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![]() Previous Editorials & Articles: Regulating US Presence in Iraq and in Afghanistan A New Political Lexicon For Afghanistan April 15, 2004 Upcoming Elections: Security, Fairness and Commitment Regalian Functions Berlin: Success or Failure نظری بر جریانات فعلی افغانستان و موضوع حاکمیت ملی -01.02.2002 11.26.2002 | Ailing Change the Doctor 08.27.2004 Since the end of 2001, Afghans have been fed with a potion that mixes a variety of active and placebo ingredients but the wounded, ailing Nation of Afghanistan has not really recovered. The remedy that the United States has prescribed for Afghanistan, without being contradicted by its allies or the United Nations, was intended to bring peace, stability, democracy and economic recovery from a quarter of a century of war, but so far it has not really worked. If you are an ailing patient, you take any medication the doctor prescribes without much questioning, hoping for the best. But if, after a few days, you are still sick, you return to the doctor’s office and usually he or she, while asking you to be patient, changes your medication and tries to find something more adequate. But if it is still not working, then you, the patient, start doubting of your doctor’s ability and wisely seek the advice of another one and even replace him. This is exactly where Mr. Karzai and his cabinet (in effect The Cabinet of Dr. Khalilzad) have mostly been incompetent in healing Afghanistan’s wounds and putting it back on the path to recovery. Part of the problem is that Mr. Karzai and his cabinet are twice impotent: one reason is that the real control is in the hands of the United-States and Ambassador Khalilzad pulls the strings; the other reason is that the interim Government has not been able to extend its control even an inch beyond… let’s say Kabul, to be charitable, in three years of power! It is sufficient to state the evidence of an alarming situation: security keeps deteriorating, drug production is in sharp increase and, not unrelated to these two previous points, regional warlordism is striving and taking root. So what did the United Nations’ Failure Too The United Nations holds its share of responsibility in the present failure in The United Nations’ lack of judgment can currently be witnessed in the repatriation process in which it is involved through the UNHCR (in association with the IOM) where it is helping Teheran and Islamabad press Afghans to return to their homes; including, in the case of Iran, in agreeing to silently participate in a forced repatriation campaign irrespective of human rights. The repatriation is happening while tens of thousands of Afghans who have returned from The road to Afghanistan’s overall recovery and normalization passes through the understanding that higher standard and accountability ought to be requested from all the major players involved in Afghanistan at this time: this includes Afghanistan’s political and militia leaders, the United States and allied countries involved in “Enduring Freedom,” the United Nations and, why not, the NGOs. Without higher standards and the demand for accountability, the wounded, weakened, immunodeficient * The International Organization for Migrations (IOM) is not a UN agency but works in collaboration with on these issues. | |