Monday, July 19, 2010

White House shifts Afghanistan strategy towards talks with Taliban


Senior Washington officials tell the Guardian of a 'change of mindset' over the Obama administration's Afghanistan policy

The Obama administration is revising its Afghanistan strategy to embrace the idea of negotiating with senior members of the Taliban through third parties – a policy to which it had previously been lukewarm.

Negotiation with the Taliban has long been advocated by Hamid Karzai, the Afghanistan president, and the British and Pakistan governments, but resisted by the US.

The Guardian has learned that while the official position of the US government is still resistant to the idea of talks with Taliban leaders, behind the scenes a shift is under way, and Washington is now encouraging Karzai to take a lead in such negotiations.

"There is a change of mindset in DC," a senior official in Washington said. "There is no military solution. That means you have to find something else. There was something missing." The missing element is talks with the Taliban leadership, the official added.

The US rethink comes in the aftermath of the departure in June of General Stanley McChrystal, the top US commander in Afghanistan Barack Obama, apparently frustrated at the way the war is going, reminded hisnational security advisers that while he was on the election campaign trail in 2008, he had advocated talking to America's enemies.

A US review of Afghanistan policy is under way, and is due for completionin December, but officials in Washington, Kabul and Islamabad with knowledge of internal discussions said feelers have already been put out. Negotiations would be conducted largely in secret, through a web of contacts, involving governments such as Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, or organisations with back-channel links to the Taliban.

"It will be messy and could take years," said a diplomatic source.

The change of heart by the US comes as Afghanistan hosts the biggest international gathering in the capital for 40 years, with representatives from 60 countries and dignitaries including the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, and Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general.

The dominant theme of the Kabul conference is 'reintegration', which involves reaching out to low-level insurgents to encourage them to lay down their arms.

Earlier this year, outlining US policy, Richard Holbrooke, the state department special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, made a distinction between reintegration, which the US supported, and 'reconciliation', negotiation with senior members of the Taliban. Holbrooke said: "Let me be clear.There is no American involvement in any reconciliation process."

There is growing disenchantment in the US with the war in Afghanistan, and senators on the foreign relations committee last week grilled Holbrooke over what they described as a lack of clarity on an exit strategy, on the part of the Obama administration.

The US has no agreed position on who among the leaders of the insurgency should be wooed and who would be regarded as beyond the pale. The Taliban leader, Mullah Omar, would be a problem given he provided Osama bin Laden with bases in the run-up to the 9/11 attacks. The US would also find it problematic to deal with the Pakistan-based insurgents led by Sirajuddin Haqqani, whose group pioneeredsuicide attacks in Afghanistan. The third main element in the insurgency is Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a jihadist supporter who has hinted he is ready to break rank.

A source with knowledge of the process said: "There is no agreed US position, but there is agreement that Karzai should lead on this. They would expect the Pakistanis to deliver the Haqqani network in any internal settlement."

The US has laid down basic conditions for any group seeking negotiation. They are: end any ties with al-Qaida, end violence, and accept the Afghanistan constitution.

A senior Pakistani diplomat said: "The US needs to be negotiating with the Taliban; those Taliban with no links to al-Qaida. We need a power-sharing agreement in Afghanistan, and it will have to be negotiated with all the parties.

"The Afghan government is already talking to all the shareholders‚ the Taliban, the Haqqani network, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, and Mullah Omar. The Americans have been setting ridiculous preconditions for talks. You can't lay down such preconditions when you are losing."

Some Afghan policy specialists are sceptical about whether negotiations will succeed. Peter Bergen, a specialist on Afghanistan and al-Qaida, speaking at a seminar in Washington last week organised by theUnited States Institute of Peace, suggested a host of problems with such a strategy, not least why the Taliban should enter into negotiations "when they think they are winning".

Audrey Kurth Cronin, a member of the US National War College faculty in Washington, and the author of How Terrorism Ends, said talks with Mullah Omar and the Haqqani network were pointless because there would be no negotiable terms.

She said there could be talks with Hekmatyar, but these would be conducted through back channels, potenially by a third party. Given his support for jihad, she said, "it would be unreasonable to expect the US and the UK to do so.".

Asked how Obama's Afghan strategy was progressing, a senior former US government official familiar with the latest Pentagon thinking said: "In a word, poorly. We seriously need to be developing a revised plan of action that will allow us a chance to achieve sufficient security in a more sustainable manner."

Officials have mentioned possible roles in negotiation for the UN and figures such as the veteran UN negotiator, the Algerian Lahkdar Brahimi, who heads, along with the retired US ambassador Thomas Pickering, a New York-based international panel which is looking at such a reconciliation.

Another name mentioned is Michael Semple, an Irishman based in Boston at Harvard's Kennedy School who has extensive ties with the Taliban.



http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/19/obama-afghanistan-strategy-taliban-negotiate

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