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State, Power, and Authority: Case study on contemporary Afghanistan. Afghan flag, 1978. Afghan flag, 2003. Map of Afghanistan. Afghan girls, 1977. Photo: Joanne Warfield. Context of state failure. Some points on the trajectory of state-building in Afghanistan.
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State, Power, and Authority: Case study on contemporary Afghanistan Afghan flag, 1978 Afghan flag, 2003
Context of state failure Some points on the trajectory of state-building in Afghanistan
#1- “Rentier state”: Building an Afghan state from the outside • Crossroads and buffer state: • Est. of monarchy 1747-1973 • “The great game”: Russia and Britain • No independent economic base (state resources from outside) • Soviet invasion, Dec. 1979 (to prop up communist government) • Soviet-supported government ($$, troops, new president) • Soviet weapons imports make Afghanistan world’s 5th largest importer of weapons , 1986-1990
Sources of Government Income, some figures • 1952: 74% domestic; 16 % foreign aid • 1959: 48% domestic; 53 % foreign aid • 1962: 22% domestic; 60 % foreign aid • 1976: 62 % dom.; 29 % foreign aid; 10% natural gas • 1979: 40 % dom.; 36% foreign aid; 13 % natural gas • 1982: 37% dom.; 28% f.aid; 34 % n.gas Source: Barnett Rubin
#2- Diverse society: competition for authority & control • Social organization: Qawm (solidarity network) • Ethno-linguistic groups • Pashtun (40%), Tajik (30%), Uzbek (10%), Hazara (Shiite- 8%), etc. • Afghan urban elite: Pashtun dominated • Urban vs rural • Little sense of unified Afghan nation
#3- History of Afghan resistance to central & external authority (often aided by external powers for their own benefit) • Uprisings against the British • Uprisings and war against the Soviets • Soviet withdrawal 1988
Early Resistance to the Communist government • Original resistance (1978-79): mass-based, fragmented, diverse, locally funded • Islam & Jihad as mobilizing ideology Ahmad Shah Massoud (center), an ethnic Tajik, in 1978. He rose to lead the Jamiat Islami. Photo: R. Depardon.
Under Soviet Occupation: the Mujahidin • 7 main parties, all based in Pakistan; by 1990, at least 4,000 bases & an estimated 1 million fighters
U.S.: $3 billion covert aid (1980s); around $700 million per year official aid. Largest covert CIA op. in history. Saudi Arabia: (reportedly) matches these funds Pakistan administers aid; supplies training and bases 1986-1990 USAID gives $150 million for health, agriculture, food, to Mujahidin areas Who gave what to the Mujahidin
Effects of external aid on rebels and society • Mujahidin become more autonomous from local populations; dependent on powerful sponsors • Creation of refugee warrior communities in neighboring countries Uzbek Warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum. Hezb-I Islami leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar
#3- The fragmentation of power • Fragmentation • 1988: Soviet withdrawal • Fight for Kabul, 1992-1996 (division of the city) • 50,000 die • Afghanistan as mini-fiefdoms Youth sift through war ruins in Kabul. Photo: Muhammad Bashir.
Maps of power Map by Gilles Dorronsoro in Revolution Unending.
Effects of Civil War, 1978-1996 Afghan child with prosthesis, Kabul, 1996. Photo: David Turnley
Physical Destruction of Place and People • “Rubble-ization” of Afghani countryside: 12,000 out of 24,000 villages and towns destroyed (mostly as part of Russian-led pacification campaign) • Nearly 2 million people killed; around 2 million people injured or maimed • Refugee crisis: nearly 6 million people flee to Pakistan, Iran, and elsewhere. • Landmines
Economic & Cultural Disarray • Decimation of pre-war elites and its social system (royalty, leftists, intellectuals); replaced by new elites (mujahidin, Taliban) • Destruction of institutions of the state, especially the Afghan Army (replaced by militias) • Normalization of violence: “Kalishnikovization” • Destruction of economic infrastructure (factories, power, transportation, agriculture): encourages rises of opium-heroin trade
Rentier Effect: Why War Continued After the Soviet Withdrawal • CIA and Pakistani intelligence (ISI) still want to overthrow Najibullah (transition president, leftist). Continued funding fighters, especially most radical ones. • External “volunteers – Arab fighters and others joined Afghani mujahidin in late 1980s and linked to transnational Islamic movements • Warlordism: no sense of common interest
#4- The Taliban revolution, 1996-2001 Taliban fighter in Kabul, 1996; Photo: David Turnley
Who are the Taliban? • Began as movement out of Islamic schools in Pakistan & s. Afghanistan. Most run by conservative Islamist Pakistanis. • Emergence of rural religious elite. Leaders young (mid 30s to early 40s) • Dominated by Kandahari Pashtuns, especially Durannis (traditional Afghani royalty). Afghan flag under the Taliban. Taliban fighters praying, 1996. Photo: David Turnley. • Very narrow interpretation of Islam.
Taliban Takeover • Kandahar 1994, capture southern border town & “rescue” Pakistani trade convoy • Herat 1995, Kabul 1996; Mazar 1998 • By 2001 controlled 85-90% Afghanistan Taliban commander in Kabul, 1996. Photo: David Turnley.
Reasons for Taliban success • Pakistani support, $$ from S. Arabia • Emphasis on piety and war-weariness of the population • security • Common Pashtun ethnicity • Relative lack of corruption (in early days) • Use of violence & force
Life under the Taliban: Politics • Mujahiddin commanders driven out of the country (Except Ahmad Shah Massoud) • Afghanistan becomes more secure; roads more passable • “Town” controls the center: Supreme Council of 30-40 members, headed by Mullah Mohammad Omar, based in Kandahar. Afghan flag under the Taliban. • Civil service at regional levels virtually unchanged. • Application of hard-line Sharia law, modified by Pashtun tribal codes.
Post-2001 mistakes? (According to Thomas Barfield)
Explaining the weak state: mistakes and problems? • “Light footprint” • process vs substance • Centralized vs decentralized state • Reconstruction vs nation-building • Karzai • Relying on Pakistan
Explaining the insurgency: What does Seth Jones say? • What is Jones’ puzzle? • What two main arguments explaining the Taliban insurgency does Jones refute? • What is his main argument (answer)? • What two indicators suggest a “state of emerging anarchy,” according to Jones? Why do they contribute to insurgency? • How does Jones define insurgency? What is it and what is it not?