The Economist UK - 16.11.2019

(John Hannent) #1
The EconomistNovember 16th 2019 Asia 51

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Banyan Still negotiating


I


t had lookedlike a complete rupture.
In early September President Donald
Trump tweeted that he had not only
cancelled a summit with negotiators
from the Taliban, but also “called off
peace negotiations”. The hopes that had
been swelling that America and the
Taliban would find a way to end Afghani-
stan’s long, gruesome conflict were
dashed. Instead, America seemed to be
resorting to unilateral measures, trim-
ming its forces in the country from
14,000 soldiers to fewer than 12,000.
Yet this week America, the Taliban
and Afghanistan’s American-backed
government were in contact once again.
The proof was a rare hostage swap. Kevin
King and Timothy Weeks, an American
and an Australian, were abducted by
gunmen in 2016 while teaching at the
American University of Afghanistan in
Kabul, the capital. Now they are to be
released in exchange for Taliban prison-
ers held by the Afghan government in a
deal brokered by Zalmay Khalilzad,
America’s pointman on Afghanistan.
Mr Khalilzad spent a long time pre-
paring the ground for peace talks, espe-
cially getting backing for them from
neighbouring countries such as Paki-
stan. Months haggling with Taliban
emissaries in Qatar followed. By Septem-
ber they had agreed on the outlines of a
deal, to be sealed at the summit Mr
Trump cancelled. The Taliban would
have promised both to prevent interna-
tional terrorist groups like al-Qaeda from
operating in Afghanistan and to enter
talks on the country’s future that would
involve the government, which it had
previously dismissed as illegitimate. In
return, the United States would have
gradually removed most of its troops. Mr
Khalilzad’s efforts marked America’s first
real search for a political settlement

since its invasion in 2001. That toppled the
Taliban but never crushed them.
Mr Trump’s frustration with the negoti-
ations was understandable. He cited a
Taliban bombing that had killed an Ameri-
can serviceman just days before the
planned summit as the reason for the
rupture. But growing criticism from Re-
publican allies, such as Lindsey Graham, a
bellicose senator, must also have unsettled
him. They worried that the negotiations
were a mere cover for capitulation.
The release of three senior Taliban
captives in exchange for the professors
will also gall American hawks. The trio
were an organiser of suicide bombings, an
uncle of the Taliban’s deputy leader and
Anas Haqqani, brother of Sirajuddin, the
head of the ruthless Haqqani network—in
effect, the leader of the Taliban’s military
operations. Yet some analysts read the
swap as a signal not only that the two sides
are talking again, but also that the Haqqani
network, the most violent and radical
element of the Taliban, is ready to be part
of any settlement.
America, meanwhile, has no good

alternatives to talks. Simply to withdraw
its forces, as Mr Trump might prefer,
would be to admit that nearly two de-
cades of American policy has failed. It
would intensify the conflict, weaken the
Afghan government and risk a proxy war
driven by the likes of India and Pakistan.
Yet the Taliban, too, have reasons to
negotiate. They have the advantage on
the battlefield—by controlling vast rural
areas, sending suicide bombers into the
capital and making shocking raids on
provincial cities. But they know they
cannot win the war.
What is more, the limbo in Afghan
politics—the results of a presidential
election in September are still being
tallied, and may lead to a second round
in the spring—is not as much of an obsta-
cle to peace as it seems. The Taliban have
long wanted to negotiate a power-shar-
ing deal with a broader range of gran-
dees—including local strongmen, civil-
society groups and politicians of all
stripes, not just the government. If that
model is taken up, then the uncertainty
about the outcome of the election will
matter less.
And what if this all goes pear-shaped?
Laurel Miller of the International Crisis
Group, a think-tank, is surely right in
arguing that for American troops to
remain in Afghanistan in perpetuity—an
idea which General Mark Milley, chair-
man of the joint chiefs of staff, seemed to
approve of this month—is no Plan b. For
a start, under Mr Trump, no American
commitment can be trusted. His abrupt
withdrawal of troops from northern Syria
points to what he could do in Afghani-
stan—with disastrous consequences. All
the more reason for the Afghan govern-
ment to explore an accommodation with
the Taliban. For ordinary Afghans peace
cannot come soon enough.

Why no one can afford to call off peace talks in Afghanistan

these crimes are “false monks”—either re-
cent initiates with little religious educa-
tion or thieves donning maroon robes in
order to steal nats’ offerings more easily.
However, this explanation may simply be a
way to avoid direct criticism of revered mo-
nastic authorities. Han Tun believes that
the monks he encountered intended not
only to steal donations but “to violate, to
intervene with our beliefs”. Khin Swe Oo,
the custodian of the shrine in Taung Pyone,
believes the individuals responsible are in-
spired by prominent monks who fulmi-
nate regularly against nats in widely dis-

seminated sermons.
The main focus of Ma Ba Tha, a radical
Buddhist organisation which was banned
in 2017, was to alert Burmese to the threat of
Islam. One of its leading members, a monk
called Wisetkhana, does not believe that
devotees of nats pose nearly as great a
threat to Buddhism as Muslims do, nor
does he condone the violent treatment
meted out to them. But he has written a
book that argues nats are evil. It is called
“Protecting the Race and Religion”. 
Not all monks abhor the spirit cult. A
few years ago Khin Swe Oo asked Zawana

Nyarna and other local abbots for help in
preventing the attacks at Taung Pyone.
Monks from local monasteries now ob-
serve the festivities, interrogate threaten-
ing monks, disrobe them if they are impos-
tors or send them home if they are genuine
monks. “Because of their help, it’s getting
better,” says Han Tun. But as Khin Swe Oo
leans back in the bamboo chair in front of
her house, just a stone’s throw from the
shrine, a pagoda covered in gold leaf, she
closes her eyes. The attacks are still hap-
pening, she says. The burden of protecting
the spirits weighs heavily on her. 7
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