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Rediff.com  » News » Walking away from Afghanistan catastrophic: Holbrooke

Walking away from Afghanistan catastrophic: Holbrooke

By Lalit K Jha
July 15, 2010 13:42 IST
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Any hasty withdrawal of United States troops from Afghanistan could have catastrophic consequences and the active cooperation of Pakistan is a must for comprehensively defeating the Al Qaeda and The Taliban, America's point man for the region Richard Holbrooke has said.

"This is my personal view, if we walk away from Afghanistan, again, as we did 21 years ago, the consequences will be similarly catastrophic because of the unique strategic position of Afghanistan and the reaction that it would have in Pakistan, China, India and the countries to Afghanistan's west," the Obama administration's special envoy told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

He stated that achieving success in the war torn country would involve continued American economic and development assistance.

"This will not be cheap, but it will be a fraction of the money that is now being authorised and appropriated for the military campaign. When we will be able to transition to that is impossible for me or anyone to say, but it won't be on a single day. It will be a gradual process, and that is what the review in December and the President's decision making will focus on," Holbrooke said in response to questions from Senators.

On Pakistan's role, he said, "We cannot succeed in Afghanistan without Pakistan's participation."

Holbrooke told Senators that his appointment as the Special Representative for Pakistan and Afghanistan was a reflection of the fact. "The US government re-organised to reflect the fact that you cannot succeed in Afghanistan without Pakistan's involvement."

Indicating that Washington was putting pressure on Islamabad for a larger crackdown in the Waziristan tribal belt, Holbrooke said, "We do not have enough action yet on the Pakistani side of the border. Here is a perfect example of why the two countries cannot be disaggregated for purposes of policy.  We got what we wanted on one side of the border, but we haven't gotten it on the other yet. And Americans are being killed and wounded because of this."

The American envoy also conceded that the western part of Pakistan is a safe haven for terrorists. "The western part of Pakistan, the lawless areas, is the epicentre of the issues that threaten our country. They directly link to the Taliban but they're in Pakistan," he said responding to concerns from Senator Jim Webb.

"We have made real progress in Pakistan in the last year and a half, but the focus is so overwhelmingly on Afghanistan -- for valid reasons; that's where our troops are -- that we have lost -- we haven't even recognised the movement in Pakistan across the board: economically, politically, strategically," Holbrooke said.

To achieve the goal to disrupt, dismantle and defeat the Al Qaeda and prevent its ability to threaten the United States, Holbrooke said the US has to degrade the Taliban because they are part of the enemy structure that America faces.

"Now, the Afghan government doesn't yet have the capacity to deal with this on its own. How could they after 30 years of war? And so the civilian part of it, police, government capacity, rule of law, sub-national government, training provincial official, women's empowerment and a whole series of other major issues -- are part of our civilian programmes," he said.

The civilian strategy of the Obama administration, he said, is designed from keeping Al Qaeda at bay and it's designed to help Afghan institutions establish conditions for stable governance.

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Lalit K Jha Washington
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