November 09, 2008
Obama's 'Fresh Start' In Afghanistan, Pakistan Faces Many Challenges
by Abubakar Siddique, Ron Synovitz
The fight against militant extremism in Afghanistan and Pakistan is one of the major foreign policy and security challenges facing U.S. President-elect Barack Obama, and campaign insiders say his administration plans to reassess U.S. strategy on the region as one of its first priorities.
The conflicting views of U.S. and Afghan officials, regional analysts, and Obama advisers on the issue reveal the difficult decisions that are going to face the new president when he takes office on January 20.
During his campaign, Obama promised to pull U.S. troops out of Iraq within 16 months and transfer many of those soldiers to the Afghan theater.
Ahmed Rashid, a Pakistani journalist and author who has followed developments in the region for more than three decades, says an increase in U.S. troops alone will not resolve the complex crisis in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Rashid tells RFE/RL that any new strategy developed by Obama's administration should aim for a comprehensive regional settlement.
"I think Obama is much more open to a new strategy and a new policy. And I think that has to take the shape of, first, a regional approach to ending the conflict in Afghanistan and Pakistan," Rashid says. "That means bringing in the neighboring countries: Iran, India, and the five Central Asian states, and then resolving some of these regional problems -- like the disputes between India and Pakistan, between Iran and the Americans, between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
"[It also means], at the same time, reallocating resources, troops, money, [and] aid in a much better and more comprehensive way than what we have seen so far from the Bush administration."
'Fresh Start Needed'
Washington-based South Asia analyst Marvin Weinbaum, who helped advise Obama on Afghanistan and Pakistan during the campaign, says there undoubtedly will be a reassessment of U.S. policy under the Obama administration.
Weinbaum says he is confident that the reassessment will lead to policies that do not follow those of the Bush administration -- policies which he calls the "fresh start needed" in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
He says he still expects Obama to increase the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan. But he says a new U.S. approach also will likely include attempts to negotiate and seek compromise where it is possible.
"There is a consensus, even in the American military, that there is no, strictly speaking, military solution. It is one which may involve the military in order to be in a position to negotiate without having to concede surrender to your enemy," Weinbaum says. "What you seek to do by a broader approach -- it's got to include better government in Afghanistan. It's got to include changing for the better people's lives. But it is never going to be enough for some people. And you want to marginalize those people. This is the only way that it can be done."
Rising violence in Afghanistan during the past two years already has compelled the Pentagon to reconsider its strategy.
Eric Edelman, the Bush administration’s undersecretary of defense for policy, told RFE/RL recently that the Pentagon is studying lessons from successful counterinsurgency operations in Iraq.
In particular, Edelman says a key to the success of the so-called "surge" operation in Iraq was the way the U.S. military worked together with Sunni tribal leaders in Anbar Province against Al-Qaeda militants. But he says the insurgency in Afghanistan is far more complex than in Iraq.
"While some of the elements of tribal engagement that were used in Iraq -- like the Anbar Sheiks and the Sons of Iraq -- may be relevant to Afghanistan, it will have to be applied with some care," he says. "But clearly, engaging tribal leaders and making accommodations and bringing over those who can be reconciled from the other side is important. Tribal engagement and local accommodation certainly will be part of the solution. But we will have to figure out exactly how to apply it."
'Outsourcing' Security
But Christine Fair, a senior political analyst at the RAND Corporation who recently toured Iraq, says she has strong doubts about copying the Anbar model in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Fair says the arming of Sunni militias in Iraq to fight against Al-Qaeda militants has had unintended consequences. She says some of those empowered by the U.S. policy now want to impose their conservative world view on locals.
"There is a whole lot of discussion [in Washington] about arming [tribal] militias in Afghanistan, for example, [and] arming the [ethnic Pashtun] tribes in [Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas]," she says. "My understanding is that the Pakistanis are going to pursue such a strategy and, of course, with American support.
"I am an opponent of this because it never works. In fact, in the case of Afghanistan, we are where we are today because we choose to outsource securing Afghanistan to [people who are] basically warlords. There is no reason to believe that it will be successful, except in a very short-term definition of success."
In Afghanistan, the deaths of hundreds of civilians in U.S. air strikes is an issue that continues to undermine popular support for Afghan President Hamid Karzai. Hours before Karzai welcomed Obama's victory, a U.S. air strike