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Afghanistan’s center of gravity (Colonel Lawrence Sellin, PHD, Afghan Vet)
UPI ^ | Oct. 15, 2009 | LAWRENCE SELLIN

Posted on 10/20/2009 6:04:25 AM PDT by xzins

Outside View: Afghanistan’s center of gravity

WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 (UPI) -- Numbering more than 25 million, Pashtuns are the largest tribal group in the world. They are also by far the dominant ethnic group in the Taliban. The center of gravity of the war in Afghanistan is the confluence of the Taliban's Islamic radicalism and traditional Pashtun culture.

In their brilliantly written article, "No Sign until the Burst of Fire -- Understanding the Pakistan-Afghanistan Frontier," Thomas H. Johnson and M. Chris Mason emphasize that the key to addressing the current instability and radicalization on both sides of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border is a proper understanding of Pashtun tribal and social framework known as the Pashtunwali. It is important to note that these Pashtun mores predate Islam and shape insurgent behavior. A more thorough comprehension of Pashtun culture may provide a wedge to separate Taliban radicalism from the more time-honored and relatively stable characteristics of Pashtun tribal society.

To a significant extent, the description of Afghanistan as the "graveyard of empires" and its resistance to outside interference has resided in the individual obligations and collective expectations dictated by the Pashtunwali, whose core tenets include self-respect, independence, justice, hospitality, forgiveness and tolerance. Among Pashtuns, group consensus remains the primary source of power, not a hierarchical central administration. According to Afghan scholar M. Jamil Hani, Pashtun culture is bottom-up, forming a series of concentric rings surrounding the individual, consisting of family, extended-family, clan, tribe, confederacy and major cultural-linguistic group, all of which resist central government influence.

The current strength of the Taliban both in Afghanistan and Pakistan can be directly linked to the uninformed and misguided policies of the Soviet Union, the United States and Pakistan over the last 30 years. It has been the subversion of the long-established Pashtun tribal culture and the intentional injection of religion as a driving force to support the aims of outside powers, which has helped lead to the rise of the Taliban.

In the early 1970s, fearing Pashtun nationalism, Pakistan embarked on a program to substitute Islam for Pashtunwali as the unifying force of the Pashtun tribal regions. Soviet military brutality and the resulting Pashtun Diaspora further contributed to the breakdown of tribal culture. The United States leveraged Muslim extremists during the Soviet occupation and then abandoned Afghanistan after the Soviet withdrawal.

Alarmed by the subsequent political vacuum and civil war in Afghanistan, Pakistan, particularly its intelligence agency, the ISI, began to support a small Kandahar group called the Taliban. During its reign in Afghanistan and after its retreat into western Pakistan, the Taliban forcibly replaced traditional tribal political and social structure with religious-based ones, creating a "Talibanized" Pashtun base of operations. Chronically unchallenged by the Pakistan government or the Punjabi-dominated Pakistan army, the Taliban have flourished.

The Taliban seem on the threshold of regaining control of Afghanistan and, ironically, have become an increasing threat to the stability of a nuclear-armed Pakistan, the nation responsible for creating them. Although they may profess otherwise, no one should doubt that a Taliban victory will lead to an increase of attacks in Pakistan as well as the Taliban becoming a transnational organization for the training and export of terrorism to Europe and the United States.

As Johnson and Mason correctly note, traditional forms of Pashtun governance directly conflict with a short-sighted attempt to impose central control from Kabul into its tribal areas. Regrettably, this approach has long been a cornerstone of U.S. civilian and military policy since the onset of the war in Afghanistan. It is interesting to note, however, that the Taliban, to some extent, are taking a similar approach by imposing top-down religious control. A recent report describing the influx of up to 4,000 foreign insurgents into Afghanistan also contravenes one of the core tenets of Pashtunwali, independence. It is not rare for Afghans, even the Taliban, to describe these foreign fighters contemptuously as "camels."

Journalist and Pakistan expert Selig S. Harrison wrote last May that conventional wisdom indicated either an Islamist or a Pashtun triumph. An equally plausible result, however, could be a cross-border radicalized "Islamic Pashtunistan." According to ethnic mapping, such an area spans one-third of Afghanistan and a large swath of northwest Pakistan. The former Pakistani Pashtun ambassador to the United States, retired Maj. Gen. Mahmud Ali Durrani, said in March 2007: "I hope the Taliban and Pashtun nationalism don't merge. If that happens, we've had it, and we're on the verge of that."

A new strategy for Afghanistan can correct many of our past errors, if we do so in time. By effectively addressing the Afghanistan-Pakistan cultural environment within the context of a comprehensive and bottom-up counterinsurgency program and in cooperation with allies and regional partners, it is still possible to reverse the momentum of the Taliban and avert a disaster potentially affecting all of southwest Asia.

Mr. President, faster please.

--

(Lawrence Sellin, Ph.D. is a colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve and a veteran of the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq.)


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: islam; pakistan; pashtun; taliban
Thomas H. Johnson and M. Chris Mason emphasize that the key to addressing the current instability and radicalization on both sides of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border is a proper understanding of Pashtun tribal and social framework known as the Pashtunwali. It is important to note that these Pashtun mores predate Islam and shape insurgent behavior.

Afghanis are not Arabs.

1 posted on 10/20/2009 6:04:26 AM PDT by xzins
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To: xzins

More importantly, Pashtuns aren’t really Afghans. A great many of them live in Pakistan and most of them think of themselves as Pashtun before Afghan or Pakistani.

The author sort of dances around this, but there is a good reason why Pakistan originally supported the Taliban.

If Pashtuns focus on Pashtun nationalism, it requires disassembling the Pakistani state so there can be a Pashtun nation-state.

If Afghan Pashtuns can be encouraged to focus on their Islamic rather than Pashtun identity, maybe they’ll go try to take over Afghanistan and run it under sharia instead.


2 posted on 10/20/2009 6:12:25 AM PDT by Sherman Logan ("The price of freedom is the toleration of imperfections." Thomas Sowell)
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To: Sherman Logan

Actually there are something like 25M Pashtuns in Pakistan (about 16% of the population) as compared to ~13M in Afghanistan.


3 posted on 10/20/2009 6:14:37 AM PDT by Sherman Logan ("The price of freedom is the toleration of imperfections." Thomas Sowell)
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To: wmfights; P-Marlowe; Dr. Eckleburg; Thunder 6; LTCJ; blue-duncan; SandRat; bigheadfred; Girlene; ...

Pashtun and not Arab


4 posted on 10/20/2009 6:16:55 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It! Those who support our troops pray for their victory!)
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To: Sherman Logan
the individual obligations and collective expectations dictated by the Pashtunwali, whose core tenets include self-respect, independence, justice, hospitality, forgiveness and tolerance. Among Pashtuns, group consensus remains the primary source of power, not a hierarchical central administration. According to Afghan scholar M. Jamil Hani, Pashtun culture is bottom-up, forming a series of concentric rings surrounding the individual, consisting of family, extended-family, clan, tribe, confederacy and major cultural-linguistic group, all of which resist central government influence.

The author seems to be saying that Pastun culture has a historic inclination to resist outside interference from those attempting to impose anything on the Pastuns. I assume he includes sharia and the taliban in those interfering forces.

5 posted on 10/20/2009 6:41:28 AM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It! Those who support our troops pray for their victory!)
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To: xzins

Sharia has become incorporated into the Pashtun way, although modified enough that Mo probably wouldn’t recognize some aspects.

The author kinds of beats the bush to death, but what I think he’s trying to say is that we need to try to boost those aspects of Pashtun culture that conflict with the Taliban. We’re not going to swing the Pashtun to our side by promoting western values, we may be able to by promoting anti-Taliban Pashtun values.

After all, the Pashtuns have been living there for thousands of years without bothering the USA one bit. They gave the Brits a great deal of trouble, but that’s another story.


6 posted on 10/20/2009 6:47:32 AM PDT by Sherman Logan ("The price of freedom is the toleration of imperfections." Thomas Sowell)
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