managed to eradicate both of Khas Uruzganโ€™s potential governments, the core of any future anti-Taliban leadership โ€” stalwarts who had outlasted the Russian invasion, the civil war, and the Taliban years but would not survive their own allies.”

Gopal then finds the interview that the US Special Forces commander gave a year and a half later in which he celebrated the derring-do, and recorded that 7 of his team were awarded bronze stars, and that he himself received a silver star for gallantry.ย  {note: Master Sgt. Anthony S. Pryor received his Silver Star on 12 June 2003. Here is 2007 Army News story about the raid; by then the Army knew the story was false.}

No Good Men Among the Living
Available at Amazon.

Myth-busting where it is most needed

Gopalโ€™s investigations into development are no more encouraging. I โ€” like thousands of Western politicians โ€” have often repeated the mantra that there are four million more children, and 1.5 million more girls, in school than there were under the Taliban. Gopal, however, quotes an Afghan report that in 2012, โ€œof the 4,000 teachers currently on the payroll in Ghor, perhaps 3,200 have no qualifications โ€” some cannot read and writeโ€ฆ 80% of the 740 schools in the province are not operating at all.โ€ And Ghor is one of the least โ€œTaliban-threatenedโ€ provinces of Afghanistan.

Or consider Gopalโ€™s description of the fate of several principal Afghan politicians in the book:

Dr. Hafizullah, Zurmatโ€™s first governor, had ended up in Guantanamo because heโ€™d crossed Police Chief Mujahed. Mujahed wound up in Guantanamo because he crossed the Americans. Security chief Naim found himself in Guantanamo because of an old rivalry with Mullah Qassim. Qassim eluded capture, but an unfortunate soul with the same name ended up in Guantanamo in his place. And a subsequent feud left Samoud Khan, another pro-American commander, in Bagram prison, while the boy his men had sexually abused was shipped to Guantanamoโ€ฆ.

Abdullah Khan found himself in Guantanamo charged with being Khairullah Khairkhwa, the former Taliban minister of the interior, which might have been more plausible โ€” if Khairkhwa had not also been in Guantanamo at the timeโ€ฆ .

Nine Guantanamo inmates claimed the most striking proof of all that they were not Taliban or al-Qaeda: they had passed directly from a Taliban jail to American custody after 2001.

Why didnโ€™t I โ€” didnโ€™t most of us โ€” know these details? The answer is, in part, that such investigative journalism is very rare in Afghanistan. Gopalโ€™s work owes a lot to other researchers. He is building on the work of Sarah Chayes and Alex Strick van Linschoten (both of whom immersed themselves in the Pushtu south), of exceptional journalists such as Carlotta Gall and David Rohde of The New York Times, of officials with years in the country such as Eckart Schiewek, Robert Kluijver, and Michael Semple, and of Afghan journalists such as Mohammed Hassan Hakimi.

Afghanistan, however, is not an easy place for in-depth reporting. Foreign civilians have been targets, even in the safer areas, since 2001, when the first Spanish journalists were executed near Jalalabad. Gopal โ€” an American civilian โ€” pursued his stories into the most active centers of the insurgency โ€” the inner districts of Ghazni, Uruzgan, Helmand, Kandahar, and the Korengal valley in the northeast โ€” places where thousands of international troops have been killed. He learned Dari and โ€” more difficult โ€” Pushtu. He won the trust of insurgent leaders.

But his real genius lies in binding all these sources together and combining them with thousands of hours of interviews. He tracks down the Taliban commander who attacked the provincial capital of Uruzgan in 2001, and then he interviews the US Special Forces commander who was defending it. He shows us the US commander ordering the air strike, and the Taliban commander seeing the same bomb destroy the jeep in front of him. He researches individuals by interviewing them, their neighbors, and their enemies, and then traces the very same people through Human Rights Watch reports, State Department documents (via WikiLeaks), US Army press statements, and Guantรกnamo interrogations and arrest reports.

All this allows him to bring life to figures who have hitherto been caricatures. Human Rights Watch reports have long emphasized the crimes of warlords such as Sher Muhammed Akhunzada, Jan Muhammed, or Abdul Rashid Dostum. But policymakers have still been tempted to perceive them also as charismatic rogues and inescapable parts of the Afghan establishment. Their links to organized crime, the CIA, Pakistani intelligence officers, and the international narcotics trade can seem simply elements of their machismo. Their scams โ€” running construction companies, private security agencies, developing property, importing and exporting oil and opium poppy, and providing logistical support for the foreigners currently on temporary duty in Afghanistan โ€” can seem simply colorful.

Ambassadors, for example, often joke about Dostumโ€™s heavy drinking and his extravagance (he is rumored to have paid $100,000 for a fighting dog). A Washington Post journalist records Dostum thundering, when posing for his US visa photo: โ€œMy friend, even if you take a picture of my ass, the US will know this is Dostum.โ€ All the American generals, Pakistani intelligence chiefs, heads of European NGOs, ambassadors, ministers, and foreign correspondents who have met Dostum over thirty years compete to tell such anecdotes. He cooked hundreds of Taliban prisoners to death in shipping containers. But he has just become vice-president.

Gopalโ€™s deep investigation, however, brings out, in detail, the real horror inflicted by such men. His long interviews with warlords, his sympathetic accounts of their youth and sufferings, make their crimes only more convincing and more shocking. Thus he interviews Jan Muhammed at length, tracing his rise from school janitor to major resistance commander in the fight against the Soviet Union. He describes his being imprisoned, the tortures he suffered, and his being marched out to face a Taliban firing squad. He describes how Jan Muhammed saved President Karzai from an ambush in the 1990s and then became his friend and adviser.

All this, however, is the introduction to Jan Muhammed ordering death squads to shoot unarmed grandfathers in front of their families, to electrocute and maim, and to steal peopleโ€™s last possessions, in pursuit of an ever more psychopathic crusade to eliminate anyone associated with the Taliban or indeed with a rival tribe. No one reading Gopal would be tempted to joke about these men again, or present them simply as โ€œtraditional power-brokersโ€ and โ€œnecessary evils.โ€

The same careful research allows Gopal to reveal not only the conservatism of Afghan rural life, but also its startlingly modern elements. His description of the rural south, for example, where a woman is a piece of property โ€” the โ€œgovernment would no more intervene in [killing your wife] than it would if you had in some private rage killed your own oxen or damaged your own houseโ€ โ€” may seem familiar.

But he also uncovers unexpected mobility and lurches in status behind the blank mud walls of the compounds. One long interview (it forms the basis for almost a quarter of the book and must have taken many days to complete) reveals that an impoverished woman, locked with her mother-in-law in Khas Uruzgan, was educated at Kabul University, and once lived unveiled in a prestigious Soviet-designed apartment block in the capital city.

Her husband โ€” who beat her for leaving the house โ€” was a progressive leftist and a proto-feminist who once encouraged her to work. When her husband was murdered and her ten-year-old son badly wounded in a gunfight, she was reduced almost to starvation in the southern city of Kandahar, and then suddenly, through a family patron, found herself elected the first female member of Parliament from Uruzgan.

Gopalโ€™s astonishing stories are not, however, a complete portrait of Afghanistan. He is so immersed in the mayhem and abuse that he seems genuinely to believe โ€” as the title of the book suggests โ€” that in Afghanistan there are โ€œno good men among the living.โ€ The more difficult truth is that it is hard to describe living among Afghans without falling back on words like dignity, honor, courage, strength, and generosity. Many of the Afghans I have worked with epitomize these virtues so clearly, and even quixotically, that they can seem almost a rebuke to our age.

Gopal must have experienced this โ€” with the Afghan friends, for example, who accompanied him on motorbikes into the heart of the insurgency. Walking across Afghanistan, and working in a very traditional community in the capital, I came to know dozens of authority figures who were men of striking charisma, energy, and sense of responsibility, clearly knowledgeable and competent in their immediate society. Gopal must have known many too.

And he must have noted how even the villains of his book had been prepared to risk their lives, again and again, whether for religion, patriotism, or simply pride โ€” and how calmly they lived, knowing that they would eventually be captured or killed. (A high proportion of the people he interviewed have since been murdered or imprisoned.)

But he does not explore these virtues. And above all, he doesnโ€™t capture their sense of humor. Afghans smile and laugh more than almost any people I know.

The formulate everybody follows to fix “failed states”

Fixing Failed States
Available at Amazon.

Ashraf Ghani is now โ€” after four months of wrangling over electoral fraud โ€” the new president of Afghanistan. His book Fixing Failed States: A Framework for Rebuilding a Fractured World (coauthored with Clare Lockhart) argues that Afghanistan can be fixed through creating ten functions of the state, including the โ€œrule of law,โ€ good governance, and a state โ€œmonopoly on the legitimate means of violence.โ€ Along the way he proposes eliminating corruption, disarming and demobilizing militias, and creating a reliable justice system and a prosperous economy.

Having spent three decades as a professor, a World Bank official, and an Afghan minister developing this intricate theory, he is now putting it into practice.

The leaders of the US intervention in Afghanistan once had very similar objectives โ€” often directly influenced by Ashraf Ghani, who has been the most tenacious and articulate advocate of this vision of โ€œstate-buildingโ€ since September 11. Similar concepts appear in General David Petraeusโ€™s US Army counterinsurgency manual and in presidential envoy James Dobbinsโ€™s The Beginner’s Guide to Nation-Building.

The Beginner's Guide to Nation-Building
Available at Amazon.

Much of the $1 trillion spent by the US and its allies in Afghanistan, and the more than a million people, deployed over a dozen years, have been justified in such terms. President Obama may in fact have been unconsciously quoting Ghani when he explained that Afghanistanโ€™s problems with narcotics and womenโ€™s rights, and even the instability of neighboring states, could be solved through the creation of โ€œa credible, effective, legitimate state.โ€

State-building, however, is not confined to Afghanistan. Ghani has promoted exactly the same recipe from Nepal to Ethiopia as the copresident of the Institute for State Effectiveness. And it seems to be immensely appealing. For the World Bank in 2013, state-building was the solution to piracy in Somalia. For French President Franรงois Hollande in 2013, โ€œrestoring the state, improving governanceโ€ were the first steps in tackling trafficking and violence in Mali. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon distilled the theory of Afghanistanโ€™s civilian surge in his 2014 bon mot โ€œMissiles may kill terrorists. But good governance kills terrorism.โ€

Gopalโ€™s book, however, should at least make us question this fashion of state-building under fire. What has actually been the result of Afghanistanโ€™s $1 trillion attempt to create โ€œsecurity,โ€ โ€œeconomic development,โ€ and โ€œgovernanceโ€? What did creating security mean in Khas Uruzgan where, Gopal explains, all the traditional leaders had been killed and where the only counterbalance to the Taliban was an illegal militia? How could the โ€œpoliceโ€ be trusted to establish a โ€œmonopoly on the legitimate means of violenceโ€ if โ€” as Gopal records โ€” โ€œin Wardakโ€™s multiparty, multiethnic district of Jalrez, for instance, all sixty-five members of the police force hailed from a single pro-Sayyaf villageโ€? (Sayyaf is a Pashtun warlord.)

What future was there for the Afghan economy when, as Gopal shows, it relied on servicing, supporting, and seeking rent from two hundred thousand foreign soldiers and civilian contractors, and where Afghan โ€œbusinessmenโ€ were often simply warlords profiting from security, supply, and construction contracts generated by US military bases? How would any of this be sustainable after the troops withdrew?

Aid agencies put billions directly into the budget of the Afghan government, on the grounds that this strengthened the โ€œaccountabilityโ€ and โ€œlegitimacyโ€ of the Afghan state. But much of the Afghan bureaucracy, including the ministries most popular with donors (education, for example), were paying money to employees who did not even pretend to work; and the regulations, tax inspections, and administrative orders were generally simply opportunities for nepotism, revenge, or bribes. Again and again Gopal reminds us that the state, which the West was supposed to be developing, was far weaker than anyone acknowledged โ€” and often simply didnโ€™t exist.

In truth, international statements about establishing โ€œthe rule of law, governance, and securityโ€ became simply ways of saying that Afghanistan was unjust, corrupt, and violent. โ€œTransparent, predictable, and accountable financial practicesโ€ were not a solution to corruption; they were simply a description of what was lacking.

But policymakers never realized how far from the mark they were. This is partly because most of them were unaware of even a fraction of the reality described in Gopalโ€™s book. But it was partly also that they couldnโ€™t absorb the truth, and didnโ€™t want to. The jargon of state-building, โ€œcapacity-building,โ€ โ€œcivil society,โ€ and โ€œsustainable livelihoodsโ€ seemed conveniently ethical, practical, and irrefutable. And because of fears about lost lives, and fears about future terrorist attacks, they had no interest in detailed descriptions of failure: something had to be done, and failure was simply โ€œnot an option.โ€

The Hazrat Ali mosque
The Hazrat Ali mosque. Photo by James Hill, from his book Somewhere Between War and Peace.

The enduring appear of fantasy

Recently, as chair of the UK Parliament Defence Committee, I voted on air strikes in Iraq, and saw state-buildingโ€™s enduring appeal. The prime minister opened the debate by saying that his strategy depended on โ€œthe creation of a new and genuinely inclusive government in Iraq [and] a new representative and accountable government in Damascus.โ€ An exโ€“cabinet minister argued that the solution to ISIS was to โ€œfocus on local governance and accountability.โ€ A shadow minister replied that โ€œthere needs to be a wider, encompassing political framework, with a plan for humanitarian aid and reconstruction, which will ultimately lead us to create a stronger and more accountable Iraqi government.โ€

This is the intellectual frame within which Britain and many others have now decided to mount air strikes against ISIS, supplemented by counterterrorist operations to kill and capture ISIS commanders. The new coalition will pay, arm, and reinforce Iraqis and Syrians to attack our enemies. And we will replace ISIS with a credible, legitimate, inclusive state in Iraq and Syria. Before perhaps turning to Yemen, or Somalia, or returning to Libya.

But Gopal shows us clearly how easy all this is to say, and almost impossible to do. Why should we be any better at targeting ISIS than we were at targeting the Taliban and al-Qaeda? We are now funding Syrian and Iraqi militia commanders and tribal leaders. In Afghanistan such commanders made themselves wealthy off international contracts, misrepresented their rivals as terrorists, and used their connections with us to terrorize and alienate the local population. How different will our new allies be from Afghan warlords such as Jan Muhammed or Abdul Rashid Dostum?

We already tried counterinsurgency and state-building in the same area of Iraq in response to a very similar group โ€” al-Qaeda in Iraq โ€” in 2008. We invested $100 billion a year, deployed 130,000 international troops, and funded hundreds of thousands of Sunni Arab militiamen. And the problem has returned, six years later, larger and nastier.

This is not a reason to reject intervention entirely โ€” Bosnia, for example, was a success. But we should not pretend that a global model for โ€œnation building under fireโ€ is the answer. โ€œGovernance,โ€ โ€œthe rule of law,โ€ and โ€œsecurityโ€ have different meanings in different cultures and are shaped by very local structures of power. Insurgencies vary with what remote and often little known communities think of themselves, their leaders, their religion, their past, and the outside world. Building a state or tackling an insurgency therefore requires deep knowledge of the history and character of an individual country. And such activity demands that Western governments acknowledge how little they know and can do in most of these places and cultures. But the startling differences within the countries in which we intervene are only exceeded by the startling uniformity, overconfidence, and rigidity of the Western response.

The question we need to ask today is not โ€œHow do you create good governance, economic development, and security?โ€ Instead, we should be asking โ€œWho makes up ISIS, and why are they getting tacit support from the Sunni population?โ€ Are either the Iraqi state or army a credible alternative? What view have rural Sunnis developed of the West, of the โ€œsurge,โ€ or extremism? Could the Kurds hold a new front line if ISIS continued to occupy Mosul? How would you convince the Kurdish leadership to allow the peshmerga to become a professional force, when it remains the essential channel of patronage and power for the major political parties?

How do you bring Turkey to actively support the fight against ISIS? How do you convince people in the Gulf to cease financing it? How do you stop Iraq and Syria being simply pawns in a much bigger fight between Iran and its Sunni opponents? What support can you provide for the people living under ISIS, to allow them to slowly escape this circle of horror? And how do our โ€” the intervenersโ€™ โ€” institutions, conceptual models, weapons, and dollars undermine and distort our relationships, corrode our programs, and defeat our own stated objectives?

These are the kinds of questions โ€” rooted in politics, culture, and lived experience โ€” that we should have been posing in Afghanistan, instead of refining universal models of โ€œstate-building.โ€ Such are the questions that only studies such as Gopalโ€™s can answer.

———————————————–

Rory Stewart in Cumbria

About the author

Rory Stewart Rory Stewart is the Conservative Parliamentary Member for Penrith and The Border. He served in the army, in the diplomatic service, and as founder and chairman of the Turquoise Mountain Foundation for Afghanistan. He is the Ryan Family Professor of Human Rights at Harvard and Chairman of the House of Commons Defence Select Committee, and has written three books. See the bio at his website and at Wikipedia.

Also see his analysis โ€œThe Irresistible Illusionโ€œ at the London Review of Books, July 2009.

For More Information

If you liked this post, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. See these posts for a better understanding our war in Afghanistan…

  1. The Big Lie at work in Afghanistan.
  2. The trinity of modern warfare at work inย Afghanistan.
  3. We are warned about Afghanistan, but choose not to listen.
  4. How many troops would it take to win inย Afghanistan? โ€” Spoiler: lots.
  5. We destroy a secular regime in Afghanistan (& its womenโ€™s rights), then we wage war on the new regime to restore womenโ€™s rights. Welcome to the Americanย Empire.
  6. Hidden history of our first step into the Afghanistan War. Itโ€™s still important for us to understand.
  7. Important: Why the West loses so many wars, and how we can learn to win.
  8. Also important: Darwin explains the futility of killing insurgents. It makes them more effective.

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