AFGHANISTAN: SENIOR MINISTERIAL AIDE TALKS ABOUT
TALIBAN, INSURGENCY
Najib Manalai is
an adviser to Afghanistan’s minister of culture and youth affairs and a
frequent commentator on the Taliban and, more broadly, militancy in
Afghanistan. Manalai spoke recently with RFE/RL correspondent Muhammad Tahir.
He discussed the Taliban and its subgroups, the current insurgency and its
roots, and possible solutions to the ongoing violence.
RFE/RL: Who are the current Taliban?
Najib Manalai: Well, the Taliban are no
longer a single group, one single entity. The Taliban, at first, were students
-- Afghan students who traditionally wanted to study theology. In the
beginning, they were a group of Afghans who had very good intentions after five
years of anarchy in Afghanistan -- they just wanted to bring peace to
Afghanistan. They were very popular. Then this movement was somehow hijacked by
Pakistani intelligence services and by international terrorist groups. Now when
we talk about the Taliban, we are talking about a kind of amalgam of different
forces, such as people who are unhappy about government forces because they
can’t find their place in the present confederation of Afghan policies; people
who are committed to other interests -- foreign interests, mainly from the
Pakistani circle; and there are people with the fundamentalist ideology of the
international Islamic movements. "The Taliban" is a composite of
these components.
RFE/RL: You mean that currently they
don’t have any unified leadership?
Manalai: They don’t have a unified
leadership; but in truth they have leadership that is de facto leadership. As a
matter of fact, people who are very active in the present day war situation in
Afghanistan are those Taliban with ties to international terrorism. And they have
leadership that is known as Al-Qaeda, with an agenda that is really a terrorist
agenda. I think their objective is not to seize power in any country; they only
want to destroy the existence of a system of references and values.
RFE/RL: Al-Qaeda is a known terrorist
group. But we can see a difference between Al-Qaeda and the Taliban in that the
Taliban have ruled a country; they in fact had a regime in Afghanistan. But
Al-Qaeda didn’t. Now you say the [Taliban] are not seeking to take power. So
what is the difference between these Taliban and those Taliban? What has
changed?
Manalai: What I said is that the
Taliban is a composite group. And some of them wanted a kind of representation
of Islam in Afghanistan, and they have seized power for this purpose. In the
beginning, they even pretended to hand over power to the king, because they
didn’t regard themselves as a political force in Afghanistan. When [Pakistan’s
Inter-Services Intelligence] got tangled up in Afghanistan’s politics, they
made this group a political group that was heading a government. But still,
that government was a government based on Islamic roles and with very slight
ideological charge. And then, in 1998 when [Osama] bin Laden was thrown out of
Sudan and he came to Afghanistan, then Al-Qaeda took actual power in
Afghanistan -- and Mullah [Mohammad] Omar was an image of power but not actual
power. And what was important for Al-Qaeda was not that there was an Islamic
government in Afghanistan but that there were 650,000 square kilometers of land
where they could train their people for action anywhere in the world. So we see
through history that those people who held power in Afghanistan and those who
were behind the scenes leading this movement are not the same.
RFE/RL: At the beginning of our
discussion, you mentioned that the Taliban is a composite of many groups. One
of those groups, you said, is people who are unhappy with the government. If we
take this part of your comment into account, we see many warlords who are also
unhappy with the current government. Do you see any cooperation or links
between the Taliban and those warlords?
Manalai: Actually, the issue of
warlords is a different issue. Many warlords came to power [on the coattails]
of the international coalition -- took power after the fall of Taliban. These
people wielded power during the process of democratization [and] of
establishing [the] central government, and now some of them have lost part of
their power. Some of those people are linked with those who are engaged with the
armed opposition -- globally, people call them Taliban. This is the best
example of what I have said -- that all people are not Al-Qaeda, [or] Islamic
fundamentalists, [or] genuine Taliban. There are people who just want to play a
role in Afghan politics and they want to play this role through violent means.
RFE/RL: So under the current
circumstances, it seems like a very complicated situation. So what are the ways
to defeat these insurgents?
Manalai: Well, to defeat these people,
the first thing is in my opinion to distinguish these three groups. Al-Qaeda is
a group -- with them you can’t reach any constructive result through
dialogue...with these people. It’s very hard to fight against them, but you
have to fight them everywhere in the world. Another group -- which is led by
foreign interests in Afghanistan -- to deal with them is very easy: You just go
to the source of their power, their financing, their equipment and training; if
you dry up their source of income, they will fall by themselves. The third
group is genuine Afghans who lost their way in different circumstances
throughout history. You can discuss with them, through discussion bring them to
the democratic process of Afghanistan’s reconstruction.
So as long as we
don’t differentiate [among these] three components of this big entity that we
call the Taliban, we won’t get very far in solving the current military
situation in Afghanistan.
RFE/RL: We have heard a lot about
foreign involvement in the reemerging Taliban insurgency. But Afghans themselves
also have some role to play in that. So how can [the Taliban] attract ordinary
people, many of whom say they are tired from 25 years of war in Afghanistan?
Manalai: Yes, why ordinary people
welcome Taliban propaganda... I think the answer is very easy: When the Taliban
[regime] was ousted from Afghanistan, Afghans had huge hope and expectations.
And all these expectations didn’t come true. We were hoping for economic
developments, but there is no economic development. The international community
tried to resolve the opium issue by destroying opium fields; but they didn’t
offer any alternative for the people who have been living on this means of
income. We still do not have light industries in Afghanistan; Afghanistan is a
consumer country. In a country where you don’t have any local production --
except opium -- you cannot expect to eradicate opium and [make] people happy.
So this is one reason.
And the other reason
is the international forces who are present in Afghanistan. They came to
Afghanistan, but they didn’t try to understand the country. They came with
Western formulas and they thought they would work in Afghanistan. And they
[made] mistake after mistake -- bombing the wedding parties, for instance,
killing innocent people. These are all things that could happen in a war, but
when these things [happen] repeatedly and there is no readjustment of the
action, it creates some [anxiety] in the population.
RFE/RL: As we analyze the situation
in Afghanistan from abroad, reports are mostly based on fighting between
Taliban and foreign coalition forces. Are you happy with the role that the
Afghan government is playing in this fight?
Manalai: TheAfghan government is part
of a coalition, so I think the Afghan government plays its due part in this
fight. But I am not happy with the situation, because if we want to win, we
must "Afghanize" this war.... In five years, we have been unable to
[create] a reliable Afghan National Army with the equipments it needs, with the
level of training it needs, and with the people it needs. So during the last
five years, we lost many [opportunities] to create a reliable Afghan National
Army. Think about one thing: When NATO sends one soldier to Afghanistan -- and
these soldiers are coming from European countries -- it costs, let’s say, $10.
But with these same $10 you can train, equip, and [deploy] maybe five to seven
Afghan soldiers. So as long as we have not "Afghanized" this war, we
will not win it. And these people who are coming from outside, they came only
for a limited period of six to eight months, and they are also unfamiliar with
the cultural situation of Afghanistan. But the Afghan guys, who were born and
grew up in Afghanistan, could deal with all these potential cultural problems.
So the first thing is to "Afghanize" the war.
The second thing is
to distinguish among the enemies. There are some enemies to whom we will not
speak, but there are some enemies that we can make friends if we speak to them.
So why not speak to them? In my opinion, in the last five years the Afghan
government has not used all [opportunities] to speak to them; and sometimes
Afghan government is not responsible for this lack of communication.
Misunderstanding of the Afghan situation by foreign assistance forces is one of
the main factors that has led the Afghan government to not succeed.
RFE/RL: Do you have any idea of the
current number of Taliban fighters who are directly involved in fighting?
Manalai: I don’t have a figure. But I
can imagine that there are not many thousands, at best; and at worst, there are
maybe 2,000 or 3,000 people.
Authors Bio:-
Muhammad Tahir is Prague based Journalist specializing in Afghan/Iran and
Central Asian Affairs, and is author of Illegal Dating-A Journey into the
Private Life of Iran.