Despite several serious
rounds of violence this week, including the assassination of a top peace
negotiator, the United States will continue to try to negotiate with
the Taliban, experts say. Afghanistan has been violent for a long time, they argue. This week just brought more of the same.
"[The United States] has been fighting for nearly 11 years, and we've already said we're not leaving until 2014," said C. Christine Fair, a Georgetown University Center for Peace and Security Studies professor who has worked in and studied the region for years.
"Talking is not only our
best option, it's our only option," she said. "We should expect that it
will be accompanied by violence."
The peace process has come in fits and bursts over the past year. When former Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced last June
that the U.S. was in preliminary talks with the Taliban in Afghanistan,
the idea was controversial. Many observers were skeptical that the
Taliban would ever deal.
Since then, the concept of negotiations has become more and more the norm. President Barack Obama touted it in his recent surprise visit to Afghanistan on the one-year anniversary of the killing of Osama bin Laden.
Yet months into the talks, it's murky as to who is involved and what, exactly, each party wants.
In March, the Taliban said it would not be setting up a diplomatic office
in Qatar to negotiate with Americans, blaming their decision on the
United States' "alternating and ever-changing position" on Afghanistan.
At the time, preliminary talks with what the Taliban called "the
occupying enemy" had already begun over the exchange of prisoners, the
group said.
Assassinated on the way to work
Observers remind that
the peace process is still relatively new considering the protracted
war, and all new and difficult enterprises have bumps in the road. In
Afghanistan, that cliche is relative.
There "weren't great hopes right now for peace talks at the moment in any case," said Michael O'Hanlon, a senior fellow at The Brookings Institution who specializes in defense and foreign policy.
On Sunday, Taliban interlocutor Moulavi Arsala Rahmani was killed when a gunman drove up to his car while Rahmani was stuck in traffic on his way to work in Kabul.
He was a member of the
High Peace Council, which was created by President Hamid Karzai and
heartily endorsed by the Pentagon. The HPC is tasked with reaching out
to insurgents and ex-Taliban who live in Kabul under government
protection. Rahmani was considered a moderate Taliban, someone who could
bring other Taliban members to the negotiating table.
The Taliban announced
recently that peace council members would be targets of its spring
offensive, but a Taliban spokesman said Sunday that the group did not
kill Rahmani.
Regardless, his death marked the second such high-level negotiator to be killed since last fall when HPC Chairman Burhanuddin Rabbani, a former Afghan president, was killed in a suicide bombing.
The biggest danger
Rahmani's assassination might have, O'Hanlon said, would be to scare
future Taliban defectors from talking with the West and allies, he said.
Riaz Mohammad Khan, the former foreign secretary of Pakistan, agrees.
"These things are unfortunate but can be expected," he said.
"On the more positive
side, I don't think recent violence suggests a strength in the Taliban
forces. I think we'll come understand what is happening in Afghanistan
as reflective of their weakness. It gives the Afghan people a chance
also to show that they won't be beaten down. It gives them a chance to
stick with peace talks."
More "green on blue" killings
Violence this week went
beyond Rahmani's death. A blast at a crowded market in northern
Afghanistan killed nine civilians on Monday.
Two more NATO troops
were also killed over the weekend, bringing the total NATO death toll to
eight in just a few days time. The two troops killed Sunday are
believed to be victims of so-called "green on blue" attacks in which Afghan security forces turn on their fellow soldiers.
Distrust between allied soldiers and Afghan soldiers appears to be at an all-time high. This year's string of scandals -- the Quran burnings at Bagram Air Base, photos of U.S. soldiers posing with body parts of alleged insurgents and crimes such as the Kandahar massacre -- has seriously frayed relations among the soldiers who must work side-by-side.
An experienced Pakistani
ambassador to China, the European Union, Belgium and other countries,
Khan suspects the recent violence could actually help rally the Afghan
army.
"If the U.S. chooses to
hold back and continue giving control to Afghan soldiers, as it appears
to be doing, I see this [positively]. If they pull back and act on
suspicion and fear, then it won't turn out well for anyone," he said.
At least 23 individuals
wearing an Afghan army or police uniform have shot and killed a
NATO-affiliated soldier this year, according to the Department of
Defense.
It's unclear whether some who have attacked NATO soldiers are actually Afghan soldiers or just in disguise.
Handing over more territory
Meanwhile, the Taliban
has demonstrated that it has plenty of fight. The earlier allied surge
in the country, especially southern Afghanistan, appeared to force the
Taliban to adopt new tactics such as relying on roadside bombs and
suicide attacks. In the past year, insurgent attacks overall have
decreased some 22%, and in some parts of southern Afghanistan by much
more, according to coalition figures. Civilian casualties rose to their highest level last year since 2001, CNN reported.
By the middle of this
week, officials announced that another large swathe of Afghanistan
territory would be handed over to local authorities, giving them control
of about 75% of the country.
Among the most striking
areas that would fall under Afghan control is the city of Kandahar, a
former Taliban stronghold, and several mountainous areas of Afghanistan,
which make for excellent hiding places for insurgents.
2014 is an election year for Afghanistan. Results could drastically change the atmosphere for peace talks, Fair said.
On Sunday, Obama and other world leaders gather at the NATO summit in Chicago,
where the future of Afghanistan will be the No. 1 topic. The meeting
will include Karzai, NATO allies and International Security Assistance
Force contributors, among others.
The Afghan constitution
prohibits Karzai from running another term. There haven't been any
candidates who've emerged as viable to take his place so far, much less
any that have appeared to align their platforms with Western goals. Watch Video
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