-Caveat Lector-

INDEPENDENT
Living in poverty and fear of abandonment, the barely functioning state
that trusted its saviours

By Phil Reeves in Kabul
24 February 2003

The details are so compelling. The snowman, for instance, that someone
built on a roundabout in the middle of this battered city.

This was clearly meant to represent Osama bin Laden, for his name was
written on his midriff. He also had a long scraggy beard made of grass and
a Taliban head-dress.

A little joke, a dash of black humour to take the mind off the oppressively
cold weather and dismal poverty? Or was it an act of scorn at a defeated
oppressor? Or an expression of support? And what about the blizzard of
propaganda leaflets flung into the streets from a passing car the other
night?

That was the first time the "night letters" - regularly distributed in
provincial cities - have appeared in the capital, threatening jihad against
the foreign soldiers and their allies. Are these the desperate death throes
of defeated Islamist extremists, or a sign that they are rallying anew? And
what of the persistent whispers that al- Qa'ida and Taliban elements have
secretly slipped back into Kabul? These were considered serious enough by
the United Nations security analysts for them to issue a kidnapping warning
to staff on Thursday.

Now, remember, this is Kabul, a city protected by nearly 5,000
international peacekeepers, and the safest, quietest place in Afghanistan.
Yet anxiety is gripping it like winter flu.

These unsettling little tremors, possible signals of a more dangerous
faultline, are not all. A more basic issue is in play: a deep concern in
Kabul that the international community is losing interest even though the
task of repairing the wreckage of war - let alone, the even more massive
job of nation-building - has just begun.

People remember Tony Blair's pronouncement that the world "will not walk
away from Afghanistan, as it has done so many times before". But Afghans
have also listened with astonishment as Americans portray their country's
experience since the overthrow of the Taliban as a "success".

Now the United States is priming its laser-guided bombs anew, and the
attention of the world's media has swivelled to the deserts and oilfields
of Iraq. Few in Kabul seem convinced by the repeated assurances - from the
US government and its military, from the UN and Britain - that they will
not be forgotten or allowed to lapse back into the bloodshed that prevailed
after the occupying Soviet forces were driven out by the CIA-funded and
CIA-armed mujahedin in 1989.

There are plenty who dislike the presence of the Americans and their allies
sweeping around their pot-holed streets in shiny new four-by-fours or army
jeeps. This is a city that still has a deeply conservative strain - despite
all the trumpeting about the liberation of women, many of those on the
streets still wear burqas - and one whose capacity for trust has been
corroded by past international betrayals. But a fear of abandonment - or at
least a sharp fall-off in international support - is palpable and
encompasses many international aid agency workers as well as residents. One
agency official, a veteran of several previous conflicts, told The
Independent: "The Pentagon and the White House have absolutely no policy on
Afghanistan."

You find the anxiety in the squalid little shack where Ilal Mohammed adds a
few dollars to his $30 monthly income as a government worker by renting out
DVDs of women's wrestling and vaguely raunchy Hindi movies - unthinkable in
the Taliban days. Feeding his five small children is hard and conditions at
home are miserable. But, he says, it wasworse before.

You find it over the road in the grubby hut where Hazrat Shah, a gnarled
75-year-old Pashtun, is selling firewood - a thriving business in a city
routinely plagued by power cuts and freezing weather. He has seen it all -
Soviet invasion, civil war, the rise of the Taliban, the arrival of the
Americans after 9/11. There is at last a measure of relative stability, he
says. But these are "very risky times".

And it is there in the outdoor money-changers' market, where a local
surgeon called Dr Ali - he was fearful of giving his full name - is
investing in a few greenbacks. He spelt the position out better than
anyone. "If the Americans attack Iraq and leave here, we will lose
everything. We have already been through that once before, and we don't
want it to happen again. The international community is our only hope, the
only way that we can stand on our two feet one day." That day is still a
very long way off. The brave new world promised in the aftermath of the
Taliban's ousting has yet to dawn. The country is not remotely close to
becoming a functioning state, with a viable infrastructure and control over
its territory. And the US-led war against al-Qa'ida is not over, even
though the world's attention has drifted elsewhere.

A year ago, the impromptu church service held this month for a small group
of US infantrymen in the mountains of south-eastern Afghanistan would have
made TV news bulletins worldwide. We would all have seen Capt Jimmy
Nichols, battalion chaplain for 2-504 Parachute Infantry Regiment, lead his
soldiers in a gruff rendering of the hymn "Keep on the Firing Line".
Dressed in full combat gear, he launched into a sermon about Samson,
turning to the wrathful pages of the Old Testament to fire up his men
before they resumed their efforts to kill or capture a small group of armed
zealots.

Samson was, the chaplain declared, the "original tough guy, long before
Rambo", whose "super-strength" was a gift from God. "God has given us also
gifts. You see, the reason that Samson is such a good story for folks like
you and me in the military is that Samson is you - Samson is me."

On the front line, fundamentalism is used to fight fundamentalism.

But, 15 months after the fall of the Taliban, the American Samson has yet
to prevail. According to Col Roger King, the US military spokesman at the
Bagram air base outside Kabul, there are "probably several hundred" Taliban
and al- Qa'ida forces around Afghanistan and "maybe a larger number" over
the border with Pakistan. Some of these forces appear to have forged links
with Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a militiaman who once pocketed CIA funds to fight
the Soviet Union before joining the civil war, earning a reputation for
extreme brutality. He is marching under the banner of a self-declared jihad
against the Americans and their allies.

The head of the Hezb-i- Islami party, he is suspected in Kabul of
involvement in numerous rocket attacks and a car bomb that killed 30 in
September. Last year he narrowly missed being killed by a missile fired by
a CIA Predator, an unmanned aircraft.

There are other ominous signs. Some 400 rockets have been fired at American
forces in 10 months. They find two or three caches of arms, often 107mm
Chinese rockets, each week. "This place is a 100 times more dangerous than
Iraq," said one US reserve officer at Bagram, a veteran of Operation Desert
Storm in Iraq in 1991. "Here they are liable to toss a grenade under your
vehicle at any time." A fortnight ago the Taliban issued what is thought to
be its first communiqué since being removed from power. It named two senior
figures - Mullah Obaeidullah and Mullah Biradar - as commanders in a new
campaign to oust the Americans.

And the international effort to help establish a meaningful central
government under Hamid Karzai is also incomplete. Many of the building
blocks of a viable nation - institutions capable of imposing law and order,
health services, power supplies, a road network, communications,
education - are often absent.

In the first six months of the Karzai interim administration, two ministers
including the first vice-president were assassinated. The President came
close to being killed in Kandahar last September.

Some international agency workers report that there is outright anger and
frustration in the provinces over the slow pace of reconstruction and the
lack of security, a sense that the Karzai government has done nothing for
them. Ethnic rivalries are crucial: dissatisfaction is said to be
particularly strong among Pashtuns, who believe that the interim government
is dominated by the light-skinned, sandy-haired and often green-eyed
Panjshiris.

The Karzai transitional government has been unable to assert its control
over most of the country. Until it does so, the free-and-fair elections
required next year by the Bonn Agreement will remain a pipe dream.

The UN and Hamid Karzai have tried to persuade the international community
to tackle the resulting "security vacuum" by extending Kabul's
peace-keeping force, the International Security Assistance Force, (Isaf) to
key provincial cities - exporting the relative stability that they have
created within the capital.

These efforts failed. The Pentagon has proposed a cheaper option:
dispatching reconstruction teams of 80 to 100 dominated by US reservists to
provincial centres. But this has met strong opposition from international
aid agencies.

In the meantime, Afghanistan is awash with hundreds of thousands of
weapons, many supplied by the West after the Soviet invasion. Much of this
arsenal, including tanks, is in the hands of rival warlords who are still
feuding over control of key trading routes. Though several have taken
senior jobs and most have expressed verbal support for the Karzai
government, they have yet to relinquish their private armies.

The lack of money has dogged Afghanistan from the start. A year ago, the
World Bank estimated $10.2bn (£6.4bn) was needed over five years.
International pledges were about half that sum. And, according to Care
International, an NGO monitoring international aid, the money actually
spentper capita last year in Afghanistan was under half that of
post-conflict Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo and East Timor. The CIA has spent some
of that paying warlords and militias for help in the "war on terror" -
strengthening rivals to the central government.

So what does this tell us about the fate of Iraq after the Americans have
taken it apart?

It is not hard to find international aid workers who see that the problems
of Afghanistan will be repeated in Iraq. "There is a real question over
whether the international community is prepared to take on the burden of
rebuilding Iraq over the long term," said Paul O'Brien, advocacy
co-ordinator for Care in Afghanistan.

Another Western observer summed up his views more acidly. "If the Americans
think this is success, then outright failure must be pretty horrible to
behold."

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