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Afghan President's Alliances With Warlords Raise Concerns

President Hamid Karzai has run the country since a UN-backed deal put him in charge in December 2001.

June 18, 2009
By Abubakar Siddique
It is a conspicuous show of power and wealth: Afghan strongmen roam the streets of Kabul in model sports utility vehicles surrounded by bands of armed bodyguards.

They want to be called "mujahedin" freedom fighters -- those who led the "holy war" against Soviet occupation in the 1980s and then fought the hard-line Taliban during the 1990s.

But many Afghans see them as rapacious warlords who led their country to the brink of disintegration, destroying Kabul and other major cities in an atrocious civil war during the 1990s.

They also are seen as thugs who may have killed, maimed, or terrorized more Afghans than the Soviet invaders.

Most of these strongmen now back incumbent President Hamid Karzai's reelection bid and eye Kabul's "Arg-e Shahi" presidential palace as a citadel of their power and influence.

Winning Friends

While opinion polls in Afghanistan suggest Karzai is well ahead of rival candidates in the upcoming presidential election, one of his key election maneuvers has been to build a formidable alliance of regional warlords.

The moves may help secure his reelection on August 20. But they are raising critical questions about governance, accountability, and the rule of law in Afghanistan.

In a move that has worried critics and rights activists, Karzai's office says General Abdul Rashid Dostum, a powerful ethnic Uzbek warlord from northern Afghanistan, can return to Afghanistan whenever he wishes.

Dostum reportedly is living in self-imposed exile in Turkey after he was charged with kidnapping and torturing a political rival last year. Dostum's militia fighters also stand accused of war crimes for allegedly suffocating hundreds of Taliban prisoners in shipping containers.

Dostum and another warlord, Mohammad Mohaqiq, have declared public support for Karzai's reelection bid. They did so after reportedly being promised control of several cabinet posts each in a future Karzai administration. That agreement is thought to be last in a series of deals between Karzai and Afghanistan's notorious factional militia commanders.

In A Bind

Another deal in early May led Karzai to choose the powerful ethnic-Tajik commander Mohammad Qasim Fahim Khan as his running mate. That deal has drawn criticism as a bad omen for democracy and human rights in Afghanistan.

Fahim has a reputation for brutality and serious human rights violations as a former guerrilla leader.

Spanish diplomat Francesc Vendrell, who spent nearly eight years in Afghanistan as a United Nations and European Union envoy, tells RFE/RL that Karzai's alliances with warlords are deplorable.

But he says Karzai has shown great political skills by building such a big coalition of support.

"Considering that, unfortunately, there are no political parties in Afghanistan -- and certainly no reformist political parties for which, I think, the West bears some responsibility -- I think he has been extremely skillful, from his viewpoint, in weaving a fabric of supporters who, whether they are warlords or not, [all support him]," Vendrell says.

But he "deplores" the choice of Fahim as a Karzai running mate because Vendrell and his colleagues engaged in painstaking diplomacy between 2002 and 2004 that eventually persuaded Karzai to drop Fahim from his ticket during the 2004 presidential election.

"Fahim had the makings of a national warlord, which is far more serious. And of course he was in a position of taking over from Karzai if something happened to him," Vendrell recalls. "Well now he has chosen him again. And I doubt that he will bring many votes, amongst the [ethnic] Tajiks. He may even take [away] some support from Pashtuns for Karzai. I really find it quite bizarre that he has chosen Fahim again."

Expensive Subcontractors

Karzai inherited the warlord problem eight years ago under the UN-sponsored Bonn agreement that made him the head of Afghanistan's first post-Taliban transitional administration. The Bonn Accords also awarded cabinet posts to anti-Taliban militia commanders whose fighters held de facto control over Kabul.

Ahmed Rashid, author of "Decent into Chaos," has chronicled how the U.S.-led coalition spent hundreds of millions of dollars to prop up those commanders. Rashid concludes that the policy reinvigorated Afghanistan's illegal drug industry and paved the way for the birth of a neo-Taliban insurgency by subcontracting security to the warlords.

Last month, Karzai acknowledged that the upcoming election will be "difficult and controversial." But he defended his alliances with strongmen like Fahim, saying that such deals are important steps for national reconciliation.

"We need a man upon whom we can rely in hard times -- for a president, that is extremely important, and Fahim Khan will deliver that," Karzai told participants at a Washington seminar in early May. "Fahim Khan has been one of those people who contributed immensely in the war against terrorism, shoulder-to-shoulder with U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan.

Karzai added that "for stability, for continuity, [and] for taking the country forward in difficult times, we have decided to have him. It is good for us. It is good for America."

But many Afghans see Karzai's warlord alliances as a dubious political tactic that ultimately will do more harm than good.

'Criminals At The Heart' Of Government

In Kabul, Afghan businessman Khan Jan Alekozai suggests that instead of being held accountable for past atrocities, warlords have exploited their political and military ties with the U.S.-led coalition -- continuing to engage in criminal enterprise with impunity.

"These people continued their old habits," Alekozai says to explain the popular perception of warlords. "Although they trimmed their beards and began wearing business suits, their mentality never changed. They continued with looting, plundering and deceit."

He suggests that the warlord power is growing with every day. "They now manipulate the government, aid projects, [major] business contracts and these strongmen virtually control Afghanistan wealth," Alekozai says. "They kidnap traders and investors as they patronize kidnapping rackets. [And] all this happens while foreign powers look on."

Alekozai says that the Afghans are grateful for the sacrifices in blood and treasure that the United States and its Western allies are making to bring stability back to their country.

"But the Afghans still have doubts about them because they relied on people here who had failed Afghans in the past because they raped people and had killed their children," he says.

Alekozai says Afghan hopes for transparent governance, respect for human rights, and the rule of law cannot be realized as long as warlords enjoy impunity.

Such views are echoed widely.

Brad Adams, the London-based Asia director for Human Rights Watch, tells RFE/RL that Karzai's alliance with the warlords is a disaster. "It is a disaster for Afghanistan. It puts criminals, including war criminals, at the very heart of a future Karzai administration," Adams says.

Adams suggests that the real challenge is the growing strength of the warlords. "They are growing in strength now, though; that's the problem," he says. "The more that they are brought into the heart of government, the more access to resources they have."

He cites access to "narco-dollars" from the drug trade and involvement in corrupt or otherwise illegal business, saying they amass huge wealth. "The wealthier they get...the more they can pay people to be their foot soldiers."

Adams suggests that warlords could eventually become a much bigger problem than the Taliban insurgency. "It goes counter to the whole idea of building up the state and a proper army and proper police force -- doing away with illegal armed groups, and it's going to cause long-term problems," he predicts. "Even if the Taliban movement fades or is defeated, then they are going to deal with this problem -- which is going to be very big."

Western diplomats and military leaders say the inclusion of warlords in government projects a negative public image. They cite examples of a few individuals who have grown from being militia commanders into their new roles as administrators and political leaders. Some point to historical parallels with France in the Middle Ages, when successive dynasties cut deals with regional strongmen and gradually brought them into the national mainstream.

But Afghans reject such parallels and point to the centralized progressive Afghan state that foreign-sponsored warlords have brought down through their infighting.
This forum has been closed.
     
Comments
by: ozma from: Australia
July 04, 2009 15:01
It is better for the United States of America and other involved countries in Afghan Affairs to support the people of Afghanistan financially. Provide them with jobs, build factories, school, hospitals, roads for them. People of Afghanistan are peace loving people they do not want war and fighting. The problem is that the majority of the Afghan people are poor, they do not find anything to feed their children.
If the warlords like Fahim, Mohaqiq, Rabani, Sayaf, and hundreds of other Afghan warlords bring their money from foreign banks and spent it in Afghanistan by building schools , factories , houses , hospitals and other financial beneficial projects then problems of the our people will be minimized

by: ozma from: Australia
July 04, 2009 14:59
the policy of the USA , Britain and other western of the world is that Pashtoons should be under the influence of the minorities in Afghanistan then this is something that we should discuss it and think over it.
No power in the world can suppress pashtoons. If you stand against Pashtoons and fight them, they will fight against you, if you talk to them in a good manner and respect them ‘ they will give double respect. Force will not achieve anything
ozma ( to be continued)

by: ozma from: Australia
July 04, 2009 14:57
If the policy of the USA , Britain and other western of the world is that Pashtoons should be under the influence of the minorities in Afghanistan then this is something that we should discuss it and think over it.
No power in the world can suppress pashtoons. If you stand against Pashtoons and fight them, they will fight against you, if you talk to them in a good manner and respect them ‘ they will give double respect. Force will not achieve anything.
It is better for the United States of America and other involved countries in Afghan Affairs to support the people of Afghanistan financially. Provide them with jobs, build factories, school, hospitals, roads for them. People of Afghanistan are peace loving people they do not want war and fighting. The problem is that the majority of the Afghan people are poor, they do not find anything to feed their children.
If the warlords like Fahim, Mohaqiq, Rabani, Sayaf, and hundreds of other Afghan warlords bring their money from foreign banks and spent it in Afghanistan by building schools , factories , houses , hospitals and other financial beneficial projects then problems of the our people will be minimized.
Most of the warlords have their own buildings , markets, business and houses in foreign countries. Where did they get they money from to purchase expensive building and houses? They money of course belongs to the poor people of Afghanistan.

by: ozma from: Australia
July 04, 2009 14:54
Iran’s expanding policy under Ahmadi Naja’s is a threat to the peaceful world. Iran must be stopped. Iran has been expanding its political , cultural and military influence in Afghanistan , Iraq, Palestine, Lebanon and other parts of the world.
Iran in the past seven years and before that has spent billions of dollars in Afghanistan supporting only Shia’s. They do not support Sunni Muslims. Shi’s buy properties and open religious institutes with the money sent to them from Iran.
We condemn US policy in Afghanistan as well in Iraq. Karzai has given a lot of privilege to Shia in Afghanistan.
There only one or two ministers in King Zaher Sha Government but in Karzai government there are more than seven cabinet posts with Shia.
We do not know whether it is the policy of the US and other western countries or is it just Karzai’s policy.
My be The US wants the majority in Afghanistan to be depressed and be under the influence of the minority . but with this policy it is not easy to maintain peace and stability. There should be justice.
Sixty (60%) percent of the population of Afghanistan is Pashtoons. But unfortunately they are deprived from their rights.
The constitution of Afghanistan says Pashto and Dari are the official languages of Afghanistan but Pashto is not given the same importance as it is given to Dari. The written language used in offices is Dari, rarely you can find a letter in Pashto.
The above warlords are against Pashtoons. Mohaqiq is anti ( Kochi ) Nomads. The nomads form about 4 percent of the population of Afghanistan.Mohaqiq hate them because they belong to Pashtoon ethnics.
As I said war criminals and warlords at the heart of Karzai’s government will not let this heart function properly. This heart will be sick and will be bleeding .
Karzai can not achieve anything for the people of Afghanistan with warlords in the heart of his government.
ozma ( To be contiued)

by: ozma from: Australia
July 04, 2009 14:53
It is unfair to give cabinet and other posts to warlords and criminals before elections. Cabinet and other high posts should be given to those who can approve their power in elections.
There is no real political party in Afghanistan and this is y a big problem.
Karza’s policy to have warlords in the heart of his government is a catastrophe. It will have negative impact on the whole political and security situation is Afghanistan. It won’t bring peace and stability to Afghanistan.
All these warlords are supported and financed by foreign countries. Mohaqiq, Khalili and Shia’s as a whole supported by Iran < Fahim is supported by Russia and India, Dustom is supported by Turkey and Uzbakistan. These warlords have no place in the heart of the people of Afghanistan. Afghanistan need leaders who are supported by the Afghan people themselves. It is up to the people of Afghanistan to choose their leaders. But unfortunately we can say that 90 % of the population of Afghanistan are illiterate. The nation has little political awareness. Political awareness is something that the educated people know it value. The people of Afghanistan are very poor. Most of them will give you’re their vote for money. Money can play a vital role in elections.
Other big problem that faces Afghanistan is the interference of neighboring and foreign countries in the internal affairs of Afghanistan. This must stop. President Obama has said so many times that United States does not support any of the candidates. It is encouraging . We hope that Obama will stick to what he says and we want him to stop other countries as well not to interfere in Afghan Affair and stop supporting any presidential candidate. ( to be continued)
ozma

by: ozma from: Australia
July 04, 2009 14:51
The inclusion of warlords like Dustom, Fahim, Mohaqiq , Khalili and others in Karzai’s team and giving them previllages is definitly a bad omen for Afghanistan and its people. They all have records of violating human rights which are against humanity.
They are not loyal to Mr. Karzai. They just demonstate that they are with Karzai \]and stand beside him for their own political and social interest sThey are not interested in serving the country and its people. They know that Karzai can be cheated easily and get from him whatever they want. Karzai will have no real power while these warlords are placed in the heart of his Government. We have been witnessing corruption and huge security , political a social problems through out the past 7 years of Karzai’s rule.
Karzai once again has promised the above warlords to give them cabinet posts, Embassys and provinces.
Karzai should have told them to nominate themselves for the presidential elections to show their power. These warlords know that they will be rejected by the people of Afghanistan , therefore they reached Karzai and made illegal agreement. Cabinet and other high post belong to the nation. Criminals and warlords have no right to deprive the nation from their right.
Ozma

by: ozma from: Australia
July 04, 2009 14:44
The inclusion of warlords like Dustom, Fahim, Mohaqiq , Khalili and others in Karzai’s team and giving them previllages is definitly a bad omen for Afghanistan and its people. They all have records of violating human rights which are against humanity.
They are not loyal to Mr. Karzai. They

by: angar from: afghanisatn
July 04, 2009 06:47

I believe that president Karzi is the next president but Mr. Karzi fallowing the old and unacceptable strategy. This is time for a big change in which E.H believing to. Mr. Karzi need to Control of international inflowing on his GOV and no more collations with unacceptable elements of Society

by: Gazan from: Peshawar
July 03, 2009 11:47
I read the article > it was a good article about Afghanistan.
I think Karzai has again made a big mistake by choosing warlords as his depties. Mr Fahim and Mr Khahlili are not accepted by the majority of Afghans. They are hated because of their deeds. Karzai with the above two men beside him willl never get the sympathy of Taleban. If Karzai and the world community really want Taleban to come forward for negosiation the first obstavle will be the warlords around Karzai. The ordinary people of Afghanistan want a clean government. A government clean from warlords and criminals. People of Afghanistan suffered alot. They want peace and stability. Peace and stability won't retrn to Afghanistan while the crminals and warlords are in powar.
I request the world comminty to bring peace to Afghanistan because in Afghanistan means peace of the world. Warlords and war criminals will never help Afghanistan They are the real obstacles in the way of peace and stability.
It is up to the people of Afghanistan to choose their leader.
I think Dr Ashraf Ghani is the best man to be the next president. He can save Afghanistan. He is the man of great capabilities. He is the who can bring peace and stability to Afghanistan.
Hope that the people of Afghanistan will think well and give their votes to someone who really deserve to be the next president.
Gazan
     
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