Afghanistan: A Choice of Comrades Terry Glavin I. A Tale of Two Cities KABUL – Among the many things that are likely to surprise a visitor to this city is the Dari version of Marilyn Manson’s
these days. There is also the exuberant courtesy, solicitousness and friendliness of
the place, and the fact that at least four million people live here now. That’s about
ten times the population of 30 years ago. The city’s motor registry department adds
8,000 new vehicles to its rolls every month.
I have no excuse to be surprised. I’m well-travelled, I’ve made Afghanistan a bit of a
personal study over the past few years, I’m a co-founder of the Canada-Afghanistan
Solidarity Committee, and among my committee colleagues I count several Kabuli
émigrés and activists who have spent a great deal of time here.
Still, nothing quite prepares a visitor for certain things, not least the spectacular
contrast between the cosseted little universe inhabited by Kabul’s ‘international
community’ over class and the gritty, raucous reality of everyday life among Kabul’s
rambunctious masses. It’s as though there are two completely different Kabulis in
the world. There’s the city that routinely shows up in English-language dailies – a
miniature, Central Asian version of Stalingrad during the siege – and then there’s
the one you never hear about, a bustling, heartbreakingly poor but hopeful and
splendid city.
The Kabul known to the outside world is the city the Sunday Telegraph judged ‘as
dangerous as Baghdad at its worst’ shortly after I arrived here. This is the Kabul
you can see from the verandas of the city’s justifiably jittery foreign diplomats,
aid-agency bureaucrats and journalists. It’s the one with helicopters always flying
overhead, and rapid-fire text messages on everyone’s fancy cell phones containing
intelligence bulletins about the latest assassination attempts and kidnappings.
Another city entirely is the Kabul I came to know during three weeks of interviews
with human rights’ lawyers, polio victims, almond-sellers, seamstresses, football
players, cab drivers, teachers and beggars. This the Kabul of the souks and bazaars,
the bus stops and back alleys; and no matter what you read in the headlines, its
| 9 |
Glavin | Afghanistan: A Choice of Comrades
citizens are among the most welcoming, happily boisterous and hospitable people
on earth.
It is in this other Kabul that you will find a sprawling sub-metropolis where life
unfolds in intrigues and excitements all its own among the hordes of kite-flying
children on Kabul’s flat rooftops. At least 70,000 of these Kabulis are more or less
orphans who descend into the streets every day to hawk maps, magazines, and
packages of chewing gum, sometimes resorting to begging, ragpicking and the
refined art of the pickpocket.
In this vast rooftop district, the talk these days is not about why the international
press depicts Kabul in such strange ways, or why there is such silence about Tehran’s
interferences in Afghan politics by its favours to factions within Hezb-e-Islami,
one of Afghanistan’s largest political parties. No, the talk is about President Hamid
Karzai’s early November decree outlawing begging. The decree instructs the Interior
Ministry to clear the streets of panhandling ragamuffins by trundling them all off to
orphanages and to the network of Dickensian ‘care homes’ run by the Afghan Red
Crescent Society.
Kabulis like a good laugh. There are vast fleets of armour-plated Toyota SUVs
ferrying nervous European bureaucrats around Kabul’s rubble-strewn streets, but
instead of being pelted with bricks, they are made the butt of Kabuli jokes. The
black humour goes a long way to explain why all but a few of Kabul’s streets remain
unpaved after all these years. Here’s just one joke: The UN tells Karzai the world
has had quite enough of the corruption in his government, and he has to act, once
and for all. Karzai responds: Of course! Then he whispers: How much will you pay
me to fix it?
But for all his eccentricities and failings, Karzai still enjoys a surprising degree of
support here, and it’s at least partly because Afghans are wise to the pot-kettleblack
context to the regular diplomatic uproars about his regime’s payoffs and
cash-skimming. The world has pledged roughly $25 billion to Afghanistan for aid
and reconstruction since 2001. The Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief
reckons that only $15 billion has been delivered, and barely half that amount has
trickled into the Afghan economy. The rest has been eaten up in ex-pat salaries,
consultants’ fees, and country-of-origin subcontracts. It is not for nothing that
among Kabulis, the foreign administrative caste that sucks up so much of the
Democratiya 15 | Winter 2008
| 10 |
world’s commitment to this brutalised country is known as ‘the cow that drinks its
own milk.’
Even so, Kabulis commonly regard aid bureaucrats with affection, especially the
lower-tier workers and the non-governmental-organisation employees who actually
spend time with ordinary Afghans. And though you might not know it from your
newspapers, six years of polling data shows that most Afghans also consistently
express support for the presence of foreign troops.
It was no great surprise, then, that the postures of the ‘anti-war’ movement based in
the world’s rich countries leave the Afghan activists I interviewed utterly mystified.
Without exception, the proposition that the 39-nation International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) is merely a tool of western imperialism was greeted with
derision. As for the notion that the way forward in Afghanistan involves the
withdrawal of foreign troops and some kind of brokered pact with the Taliban, the
response was invariably wide-eyed incredulity.
There was a range of opinion on these subjects, of course. At one end there was
bemusement, and at the other was fury, with a great deal of worry and dread in
between.
Perhaps most furious was Fatana Gilani, the head of the Afghanistan Women’s
Council. Gilani yearns for an Afghanistan that eventually stands on its own without
foreign soldiers, and she’s a leading voice for a traditional, nation-wide ‘jirga’ as a
possible way forward to disarmament and reconciliation. But she was emphatic in
her disgust with all the talk filling the pages of the foreign press about drawing the
Taliban into some sort of negotiated power-sharing arrangement. ‘Anybody who
does this is not a friend of Afghanistan,’ she said.
Gilani is a profoundly conservative Muslim, but her sentiments about diplomatic
deal-cutting as a means to secure some kind of peace in her country appear to run
across the spectrum of Afghan civil society, even to the Revolutionary Association
of the Women of Afghanistan. RAWA opposes even the ‘mini-jirga’ process that is
bringing Taliban-friendly tribal leaders from the Pakistan-Afghanistan borderlands
together with officials from Kabul and Islamabad.
Mahboob Shah, a tireless Kabul anti-poverty activist, said the entrenchment of the
rule of law in Afghanistan is critical to the alleviation of hunger, joblessness and
| 11 |
Glavin | Afghanistan: A Choice of Comrades
disease here, and international troops are playing an irreplaceable role in providing
necessary security. ‘People who say the foreign soldiers should go away, they do not
know what they are saying,’ Shah said. ‘Yes, it should be Afghans who decide, but
we have decided that the world should come to us, as a brother.’
Shamsia Sharifi, director of a formerly clandestine operation now called the Hope
for Poor Women Organisation (HPWO), laughed out loud at the idea of Taliban
peace talks. ‘Maybe your country should make a visa for me,’ she joked. ‘It is very
hard, even now,’ she said, referring to the Islamist gangsters and Muslim Brotherhood
alumni who still wield influence at the centre of power in this country. ‘But we are
very scared of the Taliban coming back.’
Sharifi distributes micro-loans for women’s businesses from a ramshackle house
with a half-collapsed roof down a dusty Kabul side street, where HPWO members
produce textiles, teach gemstone-polishing, and run adult literacy classes for
women in the basement. The struggle Sharifi waged during the Taliban years still
goes on, but she can now count 4,000 women among HPWO’s graduates since the
Taliban’s 2001 rout. ‘We need to have the troops in Afghanistan,’ she said. ‘If the
Taliban come back, the target will be us again.’
And that is the way my conversations went, from Sharifa Ahmadzai, a 75-year-old
dressmaker who teaches women how to read in an informal classroom in her home
in Baghlan, to the perilous heart of Kandahar City, where 38-year-old Ehsan Ullah
Ehsan runs a school for women, a library, a computer lab, an adult-education centre
and a free internet cafe.
Ahmadzai lives only a few blocks from a mosque where Taliban thugs routinely
deliver written pronouncements calling for her murder. In the days before I visited
with Ehsan in Kandahar, the Taliban gunned down a friend of his for the mere
crime of working for a government-owned electrical power company. Ehsan himself
had just received yet another Taliban ‘night letter,’ warning him he would be killed
unless he stopped doing his work. A few days later, a gang of men sprayed acid in
the unveiled faces of a group of Kandahar girls on their way to classes. But the girls
remained defiant. Nothing will stop us from going to school, they vowed.
Here in the ‘west,’ none of us on the liberal left would fail to recognise these brave
women and men as our comrades and allies, and if we were to flatter ourselves we
might even imagine them to be our Afghan counterparts. On the question of troop
Democratiya 15 | Winter 2008
| 12 |
withdrawal, their views were varied and nuanced, but their answer was ultimately
the same: Stay. And yet this is not the position that the left has been fighting for,
in the main, in Europe or North America. It changes by degree from country to
country, of course, and the left’s positions are varied and nuanced. But in Canada,
the left’s answer is pretty much unequivocal: Leave.
II. A Cautionary Tale
For anyone whose primary concern about Afghanistan is how best to discharge
the duty of solidarity the world owes the Afghan people, the Canadian experience
might serve as something of a harbinger of the debates to come, or at the very least,
a cautionary tale.
Because Canadian troops were kept on the benches during the Anglo-American
showdown with Saddam Hussein’s Ba’athists, Canada was more or less
unencumbered by the ferocious political divisions set off by the bloody enterprise
in Iraq. This didn’t last long, however, because one of the most successful troopsout
propaganda strategies in Canada has been the mischief of conflating the Iraqi
conflict with the Afghan struggle as though the two were merely separate fronts in
an American imperialist adventure.
Another success quickly chalked up by Canada’s troops-out camp was its deliberate
elision of the fundamental differences between the UN, ISAF and NATO approach
to Afghanistan – to which Canada has been so deeply committed – and the U.S.
approach, first laid down by the former U.S. Secretary of State, Donald Rumsfeld.
That simple and simplistic policy was articulated in the most helpfully clear terms
by President George W. Bush, when he said, succinctly: ‘We are not into nation
building.’
It didn’t help that the Bush presidency plunged Canada into flights of hysterical
anti-Americanism, aggravated by a Conservative prime minister with close political
affinities to the Bush White House. Nor did it help that the leadership of the left in
Canada had come of age during the Vietnam War, and cleaved to all the fuzzy and
comforting counterculture ideas that have made it so difficult for truly progressive
analyses to arise from the ashes of 9/11.
Into the vacuum left by the absence of any robust left-wing analysis on the
Afghanistan question came Canada’s ‘anti-war’ movement, which rapidly emerged
| 13 |
Glavin | Afghanistan: A Choice of Comrades
as the primary organisational forum for collaboration between Third Worldists and
far-right Islamists. This was a bizarre phenomenon, but Canada’s news media, in
its efforts to offer an uncomplicated and ‘balanced’ view of the Afghanistan story,
conveniently overlooked it. Ignoring the appeals of Canada’s progressive Muslims,
Canada’s left-wing press simply looked the other way.
The result was a troops-out campaign that was allowed to pose as ‘anti-war’ without
being called to account for the deadly consequences of its fundamental demands.
For one, a withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan would plunge the country
back into the bloodshed that had left hundreds of thousands dead and made
refugees out of a quarter of Afghanistan’s people during the 1990s. For another, a
troop withdrawal would threaten to trigger countless more wars by emboldening
the most bloodthirsty jihadists from the Pillars of Hercules to the Banda Sea.
But across the liberal-left, these implications remained unexamined. What mattered
more was the protection of Canada’s virtue as a refuge from the bad neoconservative
vibes emanating from the Bush White House. In these ways, the Canadian debates
about Afghanistan became thoroughly infantilised, and by 2006, during the Israel-
Hezbollah war, public opinion was turning sharply against Canada’s engagement
in Afghanistan.
In Ottawa, an unpopular Conservative minority government was at best lukewarm
about the engagement. The Liberal Party that first sent battle troops to Kandahar
when it was in power had lost all interest in championing the Afghan cause. The
only momentum on the Afghanistan question was for withdrawal, and it was
gathering steam. Worse still, for those of us who considered ourselves socialists
or social democrats, the troops-out momentum was being driven by the central
institutions of Canada’s mainstream left.
The nominally socialist New Democratic Party settled on an utterly absurd, twophased
approach – first, a full withdrawal of Canadian troops from the UNsanctioned
39-member ISAF coalition, and then, a policy of meddling in Afghan
affairs by directly negotiating with the Taliban. The president of the Canadian
Labour Congress was content to refer to the Taliban as the Afghan ‘resistance.’ An
NDP senior adviser and later one of its ‘star’ candidates went further, calling the
Taliban mere ‘dissidents’ that Ottawa was unreasonably refusing to invite to peace
talks. And always, it was just ‘George Bush’s War.’
Democratiya 15 | Winter 2008
| 14 |
So, when the Canada-Afghanistan Solidarity Committee (CASC) was formed in
the autumn of 2007, we knew we were in for an uphill climb. But as we began to
seek out prominent Canadians to identify themselves as founding members, we
quickly found we had much broader support than we had imagined. Our founders
came from across the political spectrum, and though we had our differences, we
easily came to a straightforward basis for unity.
The Afghan cause was a liberation struggle, we argued. An international military
presence was necessary to create and maintain sufficient democratic space for
Afghans to work towards justice, peace and reconciliation. The United Nations
wanted us there. The democratically elected government of Afghanistan wanted us
there. Human rights are universal, women’s rights are human rights, and we owed
it to the Afghan people to hear what they had to say for themselves. And what they
were saying was: Stay.
The Solidarity Committee set out not just to become another voice in the Canadian
debates, but to try to change the conversation entirely. In small ways, we managed
to do that, through speaking engagements, opinion pieces in the editorial pages
of Canada’s newspapers, and radio and television interviews. More recently, a
campus group has launched a campaign to raise logistical and financial support for
Kandahar University.
It is not as though we had to start from scratch. There were groups with solid
Afghan solidarity track records, such as the Canadian Women for Women in
Afghanistan and the Toronto-based Afghan Women’s Organisation. We also drew
from Canada’s loosely-knit, marginalised, but young and hopeful Afghan émigré
community.
We won our first victory without even having to really fight for it.
With his minority Conservative government on the brink of toppling, Prime
Minister Harper threw up his hands and turned the Afghanistan imbroglio over to
a panel headed up by John Manley, a former Liberal foreign minister. Earlier this
year, the Manley panel delivered a long-overdue rebuke to the Harper government
for its lumbering incompetence on Afghanistan, but it also savaged the troops-out
isolationists, and proposed a range of policy reforms.
| 15 |
Glavin | Afghanistan: A Choice of Comrades
Manley’s recommendations were not all the Solidarity Committee had asked for
in its submission to his panel, but his report was close enough. One of Manley’s
key recommendations was that Canada stick to its commitments in Kandahar
through to 2011, which means we could live to fight another day. It helped that
around the same time that Manley’s report came out, UN secretary-general Ban
Ki-Moon blasted the troops-out posture as being ‘almost more dismaying’ than the
opportunism of the Taliban itself, and a ‘misjudgement of historic proportions.’
It would be silly to overstate Canada’s relevance to Afghanistan’s prospects. But
Canadian soldiers, along with the British, the Americans and the Dutch, are
shouldering the lion’s share of the military burden in Afghanistan’s southern
provinces. And Canada had come within a hair’s breadth from withdrawal. If
Canada pulled out of Kandahar, wrote commentator David Aaronovitch, the
British would be left fatally exposed in Hellmand, and any British withdrawal
would have forced the abandoned Americans to rely solely on a futile air war.
Pakistan would revert to its duplicities, the Afghan government would collapse,
and there would be a spring in the step of every jihadist from Palestine to Malaysia.
‘That’s before we calculate the cost to women and girls of no longer being educated
or allowed medical treatment. And would there be less terror as a result?’
You could say we dodged a bullet. But now that the conflict in Iraq is rapidly
winding down in ways that defy the grim forecasts of anti-war polemicists, the
United States, particularly, is intent upon ramping up its efforts in Afghanistan.
The war for ‘hearts and minds’ should be ramped up, too, but the main battles in
that war aren’t being fought in the mud-walled compounds of bleak Afghan deserts.
They’re unfolding in the rich countries of the world, where it is already fashionable
in liberal-left circles to write off Afghanistan as an irredeemably misbegotten place,
a folly, and a lost cause.
This is not a war any of us can afford to lose, and it is a disgrace that it has to be fought
within the left, but that’s what we’re stuck with. The central struggle in Afghanistan
is not the war with ‘the Taliban.’ It is a struggle against poverty, illiteracy, and
slavery. It’s a struggle against an Islamic variation of all the totalitarian, xenophobic,
obscurantist and misogynist currents that it has been the historic mission of the left
to fight and to defeat.
Democratiya 15 | Winter 2008
| 16 |
III. Yes, They Can
One of the more touching scenes I witnessed in Afghanistan involved no Afghans at
all. It was in one of those unlikely places a visitor is surprised to discover in this city,
the movie room of the Hare and Hounds bar, in the basement of the Gandamack
Lodge, a converted 1930s-era British villa named after the 1842 Gandamack
massacre, Britain’s most humiliating military defeat in Afghanistan. I believe this is
supposed to be ironic.
The place was filled with Americans. They came in several colours, but they were
almost all young. They were watching Barack Obama’s acceptance speech, live, on
the movie room’s wide-screen TV. They had just witnessed the largest Democratic
Party landslide since the 1964 triumph of Lyndon Johnson, the year of the
bloody voter-registration drive in Mississippi. As these bright young Americans,
with such beautiful smiles and tears in their eyes, watched Obama speak with
his characteristically big-hearted eloquence, it occurred to me that thousands of
Afghan voter-registration workers were at that very moment fanning out across the
provinces of Kunduz, Faryab, Balkh and Baghlan, in just one more small movement
forward for Afghanistan’s embryonic democracy.
Spend any amount of time in Afghanistan and it is easy to become cynical. We forget
that only weeks before September 11, 2001, Pakistan’s spy bosses were directing
convoys of arms shipments through the Khyber Pass to Taliban bases, and most
of the country was on the verge of starvation. Almost a third of the people were
subsisting on emergency gruel packages from the World Health Organisation, and
al-Qaeda was churning out tens of thousands of Algerians, Chechens, Filipinos,
Saudis and Kashmiris from its training camps. Under the Taliban, it was illegal to
sing. Women were livestock.
Now, millions of girls are attending school, three out of every four children have
been immunised against childhood diseases, eight in ten Afghans now have access
to basic medical services, and there are ten universities, dozens of newspapers, and
seven national television stations.
It is so easy these days to add to the growing pile of critiques heaped upon the very
idea of humanitarian intervention. But I didn’t hear much of that kind of thing
at the Hare and Hounds. After Obama had waved his goodbyes to the cameras,
the room was alive with all the incoherence one commonly hears from the most
| 17 |
fervent and idealistic of Obama’s supporters. There was a lot of talk about hope,
and about leadership.
Obama has been clear enough about one thing. He can be counted on to surge
several thousand more American soldiers to Afghanistan. Those soldiers are
badly needed, but a mere troop surge is insufficient to meet the challenges facing
Afghanistan and the region: Good governance and security, neutralizing Pakistan’s
‘safe havens,’ and the engagement of all of Afghanistan’s neighbours in a common
strategy. There is also the long-neglected matter of proper coordination between
reconstruction, development, and military efforts, a disentanglement of aid-money
bottlenecks, and a resolution to the conflicting agendas among NATO allies.
Each of these challenges is complex, but each has also been outlined clearly enough
by the likes of Ahmed Rashid, Barnett Rubin, Steve Coll, David Kilcullen and all
the other smart people whose ideas Obama has been taking into account. Rubin and
Rashid even make a convincing case that in the matter of insurgent holdouts who
can be convinced to put the gun down, something like ‘negotiations’ might even
be possible in ways that won’t require putting knives in the backs of Afghanistan’s
brave young democrats and secularists.
Most of the Taliban’s foot soldiers are just wizened village chieftains who have ended
up on the wrong end of a dispute with a local governor who happens to come from
an opposing tribe, or they hail from the legions of desperate, unemployable men
who roam the remote corners of the country, or they’re refugee-camp survivors. As
often as not, their outback conception of ‘jihad’ is indistinguishable from the more
recognisable motives of brigandage and banditry. Their loyalties are as fluid as you
might expect. But even if some rapprochement with sections of the ‘insurgency’
leadership were possible, and some kind of truce resulted, Rubin and Rashid are
clear that foreign troops will be required in Afghanistan for a long time to come.
Run down that list of challenges again and what you notice is that each requires
leadership, and change, and hope – the vague words that tend to dominate the
lexicon of Obama’s most loyal supporters. But it could well be that Obama’s victory
is just as Slavoj Žižek describes it: A ‘sign of hope in our otherwise dark times.’ And
it could be that this is precisely what Afghanistan most needs, ‘a sign that the last
word does not belong to realistic cynics, from the left or the right.’
Glavin | Afghanistan: A Choice of Comrades
Democratiya 15 | Winter 2008
| 18 |
It’s all just words, of course. But words can go a long way, and in Afghanistan, the
words the people need to hear are these: We will not leave you. We will not betray
you. We will not abandon you.
Terry Glavin is an author, a journalist, and an adjunct Professor at the University
of British Columbia. He is a founder the the Canadian-Afghanistan Solidarity Committee.
Source: Dissent, Winter 2008