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      Withdrawal from Afghanistan:  
	Reading Between the Lines  
	By Eric Walberg 
	Al-Jazeerah: CCUN, May 31, 2010 
	    The new coalition in Westminster is parsing all the words 
	about Afghanistan and coming up with a very different interpretation, says 
	    The movement to “get the troops out 
	now!” has found unlikely converts in the form of the 
	Conservative-Liberal Democratic
	
	coalition in Britain. The election campaign suggested nothing new could 
	be expected from any of the parties on Afghanistan, despite the fact that 
	over 70 per cent of Britons want the troops home.     So eyebrows 
	were raised with the news that Afghan President Hamid Karzai was Prime 
	Minister David Cameron’s first visitor at Chequers. They went higher still 
	when Foreign Minister William Hague made his first foreign destination 
	Kabul, where he called for the withdrawal of troops as soon as possible.   
	 Accompanying Hague, Tory Defence Secretary Liam Fox seconded the new 
	approach, saying, “We have to reset expectations and timelines. National 
	security is the focus now. We are not a global policeman. We are not in 
	Afghanistan for the sake of the education policy in a broken 13th century 
	country. We are there so the people of Britain and our global interests are 
	not threatened.”     Britain’s new coalition government also 
	announced it would reduce the defence budget by at least 25 per cent as part 
	of massive cuts across the board to try to save the bankrupt British 
	economy.     Cleverly taking advantage of the electorate’s 
	revulsion with the war, Hague’s bold call for withdrawal was no doubt 
	sparked by Karzai’s address at the US Institute of Peace last week, where he 
	once again predicted an extended US commitment to Afghanistan that would 
	last “beyond the military activity right now … into the future, long after 
	we have retired, and perhaps into our grandsons’ and great-grandsons’ — and 
	great-granddaughters’ — generations. This is something the Afghan people 
	have been seeking for a long, long time.” Clearly, unlike the unborn 
	great-granddaughters of Afghans, the Brits want no part of any such plans.
	    The only way withdrawal will be possible, of course, is if 
	accommodation is reached with the Taliban. So it is no surprise that
	
	talk of peace talks continues to make headlines. What was referred to by 
	Al-Jazeera as the second meeting between Taliban and Afghan government 
	officials hosted by the Maldives (a Muslim statelet that actually issues 
	visas to Afghans on arrival) took place last week. It was organised by Feroz 
	and Jarir Hekmatyar, the son and son-in-law of Gulbadin Hekmatyar, an Afghan 
	warlord and leader of the insignificant Hezb-e-Islami party.     
	Karzai was rumoured to be unhappy that the talks are taking place, but 
	nonetheless sent observers. Hekmatyar sent a delegation to Kabul for talks 
	in March, clearly trying to use the opportunity to upstage the main Taliban 
	opposition.     Qari Zia-ur-Rehman, a Taliban commander in Kunar 
	province, told Pakistan’s The News, “The reports of negotiations between the 
	Islamic Emirate and Karzai regime are bogus and no leader of the Islamic 
	Emirate is engaged in talks with the puppet administration in Kabul,” 
	reiterating that the unconditional and immediate withdrawal of foreign 
	troops from Afghanistan was a precondition for any peace talks. He explained 
	that Karzai is using such talks as a ruse to convince the US that he can 
	divide the Taliban and negotiate them into submission. Former Pakistani 
	Inter-Services Intelligence director Hamid Gul asks, “How can Taliban hold 
	talks with a government which has never been recognised by them?”   
	 Western officials were not present at the non-talks though the US State 
	Department said it was aware of them. “We continue to support efforts by the 
	Afghan government to open the door to those Taliban who abandon violence and 
	respect human rights of their fellow citizens,” US State Department 
	spokesman PJ Crowley droned.     The meeting comes ahead of a 
	grand jirga of Afghan tribal and community leaders, to be hosted by Karzai, 
	which will demand the insurgents lay down their arms and accept asylum in 
	another Islamic country from where they can negotiate with the Afghan 
	government. The jirga, already postponed twice, is scheduled for 2 June and 
	will last only three days. No representatives of the Taliban are due to 
	attend.     There is little incentive for the Taliban to cave in 
	to pressures to disband, visit sunny Maldives or retire to even sunnier 
	Saudi Arabia. Kabul MP and former presidential candidate Ramazan Bashardost 
	last week called for NATO troops to evacuate Kabul to avoid further civilian 
	casualties. The call came two days after a suicide bomber rammed a convoy of 
	NATO forces in Kabul , killing 12 civilians and six foreign soldiers, 
	including visiting Canadian Colonel Geoff Parker. But if NATO troops can’t 
	function in Kabul — the only part of the country the Karzai government 
	“controls” — when can they function?     After the NATO campaign 
	in
	
	Marja, it is once again in Taliban hands in all but name. As the Taliban 
	launch their spring offensive, talk is of the Taliban “surge” as opposed to 
	the would-be NATO one. NATO casualties have been increasing at an alarming 
	rate, with the year’s NATO toll 215. The number of British troops killed and 
	wounded in Afghanistan has more than doubled compared to last year. The 
	200,000 rupee bounty Taliban fighters are awarded for each NATO soldier 
	killed is paying off.     Another Canadian officer, Daniel 
	Menard, is to direct this summer’s NATO
	
	campaign in Kandahar and Panjwaii, where troops from the Royal Canadian 
	Regiment will take the lead. “This conflict is our D-Day,” boasted this 
	colonial representative of Queen Elizabeth II, great-great-granddaughter of 
	Queen Victoria, who presided over the British invasions of Afghanistan in 
	the 19th century. In his obscene comparison between the liberation of 
	occupied France in WWII and the US occupation of Afghanistan , Menar added, 
	“The first guys on the beach here are the Canadians.”  
	But the Canadians are very much high-and-dry after their base in Kandahar 
	came under heavy attack three times in the past week and as they solemnly 
	hoist the flag-draped coffin of their unfortunate guest Colonel Parker 
	aboard a jet for Canada. To expect that they and the Karzai government will 
	prevail is a fantasy which surely no one any longer believes.  
	None of the 130,000 foreign troops has any understanding of Afghanistan 
	’s culture and traditions, or even speaks one of the local languages. Their 
	only communication with locals is through the barrel of a gun. Only six per 
	cent of locals polled support the current Kandahar offensive. Afghans can 
	only take pride in repelling these unwanted invaders.  As if a sign from 
	Allah, Hague and British media idol David Beckham had their flight to 
	Kandahar diverted mid-air to Helmand province, when the Kandahar airport 
	came under attack. Rather than Karzai, it is Bashardost, the angry British 
	troops and their mounting body count that Cameron and Hague are now heeding, 
	and it is about time.  
	***  
	Eric Walberg can be reached at http://ericwalberg.com 
	    
	  
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