What is behind US-Taliban talks?
29 October 2008

Yesterday the Wall Street Journal reported on US plans to open direct
negotiations with Taliban leaders in Afghanistan. The fact that the
Journal, a conservative financial paper, broke the story shows that it
was not a journalistic exposé, but a deliberate public declaration of
a shift in state policy.

According to the Journal, "The US is actively considering talks with
elements of the Taliban, the armed Islamist group that once ruled
Afghanistan and sheltered al-Qaeda, in a major policy shift that would
have been unthinkable a few months ago." It reported that such talks
were included in a "draft recommendation in a classified White House
assessment of US strategy in Afghanistan."

These plans seek to address a serious deterioration of the US position
in Afghanistan. Violence has spread through the country and into
neighboring tribal areas of Pakistan, whose US-backed government has
been discredited by its acquiescence in US bombings and ground
incursions into Pakistan against Taliban militants. The US war on the
Taliban has also antagonized important US allies that helped the US
organize the Taliban militias in the interests of US pipeline politics
in the mid-1990s: the Saudi clerical establishment and Pakistan's
powerful military espionage agency, Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI).

Notwithstanding US "war on terror" rhetoric, which portrays the
Taliban as monsters, US-Taliban talks are not new. The 2001 US
invasion of Afghanistan deployed relatively few troops and the US
occupation of the country has depended on manipulating Afghanistan's
fractious tribal elite. A State Department official told the Journal:
"We and the Afghans negotiate with the tribes every day on the
district level. Sometimes they're Taliban or their supporters. Often
they say: ‘If we get what we want, we'll lay down our arms.'"

The Journal also reported that officials of the US-controlled Afghan
regime had negotiated with Taliban representatives "in recent weeks in
Saudi Arabia."

US officials have, however, been constrained in their attempts to
create a workable Afghan policy by restrictions on negotiations with
the Taliban. An intelligence official told the Journal, "some US
officials quietly conducted informal outreach to Taliban leaders, but
the military was more interested in taking them into custody." The
leaking of plans for US-Taliban talks is a signal to opinion-makers,
as well as to observers abroad and particularly in Afghanistan and
Pakistan, that Washington will no longer impose such limits on itself.

The change in US imperialism's ruling personnel—with the impending
presidential election and the promotion of General David Petraeus to
head the US Central Command, giving him authority over US forces in
Afghanistan—provides US policy makers the opportunity to carry out a
certain recalibration of the "war on terror."

Petraeus' history is particularly significant in this regard. He is
being sent to Afghanistan to replicate there the "surge" operation he
oversaw as commander of US forces in Iraq.

In Iraq, he bought off local proxies--Sunni tribesmen in Anbar
province, parts of the Mahdi Army and Sunni militias in larger cities.
Then, with a "surge" of US troops throughout Iraq--Anbar province,
then Baqubah, Baghdad, Basra, etc.—American forces massacred those who
refused to ally with them. Following the deaths of untold thousands of
Iraqis and hundreds of US troops, Iraqi resistance to the US
occupation has decreased. US media and political circles have hailed
the surge as a great success.

Now the surge is to come to Afghanistan. At least 12,000 more US
soldiers will soon arrive there. The Journal notes that Petraeus
publicly endorsed the policy of US talks with the Taliban. In an
October 8 speech on Afghan policy at the Heritage Foundation think-
tank, he said, "You have to talk to enemies. You want to try to
reconcile with as many of those as possible while then identifying
those who truly are irreconcilable."

Petraeus will accordingly oversee a policy of carefully sorting out
Afghan tribal leaders and making each one the proverbial offer they
cannot refuse. For militia leaders who align themselves with US
military policy there will be suitable rewards. For "irreconcilables"
there will be air strikes and special operations raids.

This policy shift is particularly significant in that the candidate
now considered the likely winner, Democrat Barack Obama, has long
attacked the Bush administration for being distracted from the war in
Afghanistan and called for strikes against targets in Pakistan.

The Journal noted that both presidential candidates, Obama and
Republican John McCain, were supporting US-Taliban talks, helping
"ensure that the policy is put in place regardless of who wins next
month's elections."

This underscores a central reality of the 2008 US elections: With the
likely victory of Obama, more tactically adept but no less ruthless
representatives of the US ruling class will come to power.

Alex Lantier

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