Volume 22 No 22 September 2002
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Seeds of Chaos

By Jim Lobe
Evicting Al Qaeda and the Taliban was the easy part; the aftermath is turning out to be much
more difficult. The US military so far has failed to find Osama bin Laden and other top
Al Qaeda or Taliban leaders.
Most of Afghanistan appears to have fallen back under the control of tribal and ethnic warlords - the same people who made the rise of the Taliban possible in the first place. These are the conclusions of a classified report by the CIA, parts of which were leaked this week to the New York Times. The report went on to warn that the "seeds of possible internal chaos" have been planted.
Not only have the warlords, armed and empowered by the US military campaign itself, begun to jostle and skirmish for position in post-Taliban Afghanistan, but also foreign powers - including Russia, Uzbekistan, Iran, and Turkey - are providing aid to their favourites, setting the stage for a broader and potentially more violent set of conflicts.
While the countryside prepares for the chaos to come, the central government headed by Hamid Karzai is forced to beg the US and other Western powers for money to pay the salaries of its officials, even as the donors spend week after week arguing over whether the British-led international security force should be deployed outside Kabul, or a new Afghan army should be built over the next six months.
The report illustrates the degree to which the administration of President George W. Bush has failed to think through the consequences of its "war against terrorism,"
not only in Afghanistan, which at the moment has the most to lose from the administration's lack of planning, but also in other regions where it is intervening with US troops and other assets to fight alleged terrorists.
Thursday's fatal crash of a helicopter ferrying newly arrived US Special Operations Forces (SOF) to the southern Philippines as part of an "anti-terrorism exercise," for example, drew renewed attention to the deployment of some 650 US troops to the country's most impoverished region.
While the specific target of US intervention is a small rebel group, Abu Sayyaf, which holds two US kidnap victims, the same region is home to two much larger armies, the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), only one of which has negotiated peace with the central government.

Local officials in the area have already complained that the mere presence of US troops, which fought a bloody counter-insurgency against the Moros a century ago, could weaken still-fragile peace efforts between the army, whose tactics have become more aggressive in recent weeks, and the two movements, according to published reports.
"The real aim of the US mission is political: to demonstrate momentum in the war on terror, deploy troops in a country where they are welcome, show the flag in Southeast Asia, and find an enemy that can be quickly beaten," noted New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof. According to Kristof, the reality there is much different and more dangerous, particularly for an enduring peace in the area.
The same pattern is clear with respect to Iraq, for which military and intelligence planners are even now drawing up options for an intervention designed to oust long-time Bush nemesis and charter member of the current President Bush's "axis of evil," President Saddam Hussein. Or, as noted by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Joseph Biden, "The easy part is going to be, in a bizarre sense, taking Saddam out. The hard part is what do you do after that?" Just like Afghanistan.-Dawn/ InterPress Service.


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