segunda-feira, 24 de maio de 2010
BBC BlogNetwork "What should foreign powers be fighting for in Afghanistan?" Difficult question to which there's got to be an answer.
NATO military chiefs, diplomats, heads of government and the Afghan government in touch with all tribal chiefs in their fiefdoms will sooner rather than later need to break out from an essentially deadlocked conflict.
Western forces by the very nature of things cannot remain in the country indefinitely fighting an elusive enemy that wages a dirty war of insurgency in its own terms.
Successes scored by NATO military one day are sidelined the next by some bomber whose movements cannot ever be fully tracked.
There is no denying the fact that a lot is at stake in the remotest areas of the Afghan/Pakistan border.
For the people in the region and the larger world beyond.
The nature of the territory and the history of its inhabitants - for whom nationhood is still a far cry - makes it extremely difficult to find a final solution for extremists.
Yet this is the one and only worthy justification for continued foreign presence.
Reports indicate the Afghan government is ineffectual and corrupt, unable to deliver for the Afghan people in ways that would permanently undermine Taliban influence.
Against such a backdrop it would seem to me that just about everything remains a priority in the country.Nearly nine years on since the intervention began.
Troops are there mainly to provide security worldwide from a specific hot spot.The governments who sent them in have a responsibility towards the reconstruction effort as well.
As expected this has proven much harder to achieve.
Lasting security will be forthcoming when extremism has been severely weakened by muscle power and soft power exercised nearly simultaneously.
A multiple tall order that rests on a vision for the future that matches present military operations to civilian efforts in a particularly tough environment.
NATO should also try to garner support from countries in the region and further afield.
Indeed every organised State sharing a common desire to rid the world of religious fanaticism should seek to help out finding a way to fix Afghanistan permanently.
Western forces by the very nature of things cannot remain in the country indefinitely fighting an elusive enemy that wages a dirty war of insurgency in its own terms.
Successes scored by NATO military one day are sidelined the next by some bomber whose movements cannot ever be fully tracked.
There is no denying the fact that a lot is at stake in the remotest areas of the Afghan/Pakistan border.
For the people in the region and the larger world beyond.
The nature of the territory and the history of its inhabitants - for whom nationhood is still a far cry - makes it extremely difficult to find a final solution for extremists.
Yet this is the one and only worthy justification for continued foreign presence.
Reports indicate the Afghan government is ineffectual and corrupt, unable to deliver for the Afghan people in ways that would permanently undermine Taliban influence.
Against such a backdrop it would seem to me that just about everything remains a priority in the country.Nearly nine years on since the intervention began.
Troops are there mainly to provide security worldwide from a specific hot spot.The governments who sent them in have a responsibility towards the reconstruction effort as well.
As expected this has proven much harder to achieve.
Lasting security will be forthcoming when extremism has been severely weakened by muscle power and soft power exercised nearly simultaneously.
A multiple tall order that rests on a vision for the future that matches present military operations to civilian efforts in a particularly tough environment.
NATO should also try to garner support from countries in the region and further afield.
Indeed every organised State sharing a common desire to rid the world of religious fanaticism should seek to help out finding a way to fix Afghanistan permanently.
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