AFGHANISTAN: CONFESSIONS OF A PEACE ACTIVIST
Rabia Elizabeth Roberts
October, 2009
Kabul: armed guards, machine guns and sand bags at every  intersection and at the door to my guest house – open sewers and fecal dust –  traffic jams of SUVs, military convoys, bicycles and pedestrians – six-story  buildings amidst crumbling houses and filthy refugee encampments – men, lots of  men everywhere, and street children. The women on the streets are conservatively  dressed (no skin showing) with big scarves. About a quarter of them wear the  signature blue head-to-toe burqa. 
 I have come to Kabul because I want to experience for myself what  is happening here, eight years after the U.S. ousted the Taliban. I have spent  the past 40 years of my life protesting war and working for peace in conflict  areas. I don’t believe that killing leads to peace.  
 I came here as part of a small peace delegation of mostly women  who share my conviction that President Obama must not send more troops and  should set a timeline for withdrawal of the 60,000 that are here.  
 But now – after seven intense days and nights of interviews and  meetings in Kabul – I no longer have that conviction. 
The best path to peace may not be the withdrawal of U.S.  and NATO troops. And since the troops here now are not able to provide enough  security for the Afghans to rebuild their country, it is possible more troops  may be needed.
It shocks me to admit this. But the voices I have heard – local  and international NGO workers, reconciliation activists, ex-Taliban members,  warlords, women in homeless shelters and in governmental positions – clearly  do not want a withdrawal of troops now.  They are under attack. The great  majority of the people I listened to – not all but the great majority – feel  that additional troops are necessary to train a viable Afghan army and a  national police force and to secure the country so that development projects can  proceed. Yes, we should have accomplished those goals by now, but we have  not.
Dr. Soraya, a dedicated and hopeful Afghan physician who is  Commissioner for Women’s Rights, told us, “If the international troops leave  Afghanistan now it could be a humanitarian disaster. There will be chaos and  rape again.”
Leading Questions
I am not the only one in our delegation who had to confront this  disparity between our pre-convictions and the reality we found. This disparity  became a serious tension in our group. 
After the second day of appointments, with most of the Afghans we  met expressing support for the presence of troops, one of the leaders of our  delegation said, “I don’t like what I am hearing.” So she changed her style of  questioning. For example, when she asked, “Do you want the troops to leave?” the  answers she received were mostly “No.” So she began asking questions like, “Do  you want development and jobs, or do you want that money spent on more troops?”  Sure enough, more people began to say they wanted “Jobs not war.” This was the  sound-bite she wanted. 
In my younger days as a social researcher for national-scale  projects, I learned a great deal about survey questioning. You can get the  answer you’re looking for by limiting the options presented in the question. A  more accurate approach is to formulate questions that are essentially  open-ended, questions that do not in themselves limit the field of the answer.   
So when I asked the same people, “Do you feel Afghanistan can  develop economically and socially at this time without military security?”  the  answer was “No. We need an army. The coalition forces must stay and train an  army of 250,000 Afghans. Until that happens we need U.S. troops to secure the  border with Pakistan so the Taliban stop coming and going from their training  camps there.”
I came to Kabul to listen and learn, and to report back home what  I witnessed. While I respect the heart values of those of my colleagues who  insist on reporting only Afghan voices that support their position, I feel the  simplicity of sound bites like “No more troops” risks misleading the American  people about their responsibility to the people of Afghanistan and about how  their own security interests are intertwined in the region.
A Snapshot of Three Decades of War
America is not an innocent bystander to the situation in  Afghanistan (and neither is Britain, Russia, Pakistan, or Iran.) Over the past  thirty years American policies have shown an appalling lack of long-range  thinking as well as arrogance and ignorance about the cultural and political  forces at play in the region. 
In 1979, Soviet troops invaded Afghanistan to bolster a faltering  communist government.  Blinded by cold war rhetoric, the CIA spent the next ten  years funding and arming an indigenous insurgency called the mujahedeen (Mr.  Wilson’s War). So the U.S. couldn’t be called to account, these funds were moved  through the Pakistan intelligence services (the ISI) who served their own needs  by directing arms and money to the most fundamentalist of the Islamic warlords  involved, slowly freezing out the moderate and nationalist leaders. When the  Soviets withdrew in 1989, the U.S. breathed a sigh of relief and promptly forgot  about Afghanistan.
With 1.5 million Afghans killed in the war and 4 million more  banished to squalid refugee camps, the country was in disarray. But the  mujahedeen militias divided along tribal lines had become accustomed to fighting  and the thrill of living near death. Almost as soon as the mujahedeen took over,  rivalries exploded into civil war. Armed with the weapons we supplied them they  plunged the country into another devastating six years of war.  
Many Afghans welcomed the “talibs” as they poured out of their  conservative madrassas over the border from Pakistan and offered to put an end  to the chaos. But the Taliban victory was soon its own scourge on the people of  Afghanistan. They imposed severe social and religious sanctions on the populace,  and welcomed the money and recruits that came from Saudi Arabia and Pakistan  with the express purpose of challenging Western-style civilization.
Three weeks after 9/11, American forces attacked Afghanistan.  Three months later the Taliban had melted away. Obsessed with cultivating war  with Iraq, we left the job in Afghanistan unfinished – with inadequate security  force, little money for reconstruction, and little attention to the growing drug  trade that was funding renewed terrorist activities. The Taliban and Al Qaeda  moved to Pakistan to regroup, recruit, and then returned to destabilize the  provincial and national governments of Afghanistan.
Americans are now tired of the “war of choice” in Iraq. Faced  with enormous domestic problems, Americans understandably want to be rid of the  Afghan problem once again. After 8 years of misguided bombing raids to “kill  Taliban” who are living in villages surrounded by civilians, we have created a  new multi-headed enemy. 
Today the Taliban are different from the original fundamentalists  who waged a war in the name of Islam. According to the director of the Peace and  Reconciliation process in Kabul “only about 10% -15% of Taliban are  ideologically motivated today.” The rest are a combination of poor villagers  angry at U.S. bombing, out of work youth, former militia, drug smugglers, plain  thugs and those from the countryside who distrust any national government no  matter whose it is. “Most of them,” the director told us, “if offered money,  land, jobs and personal security would put down their weapons and come  in.” 
You Break It, You Own It
Why is this mess our problem? Why should the boys and girls from  Indiana and Texas who I talked with at Edgar Military Base in Kabul come here to  risk their lives for the security of these people? Why? Because the U.S. has  been intimately involved in creating this mess, and we have a moral  responsibility to these people to help clean it up. And in terms of our own  self-interest, if we turn our back on Afghanistan now it will almost certainly  come back to haunt us.  
What does “clean it up” mean? It means we have to do many, many  things differently from how we have been doing over the past 30 years. In my  next letter I will try to outline a few of these courses of action.
Many analysts say the U.S. is using the war on terrorism as an  excuse to expand its military power in order to access resources throughout this  region. This may be true. After 40 years of peace activism it is hard to trust  the military establishment and the industry behind it. Basically I don’t. Yet I  know if the international forces leave Afghanistan now without securing the  country, there will be a great deal more violence here and it will very likely  spread beyond these borders.
Consider the alternatives. Without an international military  presence there is a good chance that money and influence from neighboring  Pakistan, Russia, Uzbekistan, Iran – not to mention Saudi Arabia – will plunge  the country back into civil war. Then there is the enormous success of the  illegal heroin trade in the region since the U.S. invasion. Today in the south  of the country, drug production and transport pays the bills and cements the  loyalties of hundreds of tribal chieftains who are involved in the trade. This  could easily become a narco-state funneling half of its profits to terrorist  groups around the world.  Two other options are a successful Taliban victory  establishing another repressive, woman-hating, terrorist-supporting regime  fueled by drug money, or maybe simply a failed state in perpetual war,  continuously destabilizing the whole region. Any of these outcomes would  stimulate an increase in Islamist militancy and global terrorism.
The Dilemma of the Peace Activist
Peace workers are against violence. We protest all war. Military  adventurism and the pervasiveness of the military–industrial complex appall us.  I liked it better when I knew what the moral high ground in Afghanistan was –  troop withdrawal – but my experience from this intense week in Kabul has given  me pause. 
I feel we have to admit a terrible truth: the standard anti-war  position of “bring the troops home now” is in itself a violent policy. It will  precipitate extreme violence. The opposite position – maintaining current troop  levels, or adding more – also means more violence. But after all that has  happened, the U.S. has a responsibility to help Afghans fashion a sovereign  country capable of human decency.      
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Thank you for sharing such a thoughtfully written article. While being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize was a bit puzzling, albeit an honor, this article particularly highlights the incredible pickle Obama is in. Whether he decides to withdraw troops, increase US presence, or stay at the same level, he will be vilified for not being a peacekeeper.
This article also explains the quagmire we are sinking further into. No easy answers.
Again, good article. Thanks.