Adam Holloway says that Britain’s strategy in Afghanistan is misconceived. Nato’s military presence should be reduced and the battle for hearts and minds fought more imaginatively
The military and diplomatic chains of command do bad news slowly, and seem to have an answer for everything. For example, on official visits to our bases in Helmand they tell us that you cannot have reconstruction until you have security. But out there beyond the barbed wire of our camps, one Afghan asked me, ‘If you can only have reconstruction when you have security, where is the reconstruction in this town? There is security here.’ Of course, ministers and the career-focused civil servants list the gazillion projects delivered. Unfortunately — whether this is a dozen or a thousand (much nearer the former) — it matters not unless the ordinary Afghan feels these projects have made a difference to his or her life. ‘Is it true that Britain has spent $1.6 billion on war here? Imagine what that would have done if they had given this to the people here for reconstruction.’
The UK is conflicted over opium production. Of course this must be tackled sometime soon. But for now we can either fight the growing insurgency or deal with the drugs — you can’t do both at the same time if you want to maintain the consent of the civilian population. Anyway, this problem is all about demand: you will only reduce supply if you provide alternative livelihoods — something we talk about a lot but don’t seem to be able to deliver.
Speak to almost anyone who has been in the country for more than the six-month tour, and they tell you a simple truth: you cannot impose security on the Pashtuns — this can only be built by them. Alarmingly, they explain that our activities make a stable Pakistan very much less likely in future. The Pashtuns live either side of the so-called Afghan–Pakistan border, but it is no border to their tribal lands. It is completely irrelevant to them. Someone not unknown to the payroll of the Pakistani intelligence services asks, ‘How can a Pakistani government look to the West, while it is the Western powers that are bombing Pashtuns? This makes Pakistan, as currently configured politically, unviable in the long term.’
More articles from: Adam Holloway | this section
Post this entry to: del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit
Advertisement
David Tang reflects on his visits to Beijing in the run-up to the Games, where Western expertise has been harnessed to the ruthless efficiency of China’s government machine
The economist Richard Thaler — a favourite of the Cameron and Obama camps — talks to James Forsyth about the power of ‘nudging’: small transformative acts of persuasion
Fraser Nelson on the coming political week
Lloyd Evans joins the dissident movement in a ritual exercise near the Chinese Embassy. He is unsettled to find himself understanding why China’s rulers get so paranoid about them
Mark Leonard, Britain’s pre-eminent analyst of modern China, says the Olympic genie is out of the bottle. The prospect of global scrutiny has actually increased repression as the authorities try to stamp out dissent. But digital technology is impossible to police
Zenga Longmore on Yasmin Hai's new book
Richard Beeston on Benazir Bhutto's final appeal
Pervaiz Musharraf presides over a fearsomely chaotic and dangerous country, says Con Coughlin, but he is probably the only man who can save Pakistan from self-destruction
Boris Johnson is appalled by the indifference towards veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan. Whatever our views, we should honour those who have performed their duty
The new French ambassador is a figure of significance
Build your own Sky package online. Sky TV, Broadband & Talk only £16.
Sky TV & free broadband packages available from £16 a month. Choose from a standard free sky box, sky plus or sky hd.
Build your own Sky package online. Sky TV, Broadband & Talk only £16.
Sky TV & free broadband packages available from £16 a month. Choose from a standard free sky box, sky plus...
PORTA METRONIA, ROME Standing high on the top of one of the seven hills of Rome- the Coelian- this unique
ROME and PARIS: over 350 holiday rentals apartments listed: visit www.romanreference.com and www.parisreference.com or call +39 0648 903612.
Goldsmiths by Design Welcome to Ruffs! You have found a company of Goldsmiths that specialises in the manufacture, amongst other
Spectator Business | Apollo Magazine
Corporate | Advertising | Privacy | Terms
Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London, SW1H 9HP
All Articles and Content Copyright ©2008 by The Spectator | All Rights Reserved
David Lindsay
March 27th, 2008 5:15pmWe already do. We just call them "tribal elders" when we do it. But they are exactly the same people. Why are we in Afghanistan, anyway? What, exactly, would constitute victory or defeat there? And why, exactly?
mark
March 28th, 2008 12:36amat last - an article that both spells out the problem and also proposes solutions - unlike Mr Selbourne's effort in this edition.
Stan Coveney
March 28th, 2008 3:14pmAfghanistan is a dead end, a quagmire.
Millennia of history from Alexander to the Soviet Union invasions tell us that.
Better to leave Afghans to sort out their own affairs.
If terror camps spring up then military incursions on various scales from time to time would keep them ‘wrong footed’.
At present terror groups based in Pakistan operate with relative impunity in Pakistan, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
Let the terror groups deal with the local people and explain why their occupation and oppression is better that any of the other alternatives.
Steve
March 29th, 2008 11:04amAn interesting article....but...
Consider this, if the majority of the Afghan people want a Taliban style government who are we to claim the right to not allow it. Its not our country. It is up to the Afghan people to decide their own destiny. Western style democracy (whatever that may mean) has no place in a tribal society, it doesn't fit and doesn't work in that sort of situation, especially when it is seen as being imposed by force of "infidel arms".
If all Western troops pulled out the result may not be pretty, at least not to our "bleeding heart" trendy socialists but it would give the Afghanis the opportunity to forge their own society along whatever lines and with whatever social restrictions they want.
It is pure arrogance by us to assume that we are right and they are wrong.
The same applies to Iraq. We have no place there, we were not invited, we are not wanted and should therefore leave with all despatch.
Steve S.
March 31st, 2008 6:38amWell-done Adam. When are you coming to visit us again in Helmand?
Paul
March 31st, 2008 4:24pmInteresting stuff and from someone who has been here. I would not agree with the proposed solutions but we are engaged in a much more nuanced military and civil campaign right now that places the population at the centre of our activities not the Taliban. The mantra here is that the population is the prize. Ask Steve S. he can confirm this and it is slowly yielding results.Is there an e-mail address to engage in a less public discussion?
Peter Haldane
March 31st, 2008 5:43pmOf course the Taliban must be talked to but they cannot be allowed to impose their will to the point that they allow activities within the area of their control that threatens other states. However, it is the Kharzai government that must do the talking and if they are unwilling to do so they must be coerced. It is too important a matter for them to stone-wall on this.
Mark
April 21st, 2008 3:11am"Britain has lost nearly 100 dead."
Really? NHS kills that many every week. You could talk to the taliban about setting up an NHS for them. They'd never know what hit them.
Ron P
April 21st, 2008 4:05pmWhat I think this writer forgets is the fact that Pakistan is a nuke nation and the tribal region between Pakistan and Afghanistan is rife with terrorists that are trying to get a nuke and light it off in a European or American city all in the name of allah. As the war winds down in Iraq (I'll call that a win for the record, thanks) I say we "surge" in Afghanistan, stomp the lawless tribal region out of existence, set up real security and begin some real rebuilding of the infrastructure. A quick expansion of the road/water systems and farm lands to allow farmers to make the same amount of money on fruits and nuts as they do on poppies will get the country on the right path. Within 3-5 years we could see some real change, and that would include women's rights (which should not put it on the back burner.) The bottom line is that the taliban are corrupting islam much like al qaeda, and while no one should be told what religion to follow, we are in a worldwide fight against these nuts and the last thing we need to be doing is talking to them. Let the sunnis beat their head on the ground all day long, but the minute they want to take to violence against others it's no longer a religion, it's terrorism. You can sit around asking "why" all day long, but in the end it doesn't matter "why" they the practice a radical form of islam, it's "when" will they bring it to you and I, again, if we pull out or do nothing about it.
dubya
April 21st, 2008 6:25pmno difference between taliban and al qaeda -- they're both after religion-based totalitarianism. religion-based governments must not be tolerated ANYWHERE they all demand the citizens enslave themselves to irrational lovers of death.
Kristopher
April 21st, 2008 9:48pm( sarcasm )
You know ... all that unpleasantness in the 1940's could have been avoided had we been willing to talk to the Nazis.
BobG
April 22nd, 2008 5:57pmYes, Mr Chamberlain, uh Holloway, you are perfectly correct.
The Taliban have proven that they are reasonable people who would love peace if given a chance. Oh wait, they had a chance.
I think what Holloway is saying is it is just too hard. We will make our stand behind the cliffs of Dover. Ooops! Too late.
sol vason
April 24th, 2008 12:31amWhy send money if we simply pull out and leave the country to the Taliban.
I say take our friends home with us and every spring bomb the heroin crop. Why provide alternative employment? Destroy the crop and they will find some other way to live.
Great article. I'm convinced. No possibility of sucess in Afganistan but we can destroy the heroin crop.
John W
April 24th, 2008 1:25amMichael Yon sent me here. He thinks your point is an important one and needs to be discussed. When Michael Yon puts forth an opinion on the war, we should take notice.
Miriam Mendelson
April 29th, 2008 12:56pmQuite heartened to see the majority of posters here are not blind to the essential issue: Religious brutality and coercion can be called by any name you want, but they need to be dealt with - and not by accommodation. You can accommodate a people, a tribe, even a religion - but not a pratice. Allowing brutal and repressive practices to continue (whether by al-Qaeda or the Taleban) means allowing the cancer that is overtaking large parts of the Islamic world to continue to grow. The everyday Muslims are the first victims, the West is the second. Oh - women's rights? Lets allow women (and moderates, dissidents and others for that matter) to be stoned in soccer stadiums and killed by relatives... we'll get to that when the right time comes. Oh - but by then it will be too late. For them. For us.
Kafir
April 30th, 2008 6:56pmYou say we have lost considerable goodwill across the Muslim world. Tell me what goodwill have we lost? The goodwill that killed all those Israeli athletes in 1972? Or perhaps it was the goodwill that got 50+ US embassy workers held captive for 444 days in 1979. Oh, maybe it was the goodwill that got 200+ US Marines killed in 1983 or a truckbomb in the WTC in 1993, or the goodwill that blew a gaping hole in the USS Cole in 2000. I'm thinking we didn't have a lot of goodwill to begin with.
I too came here via Michael Yon. I respect him. What I got most from your article is that we're not living up to our promises in Afghanistan. Do that first. Then you can talk to the Taliban if you must, but you'll be able to do it from a position of strength.
Ellen J
May 8th, 2008 3:56pmThis makes sence to me. We seem to think here in the west that we have the right to decide how people should live. That really makes me mad because we talk about freedom but we don't really advocate it. The truth is simple. You don't win this kind of war. It just isn't possible. I understand the fear people have of extremists, but they need to look at history. Because it shows us that persicution makes these extreme groups stronger. This is the first time that I have had confermation that what I have been feeling about this is true and could possibly work.