The U.S.-Afghan Partnership
June 9, 2004
By His Excellency Said Tayeb Jawad
Building national and democratic institutions and
enhancing the state-building process in Afghanistan are
integrally linked to the security of Afghanistan, the
United States and the entire world. The Afghan people
are demanding sustainable partnership with the United
States and the international community to build their
security institutions, rehabilitate their economy and
contribute to regional and global peace and stability.
President Hamid
Karzai is visiting the United States to further strengthen the historic
relations between Afghanistan and America. While our relations are rooted in
half a century of cooperation and good relations, the United States became
deeply engaged in Afghan politics during the last phase of the Cold War,
when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979.
After a decade of
occupation, the Soviet Union was forced to withdraw its occupying forces
from Afghanistan. The Geneva Accords of April 1988 effectively ended Soviet
occupation in 1989. To help rebuild post-conflict Afghanistan, international
donors gathered in New York in October 1988 and made pledges amounting to
some $900 million. Afghans optimistically expected at the time that, after
the withdrawal of the Soviet troops, a political settlement would soon be in
place, refugees would return, and reconstruction could begin immediately
afterwards.
However, the abrupt
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the end of the Cold War
dramatically changed the equation. Afghanistan suddenly edged off the
international community’s radar screen, reflecting shortsightedness but
justified by both declining strategic interest in the country and
frustration with the continuing proxy conflict. Hence,
Afghanistan
became a victim of both the Cold War and the post-Cold War era. With
multiple foreign policy priorities in the new world era, the United States
and its allies neglected Afghanistan’s post-conflict reconstruction and
abandoned the country to the detriment of their long-term interest in
international peace and security.
The bloody and
destructive decade of the 1990s in Afghanistan saw internecine factional
conflicts among former combatants and armed groups that ravaged Kabul,
destroying state institutions and public facilities. The emergence in 1994
of the Taliban movement, with foreign assistance, enabled Al-Qaeda and its
global network to first victimize and terrorize the Afghan people and then
to target American assets in the Middle East and Africa from the Afghan
territory.
The painful
experiences of the 1990s in
Afghanistan proved that some
Afghan leaders such as Hamid Karzai were right in arguing that state failure
in one country can affect peace and security in the entire world. We sadly
witnessed the terrorist attacks of September 11 on the United States. More
than 3,000 innocent American lives were lost in the attacks orchestrated by
Al-Qaeda operatives. The United States government immediately responded with
participation of the Afghan people and ended the terror and tyranny of the
Taliban in Afghanistan and destroyed Al-Qaeda bases. The Afghan people
welcomed President George W. Bush’s decisive action against the Taliban and
are grateful for the U.S.
commitment to the long-term reconstruction of
Afghanistan.
The Europeans and the entire
international community unanimously backed Operation Enduring Freedom and
joined the United States in the effort to help Afghanistan rebuild after
over two decades of deadly and devastating conflicts. On November 14, 2001,
five weeks into U.S.-led operations in Afghanistan, the Security Council
endorsed an urgent meeting of Afghan political leaders to form an interim
government for the country and to establish a framework for its physical,
political and economic reconstruction.
As a clear sign of unity of purpose, the
Bonn talks in Germany in early December 2001 brought together UN officials,
Afghan leaders and members of the international community to discuss the
country’s future. Security Council Resolution 1386, approved unanimously on
December 20, 2001, provided for the creation of International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) and its deployment to Kabul and the surrounding
areas to help the Afghan Interim Authority create a secure environment in
Kabul.
Initially, nineteen countries contributed
troops and logistical supplies to ISAF in order to provide physical security
in Kabul. This number has grown close to 30 countries now. The number of
ISAF forces has increased from 4,500 to nearly 6,000 peacekeepers currently
maintained by NATO.
Since the inauguration of the new
government in Afghanistan, there has been strong bipartisan support for the
long-term assistance to Afghanistan at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue. The
tragic day of September 11, 2001, marked a strong common interest between
the American and Afghan peoples in jointly combating international terrorism
that has harmed both nations.
Long before launching the massively
destructive attacks on the United
States, Al-Qaeda had been
destroying and terrorizing Afghanistan and its people. Afghans were the
prime victims of terror, as the tyrannical regime of the Taliban had invited
Al-Qaeda to base its campaign in
Afghanistan. President George W.
Bush has repeatedly stressed in his remarks that “the United States and
Afghanistan are united in our common effort to defeat terrorism and to build
a more secure and prosperous future for both American and Afghan peoples.”
Since the September 11 events, the United
States has been leading the international community in the war against
terrorism and is fully committed to the reconstruction of Afghanistan. On
March 31, 2004, during the International Conference on Afghanistan in Berlin,
Germany, Secretary of State Colin
L. Powell noted in his remarks with President Karzai that “the Afghan people
want to live in peace, they want to live in freedom, they want to live in a
democracy. The international community knows its obligations and we will
meet those obligations.”
Afghanistan, the United States and the
international community share a common interest in the reconstruction and
sustainable development of Afghanistan, which would foster economic recovery
and regional stability and bolster global security. The United States has
firmly stayed the course in Afghanistan by helping the country accomplish
several of its major goals outlined in the December 2001 Bonn Agreement.
We have taken important steps toward the
goal of becoming a viable partner. A passage from the preamble of the new
Constitution sets the course for the direction Afghanistan has taken: “We,
the People of Afghanistan…for creation of a civil society free of
oppression, atrocity, discrimination and violence and based upon the rule of
law, social justice, protection of human rights, and dignity and ensuring
the fundamental rights and freedoms of the people…have adopted this
Constitution in compliance with the historical, cultural, and social
requirements of the era…”
Credit is due to Afghans and their
international partners for coming a long way in two short years. But many
challenges remain to be tackled in the ongoing state-building process in
Afghanistan. Post-conflict rebuilding is an international enterprise that
needs enduring security and economic partnership, sustainable resources,
strategic coordination and long-term political support. There is now
international consensus that left untended again, the remaining challenges
in Afghanistan will jeopardize the hitherto peace-building achievements with
grave implications for national, regional and global peace and stability.
Instead of “aid,” we need
partnership and investment to overcome challenges. We are realistic about
our difficulties. Afghans face the general challenge of building a state and
providing for good governance after the complete destruction of all national
institutions and a severe shortage of resources and human capital. To
overcome these difficulties, we must reform, strengthen and rebuild our
government institutions to make them accountable, capable and more
representative, and we must improve local and district level governance. We
must enhance government capacity to deliver services to all corners of the
country, especially in areas prone to terrorist infiltration. All Afghans
have not yet benefited from the peace dividend. We must eliminate the
corruption, nepotism and abuse of power that undermine our recovery process.
We are also facing the
specific challenges of preparing the logistical and legal grounds for the
election and building the institutions and the capacity needed to prepare
and enact the enabling laws required by the new Constitution.
We continue to confront
security challenges posed by the terrorists and other elements. To overcome
security problems, we must continue to rely on external assistance, but in
the long run, we must stand on our own feet. We need to expedite the process
of building our national army and professional police force. We have asked
our international partners to enhance security in the provinces by
expediting the deployment and presence of the ISAF and/or the Provincial
Reconstructing Teams (PRTs). We welcomed the NATO and UN decision to expand
ISAF outside of Kabul and to increase the number of PRTs from twelve to 16
before the election. We must accelerate the demobilization, disarmament and
reintegration program and prevent extremists from high-jacking the democracy
and the nation-building process for personal gain or factional agendas.
Narcotics pose a serious
challenge for all of us. Cultivation and trafficking of narcotics go
hand-in-hand with terrorism and warlordism. It is in our best national
interest to fight them all. President Karzai is committed to mobilizing all
of our resources in the fight against narcotics. We know Afghanistan's
heroin, which sells on the retail market for one hundred times the farm gate
price, is one of the sources of the illegal money that funds international
terrorism and crimes across the region. It also finances the destabilizing
activities of warlords and criminals in Afghanistan.
The international community
and our government cannot afford to wait as these destructive trends reverse
our recovery process and further endanger global security. Once again,
partnership and comprehensive strategic plans are needed to break this
vicious cycle. We shall mobilize all available resources to fight drugs in
Afghanistan. The government of Afghanistan has adopted a National Drug
Strategy aimed at drastically reducing poppy cultivation, encouraging
alternative income streams, destroying drug labs, strengthening law
enforcement, training specialized national police units and developing the
justice sector to facilitate the proper prosecution and sentencing of
traffickers. We cannot implement it without long-term international
partnership.
To overcome these
challenges and to make the nation-building process in Afghanistan
irreversible, Afghans need and demand a strategic partnership with the
United States and sustained engagement by the international community.
Afghans cherish the growing partnership and warm friendship forged between
the two nations.
By expanding our partnership to help
Afghanistan sustain the recovery process, the United States of America and
other nations are assisting the future blueprint for democracy in similar
societies – the very best antidote to extremism and terrorism. Long-term
success in Afghanistan is contingent upon a long-term U.S.-Afghan
partnership.
The Honorable Said Tayeb Jawad is
Ambassador of Afghanistan to the United States.
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