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The administration of President George W. Bush appeared to make a wise choice in its original sequence of counter-terrorism policy objectives. It decided first to facilitate the organization of an Afghan government of national unity to replace the Taliban. Washington then would provide military support for this coalition of Afghan tribes in order to drive the Taliban from power, muster recognition for the new Kabul regime, and, with UN assistance, begin the reconstruction of Afghanistan. Only then would the United States lead the effort to bring Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda to justice — or bring justice to them. From what can be surmised, Bush's war cabinet agreed that as long as the Taliban regime existed, bin Laden and his terrorist organization would be protected. But without the Taliban, bin Laden could not find refuge in Afghanistan's cities, and therefore would be forced to try to find sanctuary in the boondocks of Afghanistan. There, he and his followers could be isolated, hunted, and destroyed. This policy sequence is now out of synch. The effort to organize a government of national unity has proved to be far more difficult than anticipated. The Northern Alliance — a coalition of Tajik and Uzbek Afghanis and backed by Russia, India, and Iran — wants to advance on Kabul on its own, relying on U.S. airpower to decimate Taliban forces in its path. However, traditional Pashtun tribal leaders in the south, some of whom favor rallying behind Zahir Shah (the exiled king), and some strongly backed by Pakistan, objects to any U.S. military aid that would put the Northern Alliance in power in Kabul. Pakistan, especially, opposes the establishment of a new Afghan government linked to its Indian rival. The forces in the south called for an inclusive tribal council, a loya jirga, as the proper way to create an alternate regime. Secretary of State Colin Powell, undoubtedly frustrated by the intricacies of Afghan tribal politics, is working to bring about an alternative indigenous political authority. He has made his policy-planning chief, Richard Haass, the point man for the effort. Progress remains slow. Hundreds of Pashtun leaders did meet in Peshawar to call for a loya jirga. The Northern Alliance reluctantly pledged to be patient, for a time, until forces in the south could be organized as part of the anti-Taliban coalition. The Pentagon, however, became impatient. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld made the case that military strikes on the Taliban would facilitate the formation of a government of national unity. Degrading the Taliban's military, he argued, would give its opposition confidence in eventually taking power. Diplomacy and military operations could proceed concurrently. Air strikes commenced on Oct. 7. While the laborious process of creating a new regime painstakingly proceeded — suffering a severe set back when the Taliban captured and executed opposition leader Abdul Haq — U.S bombing strikes dominated the news. Day after day, reports from Afghanistan and the Pentagon describe the targets hit and the casualties produced — with Pentagon reports often at great variance with those of the Taliban, who claim widespread destruction of civilian targets and hundreds dead. The military effort has moved out ahead of the diplomatic effort, with increasingly adverse consequences. As a result, the United States now is losing the propaganda war. With an Afghan government of national unity yet to be established, U.S. bombing appears to be another foreign power beating up on the Afghans. The United States appears, to many in the Islamic world, to be at war with the Islamic world. In particular, angry Pakistanis are putting President Pervez Musharraf under growing pressure for his support of U.S. military operations. Musharraf now warns Washington that it may be creating a "quagmire," adding that "there has been, I think, a bit of excessive collateral damage." Any positive message from Washington — that all Afghans will be represented in the new regime, that the Taliban is a creature of radical Arabs, that no foreign troops will occupy the country, and that the United Nations will contribute mightily to reconstruct the war-torn land — is being drowned out by reports of exploding ordnance and its devastating consequences. The absence of a strong positive message coupled with the focus on bombing threatens to:
Rumsfeld now finds his continuing military operations treading water and awaiting progress on the diplomatic front, progress that the military operations themselves may be making more difficult.
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