Afghanistan’s past foretells its post-US withdrawal future

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
11 Min Read

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Ex-CIA officer Bruce Riedel at the Brookings Institution in Washington DC, whose familiarity with Afghanistan is never in doubt, has made an attempt to figure out the future course of events as the US troop withdrawal commences. 

History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. Riedel sees in the haziness old familiar shapes appearing: the erstwhile Northern Alliance warlords. And he invokes the fate of the communist regime led by Mohammad Najibullah – called Najib by everyone – after the Soviet withdrawal in 1989.

Can the two strands supplement each other?

Riedel’s bottom line is that after the US withdrawal, although the civil war will escalate further, “victory of the Taliban in Afghanistan is not inevitable.” Riedel recommends continued American backing for the Afghan army and synergy with former Northern Alliance leaders to create a revamped agenda to defeat the Taliban militarily. 

Clearly, there is an influential body of opinion within the US military and intelligence establishment rooted in the belief that any hope of mainstreaming the Taliban is futile, since the movement is wedded to the extremist ideology of an Islamic Emirate.

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