Since you've been to Afghanistan, what practical solutions can your offer? I note that, while many Afghans are leaning toward the Taliban once more, they do remember the Taliban's ban on music. I also recall that when American forces liberated Kabul and Kandahar people celebrated by doing things such as listening to radios and flying kites - both of which were prohibited by the Taliban. Is there any way we can leave behind any values such as educating girls (I recall sometime back when some Afghan threw acid in the faces of schoolgirls) and not subjecting women to house arrest?
Its a very difficult situation, Tim. As I intimated in earlier posts, I am not very hopeful for the future of the country post-drawdown. While the West has definitely made progress and improved the situation for Afghans, specifically women, over the past 10 or so years of involvement, I don't think that progress is going to stick. I think that the cost of these meagre gains, both in terms of human lives lost & financial impacts, does not justify the expense.
If I could offer solutions that worked, consistently, I would not merely be a development consultant, I would be a Nobel laureate.
In a nutshell, I would offer the following: (which apply not only to Afghanistan, but pretty much any post-conflict environment.)
- Economic development & poverty reduction produce an overall climate where extremists find it more difficult to operate. Get someone hooked on Indian bollywood movies, blue jeans & make sure they are fed, and lo and behold, they may stop committing atrocities. Private sector development, education, and building a climate supportive of small/medium business help to achieve these goals.
- A committment to legal reform. Making sure that a country's laws are well-enough written to be enforced, making sure the judicial system is efficient and not corrupt, and a well-trained and well-paid police force to support enforcement.
- Basic infrastructure. In rural areas, this means irrigation, and where possible/relevant, access to electricity & technology to support a shift from subsistence livelihoods to market farming. In urban areas, this means sewage and waste removal, hospitals, roads - the fundamentals of what people need to move forward.
I personally feel that the ideas that support horrible notions like honor killing, fester in places where poverty & hopelessness reign. Give people the basics, and it takes away some of the ability of the terrorist / fundamentalist to gain traction.
As an aside - the acid attack is not a once-off incident. That is a frighteningly regular form of terror used in Afghanistan. I would have to go through my security reports, but I would say that reported assaults with acid on women/schoolgirls occurs probably monthly. Add in unreported assaults, and you get the picture. I can't comment if there has been a significant reduction between 2010-2012. But when I left, while there were probably fewer such incidents as compared with prior years, there were still far too many.