By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 23rd May 12
The NATO summit in Chicago that concluded
on Monday put the stamp of finality on a western withdrawal from Afghanistan by
31st Dec 2014, leaving security thereafter in the hands of Afghans.
Starting next summer the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) will assume the
lead role in imposing security across the country, with western forces moving
to a backup role. The question of who will pay the ANSF’s $4.1 billion annual tab
remains unanswered for now.
Announcing the withdrawal of the 40-nation,
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), which has overseen
Afghanistan’s security since 2001, a joint communiqué stated on Monday, “ISAF’s
mission will be concluded by the end of 2014. But thereafter Afghanistan will
not stand alone.”
That generosity will last only for a
decade; NATO says that Kabul must support its own forces by 2024.
“Afghanistan’s yearly share (of the security budget) will increase
progressively from at least US$500m in 2015, with the aim that it can assume,
no later than 2024, full financial responsibility for its own security forces,”
says the communiqué.
During the interim period, NATO’s support
remains conditional on Kabul’s “commitment to a democratic society, based on
the rule of law and good governance, including progress in the fight against
corruption.” The western insistence on corruption-free governance has been a
major irritant for President Hamid Karzai.
Turning the screws on Karzai, who must
constitutionally step down as Afghanistan’s president after completing his
second term in 2014, NATO leaders stated, “The forthcoming elections must be
conducted with full respect for Afghan sovereignty and in accordance with the
Afghan Constitution. Their transparency, inclusivity and credibility will
also be of paramount importance. In this context, continued progress towards
these goals will encourage ISAF nations to further provide their support up to
and beyond 2014.”
So far, ISAF has functioned under a
“peace-enforcement” mandate under Chapter VII of the UN Charter. Now NATO will
seek a fresh UN mandate for its new mission that would be confined to training,
advice and assistance. The communiqué noted. “We will ensure that the new
mission has a sound legal basis, such as a United Nations Security Council
Resolution.
The joint communiqué papered over serious
rifts within NATO. Newly-elected French president, Francois Hollande, insists
on withdrawing French forces from Afghanistan by 2012, while German Chancellor
Angela Merkel wants to salvage NATO’s honour through a synchronised pullout.
These divisions are being gleefully exploited by the Taliban, which registered
its presence at Chicago with a 3-page statement urging NATO countries to follow
France’s example.
The ANSF already has responsibility for
security across half of Afghanistan, according to time lines that were mandated
in the November 2010 NATO summit in Lisbon. In the first phase, which was
completed in July 2011, the ANSF took charge of Kabul city, six smaller towns,
and two of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces. In the second phase that began last
November, Afghan forces assumed responsibility for a much larger area: six
provinces, seven cities and 40 rural districts. With the completion of the third
phase, which President Karzai announced on 13th May, three quarters
of Afghanistan will be under ANSF charge. But the most violent areas --- like
southern Afghanistan, where Taliban influence is strongest --- are still
controlled by western forces.
Despite “assuming security responsibility”
for large swathes of Afghanistan, the ANSF remains incapable of operating
independently. Western forces still provide crucial logistic support; medical
facilities; air support and mentoring. Experts say it will take at least a
couple of years for the ANSF to operate independently.
The biggest loser at Chicago was Pakistan’s
president, Asif Zardari, who accepted a special invitation to Chicago but
couldn’t get to meet his US counterpart. According to US press reports,
President Barack Obama is believed to have made a meeting conditional on
Islamabad agreeing to reopen American supply routes from Karachi Port to
Afghanistan. Despite a meeting between Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and
President Zardari, that deal was not closed.
At a press conference after the summit, US
president Barack Obama acknowledged “tensions between ISAF and Pakistan, the
United States and Pakistan,” but pointed out that, “they are being worked
through both military and diplomatic channels.”
Referring to the extremism and instability
in that country, Obama declared that “it is in Pakistan’s interest to work with
us and the world community to ensure that they themselves are not consumed by
extremism that is in their midst.”
Col I donot think Pakistan still looses. It would have if India would have grown its econmomic clout & would have succeed to get world powers to impose Iran like sanction on Pakistan. We have not imposed high cost on Pakistan for doing Kargil & later 26/11 so we are still prone to surprise assymetric warfare. On top of it we had Kangress supported public figures passing judgements on innocence of average Pakistani. On should as these Indians - how does JUD funds it operations if average Pakistani does not fund them. We achieved nothing with our posturing of last 3 yrs.Everything has merrily back to where it was pre 26/11. Momentary patriotism by party in power did not achieve anything. This will be same story for Afghanistan too.Since we have corrupt player there too
ReplyDeleteIs it a repeat of withdrawal from the South Vietnam, where there was no justification for a war. However here is a justification for the war.
ReplyDeleteIAF, in fact, feels Tejas is not even a fourth-generation fighter at present....
ReplyDeletehttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/UPA-report-card-claims-Tejas-inducted/articleshow/13421664.cmspkl
the snap speaks for itself... he is not able to hide pakistan's... distraughtness... distresseness... embarrassment... flusterness... humiliation... meekness...
ReplyDelete