October 28,2008:
Afghanistan has been a problem for
thousands of years, and the main cause of the violence and instability has
always been the same. The tribalism that rules the rural areas encourages
groups of guys with weapons (once spears, swords and bows, now rifles and RPGs)
to go hunting. Not after animals for eating, but after other tribes for
whatever could be stolen (including women and children, and anything that could
move under its own power or be carried.) This is not unique to Afghanistan, but
it a common pattern with tribal societies the world over. The problem in Afghanistan
is that this tribal culture is still alive and well. It may have weakened in
the urban areas, but once you get out into the countryside, you shed several
centuries when it comes to social relationships. Another annoying custom common
throughout the country is the willingness to quickly switch sides, or make, and
break, truces. The code of the hills here is very opportunistic. As the
fictional tribal chieftain, Don Vito Corleone put it; "It's
business."
The bandits
will also wear labels if it suits them. Bandits love to identify themselves as
Taliban, because that often sends the police or troops chasing after any real
Taliban in the neighborhood. The drug gangs, which are wealthier, and more powerful
(at least in terms of firepower) than the Taliban, also like to pretend they
are something else (peaceful farmers, innocent merchants, concerned tribal
elders, anything but what they really are).
In other
words, most of the hostile gunmen out there are not Taliban, but bandits or
hired guns protecting the drug business. And all of them are up for a little
crime on the side. Highway robbery is a popular outdoor sport. It's not for
nothing that most rural homes look like little forts. If you don't protect
yourself, no one else will, and you'll lose everything.
The Taliban
are seeking out and killing Christians who they suspect, or just accuse, of
trying to convert Moslems to Christianity. The Taliban took credit for the
recent murder of a British Christian in Kabul, with accusations of trying to
spread Christianity. An Afghan court was also persuaded to withdraw the death
sentence for a 24 year old Afghan college student accused of blasphemy (for
writing on the Internet an article the judges considered critical of the
Prophet Mohammed's views on women). The young man was sentenced to 20 years in
prison instead.
The fighting
across the border in Pakistan continues to have an impact on the Afghan
Taliban. The Pakistani Taliban are being destroyed by the Pakistani army. The
Pakistani Taliban are offering to surrender, in return for a ceasefire. The
army demands disarmament first. Even reinforcements from the Afghan Taliban
have not been able to save the Pakistani Taliban. But the army won't destroy
the Pakistani Taliban, only damage it. The Pakistani Taliban will surrender,
lose a lot of their weapons and some of their leadership. But the conservative
religious ideas, and tribal attitudes that created the Taliban, will still be
there. And the Taliban will rise again, as it long has under a lot of different
names. Fanatic, and heavily armed, tribesmen spouting scripture and killing
anyone considered an "unbeliever", is an ancient problem in this part
of the world.
UN and U.S. officials
differ on how much drug production has declined in Afghanistan this year. The U.S.
says it will drop 31 percent, the UN says it will drop only six percent. The
drug gangs are under increasing pressure, because they are seen as a major
financial backer of the Taliban, and the source of much corruption within the
government. The population as a whole is growing more hostile to the drug
lords, because more Afghans are becoming opium or heroin addicts. This is a
pattern that appeared two decades ago in Pakistan, before the government there
drove the drug business into Afghanistan.
Foreigners
are finding that, while Afghanistan needs roads in order to build a stronger
economy, it also needs an effective police force to keep the tribal bandits
from plundering travelers along those new roads. The banditry is not new, but
the roads are, and they don't go well together. Building a police force that
can deal with the bandits can be done, the Pakistanis and Indians have done it
during the last century. But the solution means police strong enough to take on
tribal militias (who don't want to give up their traditional right to steal
from strangers).
October 25,
2008: French officials said they were
not concerned that the Taliban had captured a Milan anti-tank missile launcher,
and two missiles. This happened during an operation in the Alasai Valley, north
of Kabul, on the 18th. About a hundred Taliban attacked 300 French troops and
the French withdrew, leaving behind the missiles in their haste. Smart bombs
were used to kill at least 14 of the attackers. French officials said all the
French troops got away, and that the Taliban would not be able to use the Milan
missiles without special training.
October 24,
2008: Fifteen Afghans face the death
penalty in the UAE (United Arab Emirates) for trying to smuggle in 450 pounds
of heroin. Smuggling heroin is where the big money is, but it's also very
risky. Saudi Arabia regularly beheads drug smugglers, and Iran has special
police units that spend all their time roaming the Afghan border looking for
drug smugglers. These police are under orders to shoot first and shoot to kill.
That's mainly because the smugglers play by the same rules.
October 22,
2008: In the east, an Afghan army check
point was hit by a smart bomb, after some confused communications between
foreign and Afghan army commanders over who was firing on road traffic. Nine
Afghan soldiers were killed. There have been a growing number of friendly fire
incidents, mainly due to poor communications between Afghan and foreign troops.
There are also problems with local tribesmen hired for security (for
reconstruction workers or construction projects.) These guys have guns, but not
much discipline. It is believed that the "Afghan soldiers" were
actually local tribesmen wearing some kind of uniform, working as security
guards and firing on U.S. troops (either deliberately or by mistake.)
October 21,
2008: The U.S. revealed that U.S. Army Special
Forces had raided a Taliban camp last week and rescued an American who had been
kidnapped two months ago about 50 kilometers west of Kabul. Afghan tribesmen are
increasingly turning to kidnapping as a get-rich-quick scheme. The growing
availability of cell phones makes it easier to make arrangements for collecting
the ransom. This is a worldwide problem, and the most effective techniques (for
grabbing someone and collecting a ransom without getting caught) have been
quickly spread via the Internet. In Afghanistan, foreigners are the preferred
prey, because there is less risk of a tribal vendetta. These feuds can get very
nasty, especially if you are identified and your victim is from a stronger, and
vengeance prone, tribe or clan.