August 6,
2008: India's success at containing
Islamic terrorists from entering northwest India (Kashmir), has caused some of
those terrorists to shift operations to Afghanistan. These Pakistanis are not
border tribesmen (Pushtuns) but men recruited from more populous parts of the
country (like the Punjab). They are being found among the dead and captured
Taliban in those few parts of Afghanistan that are sort of at war. Most of
Afghanistan has been at peace, or at least what passes for peace in this part
of the world, since 2002. But most of the adult male population is armed (the
majority of those just for self-defense). The chronically high unemployment
makes it easy for warlords (usually ambitious tribal leaders, actually anyone
with access to cash and guns) to recruit and to head off looking for power
(intimidating other tribes) or loot (stealing whatever they can).
This
ancient warrior tradition has been revived big time in the "Pushtun belt" (the
Pushtun tribal territories on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistani border) by the
establishment of the heroin trade in Helmand province. Most of the poppies are
grown here, and processed into opium and heroin, mostly for export. The trade
once flourished across the border in Pakistan, but two decades ago the
government shut it down, after experiencing a sharp increase in drug addiction
throughout Pakistan.
Now the
new addicts are Afghan, and most of the country is hostile to heroin and opium
production. But the drug lords don't want to move on again, as the next move
will take them out of Pushtun territory, and many of the Pushtun drug gangsters
won't have an easy time of it operating with "foreigners" (anyone who is not a
Pushtun). Before the Taliban were overthrown in 2001, they demonstrated their
willingness to tolerate the heroin trade (as long as nearly all of the stuff
was exported, because the Koran, by implication, forbids these drugs, along
with alcohol). The Taliban needed the high "taxes" that the drug gangs could
pay, and still does. The drug gangs and the Taliban (basically Islamic
conservatives with guns and attitude) need each other. The drug lords know they
can bribe plenty of government officials to leave them alone, while the Taliban
believe they can intimidate the government, and anti-Taliban tribes, to obey.
The
relationship between the drug gangs and the Taliban is an imperfect one. There
is no unified command, just dozens of local arrangements that follow the same
pattern (the drug gangs use bribes and Taliban violence to keep their poppy
fields and refining operations safe from government interference).
In terms
of casualties, the Taliban are losing. The NATO forces are losing about six men
per thousand per year. The Afghan police and army are suffering about twice
that casualty rate. The Taliban are losing three or four times as many as the
Afghan security forces. But the Afghan war is not so much about casualties as
it is about tribal politics. As long as some of the tribes, or tribal factions,
support the Taliban, the fighting will continue. This kind of violence has been
endemic in Afghanistan for thousands of years. These wars end either through a
threat of extermination (the old Mongol approach, which is no longer
acceptable), or negotiation. The big difference between the Afghan government,
and NATO, is over the importance of negotiation, and what can be given up. Many
in the government are willing to tolerate some degree of heroin production and
Taliban autonomy, in order to achieve more peace. NATO and the U.S. do not go
along with that option.
August 1,
2008: Publicly, Pakistan denies U.S.
charges that the Pakistani intelligence agency (the ISI) helped plan and carry
out the July 7th terror attack on the Indian embassy in Afghanistan.
Privately, Pakistan promises to root out Islamic conservatives and pro-Taliban
operatives in the ISI. This has been a problem with the ISI since the 1980s,
and no one has been willing to do the deed because the ISI could provide
accurate information on Islamic terrorists (as when al Qaeda and the Taliban
make terror attacks in Pakistan outside of the tribal territories.) But the
Islamic conservatives in Pakistan are not united, and some factions are now
openly at war with the government. The factionalism extends to the ISI, making
more difficult any attempt to clean up the organization. Unfortunately, it's
not just the ISI. There are Islamic militants (or their fans) throughout the
military and government. But nowhere are they as thick as in the ISI, and it's
becoming a public embarrassment. Expect to see some fireworks in this
department.