Pubdate: Mon, 16 Oct 2006 Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand) Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2006 Contact: http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/39 RIGHTING THE AFGHAN WRONGS Five years ago, the Taliban regime in Afghanistan fled along with its Arab terrorist allies in the US invasion that followed the Sept 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. Since then, the country has failed to establish a decent, functioning government. Despite much aid and strong support from the United Nations and the world, Afghanistan is in desperate trouble. The viable economy consists almost entirely of opium production and drug trafficking. Terrorism, particularly suicide bombers, threatens life everywhere. The Taliban army, routed but not disintegrated in 2001, has regrouped and remains a deadly military threat. There are open fears in Afghanistan that the Taliban rebels pose an actual threat to central power. The commander of Nato forces, British Gen David Richards, believes the Kabul government and international supporters have as little as six months before the Taliban begin to make major gains. The extremists have survived by mounting tough military resistance in the Afghan mountains. But, says Gen Richards and his Nato staff, the Afghan people are beginning to miss the social order and security of the Taliban days more than they appreciate their current freedom. The Afghanistan government, the United Nations and Nato must solve three major problems if they are to prevent failure. The first is that President Hamid Karzai and his government in Kabul have failed to lead. Mr Karzai, ministers and civil servants all have become bogged down in bureaucracy and indecision. There is little obvious governance, massive corruption, and the drug trade has grown out of control. Instead of dealing forthrightly with regional warlords - making deals where possible, dealing decisively where necessary - Mr Karzai has created an administration that is neither willing nor able to confront the serious problems of the country. The president has a point when he blames niggardly resources and aid, but not much of one. Example: On numerous occasions, Thailand offered to help with anti-opium crop-replacement expertise, while Kabul dithered and wavered. That brings up the second point. Afghanistan produces almost all the world's supply of opium meant for the traffickers of heroin. Use of this dangerous, killer drug is growing again, exactly because of the increased availability. Afghans are opposed to using herbicide to kill the opium crops, mainly for the irrational, wartime fear of chemicals dropped from airplanes. The government has vacillated on crop substitution as heavily armed, influential gangs and warlords have taken over the drug trade. Even farmers who curse drugs and want clean options are enslaved by the drug gangs, forced by poverty and lack of opportunity to grow opium. The Taliban, as they have been since their inception, are the chief drug traffickers. Finally, there is the role of Pakistan in Afghanistan's troubles. Islamabad and President Pervez Musharraf long ago began harsh crackdowns and arrests of al-Qaeda, both the Arab invaders and their home-grown supporters. But they have benignly accepted the Taliban - originally created and fed by the Pakistan army's Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence. This has created the huge and ultimately unfriendly problem for Afghanistan of providing safe haven and a supply route for the Taliban. Pakistan also should consider the part its policy plays in worsening the narcotics problem which threatens, literally, to overwhelm Afghanistan. There remains an immense amount of world goodwill for Afghanistan. The nation has been torn by wars and civil wars without cease since 1979. Western forces will not remain forever, nor will Afghans allow them. But neither the United Nations nor the Afghanistan government has marshalled or exploited the available aid. A chaotic, undeveloped Afghanistan is unacceptable in today's world. A return to the abusive Taliban regime is unthinkable, even if that group were not directly tied to international terrorism. The international community needs to step up the efforts to move Afghanistan forward, mount a serious effort against the drug traffickers at all levels, and help the Kabul regime become an effective government. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman