Robert D. Kaplan has an op-ed in the New York Times on the war in Afghanistan. An abridged portion of the article’s main substance appears below.

A Manhunt or a Vital War?
By ROBERT D. KAPLAN

THE rising violence in Afghanistan and fractious political situation in Pakistan have become leading issues in the American presidential campaign and the debates between the candidates. Indeed, after seven years of war in the region, it’s time to ask a very impolite set of questions: If we did, by chance, capture or kill Osama bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, would Afghanistan still matter? Would there be public support for sending more American troops to stabilize a country that has rarely in its history enjoyed strong central government and that abuts a tribal area in Pakistan that neither the British nor the Pakistanis have ever been able to control? Is the war in Afghanistan, deep down, anything more than a manhunt for a handful of individuals? And if it is, how do we define victory there?

After all, Afghanistan is not the only ungovernable space with an Islamic setting around the world that can provide a base for terrorists who want to attack the United States. The world is full of them: from Somalia to the southern Philippines to the Indonesian archipelago. Better, perhaps, not to be tied down with thousands of troops in one or two places, and instead use sophisticated, high-tech covert means to hunt down hostile groups wherever they crop up. The problem with Osama bin Laden, one could argue, was not that he had a haven in Afghanistan in the 1990s but that he was not pursued there with sufficient vigor.

So, here’s my answer: In fact, Afghanistan is more than a manhunt, and it does matter, for reasons that have not been fully fleshed out by policy makers or the military. Afghanistan looms larger than it appears. Strategically, culturally and historically speaking, Afghanistan and Pakistan are inseparable. In the 16th and 17th centuries, both countries, along with northern India, were united under the Mughal Empire. Today Pakistan, with 165 million people, is a nuclearized Yugoslavia in the making, and threatens to be torn apart by the Taliban rebellion in its North-West Frontier Province (and, possibly, by the growing Baluchi and Sindhi separatist movements in its southern half).

Since its birth 60 years ago, Pakistan has had darkly Shakespearean politics—but it is salvageable: it has an expanding urban middle class, and recent elections have by and large seen the defeat of religious extremists in favor of moderates. Pakistan’s future may hinge on the degree to which the United States can work with the Pakistani military to keep the Taliban rebellion from expanding not only throughout Afghanistan, but into Pakistan’s own cities as well.

Paradoxically, that will mean making deals with some Taliban groups against others. For the Taliban are not a monolithic organization, but bands of ornery Pashtun backwoodsmen who have been cut out of the power base in Afghanistan by an increasingly corrupt and ineffectual government in Kabul. They are not Al Qaeda: they lack a well-defined worldview and some are susceptible to political entreaties. But if our drone air strikes are not accompanied by nation-building steps like constructing roads and water wells, we will fail and Pakistan will be further destabilized.

A failure in Afghanistan that destabilized Pakistan would do India no favors. Indeed, Pakistan would not go quietly into history. Sindhi and Baluchi separatists talk openly of an alliance with India if Pakistan unravels. But India, while its intelligence services now and then stoke Baluchi separatism, is terrified of such a development.

In the end, victory in Afghanistan can be defined by achieving the kind of security there that existed in the 1960s, when King Zahir Shah controlled the major cities and the roads connecting them, and a relative peace reigned. Even under a weak central government, Afghanistan could finally achieve economic salvation: the construction of a web of energy pipelines that have been envisioned for years connecting Central Asia with the Indian Ocean. These might run, for example, from the natural gas fields of Turkmenistan down through Afghanistan and into the dense population zones of Pakistan and India, with terminals at ports like Gwadar in Pakistani Baluchistan and Surat in the Indian state of Gujarat.

In other words, in Afghanistan we are not simply trying to save a country, but to give a whole region a new kind of prosperity and stability, united rather than divided by energy needs, that would be implicitly pro-American. What the Pentagon calls the “long war” is the defining geopolitical issue of our time, and Afghanistan is at its heart. The fate of Eurasia hangs in the balance.


COMMENTS / 12 COMMENTS

[...] The Afghan War is for the Future of Pakistan, India, and the USTHE rising violence in Afghanistan and fractious political situation in Pakistan have become leading issues in the American presidential campaign and the debates between the candidates. Indeed, after seven years of war in the region, … [...]

Afghanistan » Afghanistan insurgency spiked from Pakistan added these pithy words on Oct 05 08 at 8:39 am

Don’t mean to burst your bubble. Where’d they gonna get the MONEY from, dude?

Yours Truly added these pithy words on 05 Oct 08 at 10:26 am

YT’s comment is the sort of trolling that CA would do well to ban.

Regarding Kaplan,

But India, while its intelligence services now and then stoke Baluchi separatism, is terrified of such a development.

What is the support for this?

tdaxp added these pithy words on 05 Oct 08 at 12:53 pm

tdaxp : dude, my apologies if I seem to be “trollin’”. But it’s the writtin’ on the wall, ain’t it? Hey, I’m worried ‘bout the region goin’ up in flames as well. Not in anyone’s interest. First the US economy goes under, what next? Pakistan evolvin’ into another extremist state with “nucular” arms pointin’ at America or Europe?

Yours Truly added these pithy words on 05 Oct 08 at 4:02 pm

Tdaxp – I can’t find a source off the top of my head, but many Indians I’ve talked to (at least ones living in the US) think India needs a stable Pakistan as a common enemy to unite disparate ethnic groups. India would certainly not benefit from a wave of ethnic separatism, nor would dealing with the refugees and security consequences of a massive failed state on its own borders be an easy task.

DPT added these pithy words on 05 Oct 08 at 5:35 pm

Its always refreshing to hear Kaplan’s take… thank you for posting it.

I don’t think anyone in the US would care about Afghanistan if bin Laden were not in the picture… And I have to say that I can think of better ways to spend my tax dollars than keeping India happy…. I find it VERY hard to believe that the US can run the best intelligence ops in Afghanistan – India and Pakistan MUST have better resources. I would be happy to see them take on some of the heavy lifting…

Alfred Russel Wallace added these pithy words on 05 Oct 08 at 11:27 pm

ARW, I fear you are correct—and your words bring up visions of scenes from the recent film “Charlie Wilson’s War.” That’s one reason Kaplan is advocating the importance of the region in this article.

Curzon added these pithy words on 06 Oct 08 at 2:01 am

Yeah, I think YT’s “trolling” is the elephant in the room on this issue. We can talk geopolitics all we want, but at the end of the day most voters are worried about what’s going on before the water’s edge. Whoever agrees to keep the war in Afghanistan going beyond the average American’s understanding of its justification is going to face a s—tstorm in the next election, especially if the economy hasn’t begun to recover by then.

That said, “Vietnamization” has never worked as well as we expect it to. As a non-expert bloviating from my armchair, I believe it would take an immense amount of money and training to build and maintain a halfway-effective native-run security infrastructure in that region. Even then, quality would probably be sub-par. It may just be more cost-effective to have our own troops there despite all the political flak.

The old “one British soldier is worth twenty of those beggars” argument…

Joe Jones added these pithy words on 06 Oct 08 at 2:02 am

When Ahmed Rashid started to write series of Afghan stories over Far Eastern Economic Review in the late 90’s,his concern was not only Bin Laden,but numbers of Uzbek,Tajik,Uighur and Pakistani Pashutun extremists making Afghanistan as the sanctuary thus could become the source of regional instability.He had also expanded this idea on “Taliban” which was written on the eve of 911,that Pakistan could be Talibanized if things in Afghanistan continues to remain as a failure state.

So I say there are dozens of reasons for the U.S and NATO to remain in Afghanistan after the would-be Bin Laden caputre and country like Japan should fund the effort.

Kinda offtopic,but I found out that Uzbek-Afghan warlord,General Abudul Rashid Dostum’s daughter is curretnly working in Tokyo as Uzbek/Dali/Pashutun/Japanese translator.She showed up in my office about three years ago and she still enlist in same translator company with my wife.

Aceface added these pithy words on 06 Oct 08 at 1:28 pm

When you consider the Energy quotient, not just Japan, but also China make for natural allies in this effort. This would obviously make the Indians nervous. Such is that part of the world.

ElamBend added these pithy words on 06 Oct 08 at 8:02 pm

Honestly, I didn’t think YT was trolling. No matter how important our presence- in Afghanistan or elsewhere- is, our ability to maintain that presence is dependent on our ability to pay the bills.

On that note, I wonder what the cost of the things we should have been doing (subverting or replacing the poppy industry, for example) compares with the cost of what we have been doing (running around burning fields and opium labs)?

Michael added these pithy words on 11 Oct 08 at 7:41 am

Joe Jones & Michael : thanks for defendin’ yours truly. Much appreciated.

YT added these pithy words on 13 Oct 08 at 2:35 pm

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The Afghan War is for the Future of Pakistan, India, and the US

Posted on 05 Oct 08 by Curzon. Subscribe to follow comments on this post. 12 comments. Add your thoughts or trackback from your own site.

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