Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

War In Afghanistan: Realities And Prospects

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • War In Afghanistan: Realities And Prospects

    WAR IN AFGHANISTAN: REALITIES AND PROSPECTS
    Gagik Harutyunyan

    "Noravank" Foundation
    14 December 2009

    The establishment of the multi-polar world order is a long process and,
    despite system changes, realities inherited from the unipolar world
    will dominate in the military and political and economic developments
    for quite a long time. This circumstance becomes more vivid in the
    context of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But if Iraq issue, due to
    the irreversible changes which took place as a result of war, to one
    degree or another is close to some kind of stage outcome then the
    same cannot be said about Afghanistan.

    "Grey war" In a global plane there are countries and regions which
    developments are not sufficiently covered. Among analysts such
    territories are called "grey". For the USSR citizens the classical
    "grey" country was, for example, Afghanistan. The Soviet citizens had
    not been well informed for quite a long time about the war conducted
    by the Soviet army under the slogans of "international help" and
    "establishment of socialism" which had lasted for about 10 years
    (1979-1989) (during that war about 15 thousand soldiers were killed and
    Afghani losses, including civilians, were more than several hundred
    thousand1). In those years it was put down to the "peculiarities of
    the close Soviet regime" (particularly, by a part of the society
    which was to some extent informed about the war through "Voice of
    America", "BBC" and other radio stations). Let us also mention that
    the information blockade of the war in Afghanistan was abolished only
    in 1988-1989 during Gorbachev's "perestroika" which was followed by
    the withdrawal of the troops from the country.

    Some parallels 20 years passed and today in that very Afghanistan
    another conflict has been going on for 8 years. Today the US and
    its NATO allies assumed the role of the USSR. The slogans did not
    change too much either: today it is conducted in the context of "war
    on terrorism" and "establishment of the democracy". Of coarse today
    the international community is more informed about the developments in
    Afghanistan than the Soviet citizens before. But the recent monitoring
    of the information flows shows that the new war in Afghanistan is less
    covered in the mass media than, e.g. the processes in the Middle East.

    Thus, the region and a conflict going on there have again acquired
    "grey" status. In informational plane (and not only informational)
    the current situation is to some extent similar to the "hunger for
    information" in the Soviet period though the US and its allies can
    hardly be called totalitarian, "closed" countries.

    At the same time the references to the issues of Afghanistan on
    the information field has been growing since 2009 which reminds the
    "perestroika" period. In this regard let us mention that today in the
    US in the context of "relaxation" strategy2 a kind of "perestroika"
    is taking place. It is remarkable that in 1988-1989 the situation
    in Afghanistan was beyond control which is also very close to the
    current situation.

    It is conditioned by the fact that the Americans and their allies
    are fighting not only Taliban and Al-Qaida fighters. There are also
    many ethnic groups and various units which activated their actions
    to a considerable extent. The geography of those actions has also
    extended: today the battles are fought not only in the territory of
    Afghanistan but also in the territory of Pakistan.

    The tactics of the fighters has also changed. The usage of the missiles
    and carrying out terrorist acts by the suicide bombers (there were no
    such things during the Soviet occupation) created new and difficult
    situation. The military actions today "moved" to the comparatively
    quite big cities (it is suffice to remember the recent attack on the
    UN office in Kabul and the bombing of Peshavar (Pakistan). The western
    militaries have not elaborated efficient remedy against such tactics.

    In a consequence a number of casualties among the US and NATO soldiers
    is considerably growing and in October 2009 American army lost about
    60 soldiers. Though in 2009 the United States has sent 17 thousand
    additional troops to Afghanistan and because of that war it raised
    its military budget for 2010 on $30 billion, among other allies the
    signs of demoralization can be noticed. Some countries (e.g. Italy) are
    going to withdraw their troops3 and in other countries (e.g. Germany)
    the growing public unease concerning that war can be noticed.

    Generally, it should be stated that the negative attitude in the
    international community towards the war is growing. In western mass
    media one can meet many materials where parallels are drawn between
    wars in Afghanistan and Vietnam. In Vietnam War the US suffered a
    defeat which is regarded by many American commentators as shameful.4

    As it is known under such conditions the solutions are tried to be
    found in the political plane.

    Certain uncertainty In March 2009 the president Obama unveiled the
    programme of the American actions in Afghanistan and Pakistan which
    acquired name AfPak. According to the paper the main goals of the US
    in South Asia are the annihilation of the terrorist groups and the
    creation of the efficient security system. In the analytical community
    and some circles of the American higher command the presentation
    was interpreted as the new US administration editing G. Bush global
    strategy in other spheres had not changed its stance on Afghanistan
    issue. Particularly, according to the Council on Foreign Relations
    (CFR) expert Daniel Mark5 the policy of Washington in regard to the
    aforementioned countries remains uncertain. According to the expert in
    the new administration's programmes the level and the distribution of
    the military, intelligence and diplomatic resources are not clarified.

    It is also very important that the terms of completion of the programme
    are not determined. In the opinion of the CFR experts the US should
    change their priorities in the regions by directing the main part
    of military and political and financial help not to Afghanistan but
    to Pakistan where the maintenance of the stability (especially in
    the sphere of nuclear weapons) is much more important6. D. Mark also
    mentions that under the bareness of the material resources the close
    cooperation with Pakistan in military-political sphere demands fewer
    expenses than the war in Afghanistan. It is considered anyway that
    in both countries the emphasis should be placed on the actions of
    the armed forces and special services rather than on the issues of
    "state formation" and "social and economic development".

    It is also remarkable that according to CFR expert the American
    presence in Afghanistan do not promote the improvement of the situation
    but it also creates an impression that "the US has secret reasons"
    to stay in that country. Let us mention that the latter issue is
    really topical and it should be accepted that the current discussions
    on AfPak do not touch upon the true goals of the war.

    Strategic goals It is not a secret that the "war on terrorism" and
    "the establishment of democracy" in Afghanistan and Pakistan are simply
    PR slogans7. And, of course, the experts of the American "think tank"
    in the sphere of foreign policy - CFR - are well aware of that. The war
    in South Asia is conducted exclusively in strategic and geopolitical
    planes and CFR advising the Obama administration to "take easy" the
    issues of "state formation" and "social and economic development",
    in fact, calls not to forget the true objectives of that war. The
    geography of the region is almost ideal to implement actions against
    main competitors of the US - China and Russia (and in some cases even
    Iran). There has already been created the developed American military
    infrastructure which consists of 12 bases and includes airports and
    other structures. But the purpose is not only the possibility of
    delivering efficient airstrikes against the enemies in case of war.

    Dominance in this region allows influencing directly the former
    Soviet Central Asian republics. The dissemination of the radical
    Islam ideology and forming of the terrorist groups in those republics
    contributes to the creation of the "instability zone" near southern
    borders of Russia through "colour revolutions" and other actions.

    There are the same considerations regarding China.

    According to numerous sources before the September 11, 2001 the CIA
    aspired to direct the radical Islamists to boost the separatism among
    Uyghur and the recent unrest in Xinjiang comes to prove that there
    is some "progress" in that line.

    The geo-economic and energy factors are also extremely important. The
    planned Caspian-Indian ocean oil pipeline should go through
    Afghanistan, and the gas pipeline which would connect Turkmenistan
    and India, according to yet unapproved final project, also would go
    through the territories of Afghanistan and Pakistan.

    But according to some experts the US plans are not confined to
    exclusively geopolitical and geo-economic considerations.

    Global opium war According to the version of German political scientist
    William Engdhal the US troops are in Afghanistan also in order to
    control the biggest in the world opium cultivation and supply market
    and to use the drugs against Russia and the super-profits from it
    should go to restore the American financial system which suffered
    from crisis.

    This version may seem to be unserious but the facts give the seal to
    the version of the German political scientist. According to various
    sources (including the head of the US president administration's Office
    of Drug Control Policy) in recent 1-2 years Afghanistan has been
    supplying about 90% of world opiates black market. According to the
    data of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (NODOC) issued
    in 2009 Russia has become the largest drugs market which consumes 20%
    of annual drugs production8. The UN brings the data that for the recent
    10 years the number of the drug addicts in that country grew ten times
    and now it is about 1.5 million. Russia annually uses 75-80 tons of
    heroins (i.e. more than China - 45 tons, the US and Canada together -
    20 tons) and there are about $13 billion spent on buying drugs.

    The member of the International Relations Committee of the State Duma
    of the RF Semyon Baghdasarov9 who is one of the recognized experts on
    Central Asia also affirms that the US and NATO do not fight against
    drugs in Afghanistan but they, in fact, promote their cultivation.

    Particularly, S. Baghdasarov mentions that in 2001 under the rule
    of Taliban only 185 tons of opium were gathered while at present 43
    times more, i.e. 8000 tons. It should also be added that according
    to William Engdhal data the main sponsor of drugs cultivation and
    supply in Afghanistan is Hamid Karzai.

    It should be mentioned that the "opium" psychological weapon has been
    known since 17th century. The Dutch sold it as a spice to Indonesia
    in order to demoralize the Indonesians who opposed to the spreading
    of Dutch plantations in their country. Later the same technology
    was successfully used by the British in China. During the First
    (1840-1842) and Second (1856-1860) opium wars they substituted in tea
    trade silver for opium and could turn almost the half of the Chinese
    into drug addicts and thus, in fact, conquered the country.

    It is characteristic that the trade balance of China was in surplus
    while British one was in deficit. In a consequence of the opium wars
    the picture has changed. Let us mention that today the situation is
    almost the same: American economy is suffering the difficult stage,
    while the Chinese, despite global crisis, continues to grow.

    Possible prospects The current discussions on the Afghan issue on
    political arena come to prove that the United States has not clarified
    its further actions in that region. Let us mention that within the
    frame of the "hyperpreventive-super-preemptive" actions doctrine
    named after G.

    Bush the current strategy was elaborated under the unipolar world
    order when the domination of the US in global plane was undisputed.

    Today the situation has changed and this dictates the elaboration of
    new approaches. In the situation being what it is several scenarios
    are possible among which the followings can be mentioned:

    "CFR variant". The US preserves its current position in the global
    plane and manages to control the situation in South Asia adequately.

    Under such conditions the US, according to the CFR recipes,
    consolidating on the created positions manages with the help of army
    and special services to continue their old strategy. At the same time
    the American action programme will be more modest and unpretending
    in regard to the "democratic" and "global anti-terrorist" projects.

    According to this variant the US will preserve the considerable part
    of its opportunities and will try to implement (maybe not in the AfPak
    but in PakAf format) the aforementioned "strategic goals" and continue
    "global opium war".

    "Vietnam scenario". The US continues losing its political and economic
    grounds in global plane and at the same the situation in South Asia is
    getting beyond control. In the circumstances concerned the American
    administration (maybe the next one, and according to the mentioned
    scheme it maybe headed by Barak Obama whose mission is the worthy
    "positioning"of the US in the multi-polar world) decides to withdraw
    their troops from the region10.

    In case of the latter scenario the uncontrolled chaotic situation
    may emerge and the developments may go in different and unpredictable
    ways. It is remarkable that Russian experts11 are most of all worried
    about the uniting of Afghanistan and Pakistan under the direction of
    radical Islamists. Such a development may also raise the possibility
    of nuclear confrontation with India. The one should not also exclude
    that such a scenario may even be preferable for the US12.

    1Sometimes in mass media one can meet the information about
    approximately one million casualties but we think that such information
    is most likely pursues propagandistic objectives.

    2See, particularly, Ô³Õ¡Õ£Õ&quot ;&# xD5;¯ Õ~@Õ¡O~@Õ¸O~BÕ&#x A9; ÕµÕ¸O~BÕ¶Õ&# xB5 ;Õ¡Õ¶,
    Â"Õ~@&#x D5;~@-Ô¹Õ¸O~BO~@O~DÕ&quot ;Õ¡ Õ°Õ¡O~@Õ¡Õ&# xA2 ;Õ¥O~@Õ¸O~BÕ©&#xD5 ;& #xB5;Õ¸O~BÕ¶Õ¶Õ ¥O~@Õ"
    Õ°Õ¡&#xD 5;´Õ¡Â¬Õ¿&#xD5 ; ¥O~DÕ½Õ¿Õ¨&# xC2 ;", Ô³Õ¬Õ¸Õ&#xA2 ;&# xD5;¸O~BÕ½. Õ¡Õ¦Õ£Õ&#xA1 ;&# xD5;µÕ"Õ¶
    Õ¡&#x D5;¶Õ¾Õ¿Õ¡&#xD5 ;¶Õ£Õ¸O~BÕ©&# xD 5;µÕ¸O~BÕ¶, #5 (9), Õ§Õ" 3, 2009O~I

    3In this context the incident with the Italian unit is
    significant. It was exposed that the special services of
    that country paid Afghan fighters for not fighting against
    Italians. See: http://www.infox.ru/accident/incident/
    2009/10/15/ Italyanskiye_spyecsl.phtml

    4We think that maybe such developments are justified from the point of
    view of the scenarios regarding the end of the war but in the aspect of
    the essence of the conflict they are not grounded enough. Of course,
    there were known geopolitical and geo-economic objectives in Vietnam
    War which constituted a part of the USA-USSR conflict, but the general
    impression is that the war had more competitive character.

    I.e., despite the geopolitical objectives and large-scale
    confrontation, the combatants (USA and USSR) tried to solve routine,
    operative issues. Meanwhile, initiating this war in Afghanistan
    Americans had indisputable advantage in global planes and the issues
    of competition with other states if regarded then only in the context
    of dominating "hyperpreventive-super-preemptive" doctrine.

    5Daniel Markey, From AfPak to PakAf: A Response to the New U.S.

    Strategy for South Asia.

    A Policy Options Paper, http://www.cfr.org/publication/19125

    6In this regard Daniel Mark offers to rename the programme into PakAf.

    7The same maybe said about the Soviet expansion. The developments
    round Afghanistan (particularly if we remember the war against that
    country conducted by Great Britain in the 19th century) mainly took
    place within the scope of classical geopolitical conceptions.

    8http://pda.lenta.ru/news/2009/10/22 /drugs

    9http://echo.msk.ru/programs/razvorot/5815 16-echo.phtml

    10Such a variant does not mean that the US loses the chances to
    restrain China and Russia from strategic point of view. Being the
    undisputed leader in the sphere of military technologies Americans
    aspire to change geopolitical concepts with the formation of the
    space missile forces (this is not a science fiction and it is close
    to the reality) which would allow keeping the main competitors at a
    gunpoint

    11Ð~PÐ"е&#xD 0;ºÑ~AанÐ&#x B 4;Ñ~@ Ð¥Ñ~@ам&#x D1; ~GиÑ...ин, Ð~Zак можÐ&#xB5 ;&# xD1;~B
    взоÑ~ @ваÑ~BÑ~LÑ~ A& #xD1;~O ЮжнÐ&#xB0 ;&# xD1;~O Ð~PзиÑ~O, ТÑ~@и
    Ñ~AÑ~F& #xD0;µÐ½Ð°Ñ~@Ð& #xB8;Ñ~O индÐ&#xBE ;-& #xD0;¿Ð°ÐºÐ¸&#x D1;~AÑ~BанÑ~A&#xD0 ;ºÐ¾Ð¹ войÐ&#xBD ;&# xD1;~K
    Ð~_оÐ"Ð&#xB8 ;Ñ~BиÑ~GеÑ~ A& #xD0;ºÐ¸Ð¹ кÐ"аÑ~A&#x D1; ~A, #57, 2009.

    12See, for example, Ô³Õ¡Õ£Õ&quot ;&# xD5;¯ Õ~OÕ¥O~@-Õ~@Õ¡O~@&#x D5;¸O~BÕ©ÕµÕ¸O~ BÕ¶ÕµÕ¡Õ&#xB6 ;,
    Ô²Õ¡Õ¦Õ&#xB4 ;& #xD5;¡Õ¢O~GÕ¥Õ¼ Õ¡Õ·Õ­Õ&#xA1 ;O~ @Õ°Õ" Õ´Õ¡O~@Õ¿Õ&# xA1 ;Õ°O~@Õ¡Õ¾Õ&# xA 5;O~@Õ¶Õ¥O~@Õ¨,
    http ://www.noravank.am/am/?page=analitics&nid=1572 Other issues
    of author FORMATION OF THE FUTURE [03.08.2009] "THINK TANKS" AND
    NATIONAL SECURITY [24.07.2009] MULTIPLE-VECTOR GLOBALIZATION AND
    PERMANENT CHAOS [03.04.2009] SYSTEM CHANGES [27.03.2009] FORMATION
    OF THE "POLYIDEOLOGICAL" SOCIETIES [19.01.2009] ON THE ELECTIONS AND
    POST-ELECTION PROCESSES IN ARMENIA [24.03.2008] On the problems of
    information security [21.03.2007]
Working...
X