The meaning of Marjah 

By Kamran Bokhari, Peter Zeihan and Nathan Hughes 

On February 13, some 6,000 United States Marines, soldiers and Afghan National 
Army troops launched a sustained assault on the town of Marjah in Helmand 
province. Until this latest offensive, the US and North Atlantic Treaty 
Organization (NATO) effort in Afghanistan had been constrained by other 
considerations, most notably Iraq. 

Western forces viewed the Afghan conflict as a matter of holding the line or 
pursuing targets of opportunity. But now, armed with larger forces and a new 
strategy, the war - the real war - has begun. The most recent offensive - 
dubbed Operation Moshtarak ("Moshtarak" is Dari for "Together") - is the 
largest joint US-NATO-Afghan operation in history. It also is the first major
offensive conducted by the first units deployed as part of the surge of 30,000 
troops promised by US President Barack Obama. 
The United States originally entered Afghanistan in the aftermath of the 
September 11, 2001, attacks. In those days of fear and fury, American goals 
could be simply stated: A non-state actor - al-Qaeda - had attacked the 
American homeland and needed to be destroyed. Al-Qaeda was based in Afghanistan 
at the invitation of a near-state actor - the Taliban, which at the time were 
Afghanistan' s de facto governing force. 

Since the Taliban were unwilling to hand al-Qaeda over, the United States 
attacked. By the end of the year, al-Qaeda had relocated to neighboring 
Pakistan and the Taliban retreated into the arid, mountainous countryside in 
their southern heartland and began waging a guerrilla conflict. In time, 
American attention became split between searching for al-Qaeda and clashing 
with the Taliban over control of Afghanistan. 

But from the earliest days following 9/11, the White House was eyeing Iraq, and 
with the Taliban having largely declined combat in the initial invasion, the 
path seemed clear. The US military and diplomatic focus was shifted, and as the 
years wore on, the conflict absorbed more and more US troops, even as other 
issues - a resurgent Russia and a defiant Iran - began to demand American 
attention. All of this and more consumed American bandwidth, and the Afghan 
conflict melted into the background. The United States maintained its Afghan 
force in what could accurately be described as a holding action as the bulk of 
its forces operated elsewhere. That has more or less been the state of affairs 
for eight years. 

That has changed with the series of offensive operations that most recently 
culminated at Marjah. 

Why Marjah? The key is the geography of Afghanistan and the nature of the 
conflict itself. Most of Afghanistan is custom-made for a guerrilla war. Much 
of the country is mountainous, encouraging local identities and militias, as 
well as complicating the task of any foreign military force. The country's 
aridity discourages dense population centers, making it very easy for irregular 
combatants to melt into the countryside. Afghanistan lacks navigable rivers or 
ports, drastically reducing the region's likelihood of developing commerce. No 
commerce to tax means fewer resources to fund a meaningful government or 
military and encourages the smuggling of every good imaginable - and that 
smuggling provides the perfect funding for guerrillas. 

Rooting out insurgents is no simple task. It requires three things: 

1. Massively superior numbers so that occupiers can limit the zones to which 
the insurgents have easy access. 
2. The support of the locals in order to limit the places that the guerillas 
can disappear into. 
3. Superior intelligence so that the fight can be consistently taken to the 
insurgents rather than vice versa. 

Without those three things - and American-led forces in Afghanistan lack all 
three - the insurgents can simply take the fight to the occupiers, retreat to 
rearm and regroup and return again shortly thereafter. 

But the insurgents hardly hold all the cards. Guerrilla forces are by their 
very nature irregular. Their capacity to organize and strike is quite limited, 
and while they can turn a region into a hellish morass for an opponent, they 
have great difficulty holding territory - particularly territory that a regular 
force chooses to contest. Should they mass into a force that could achieve a 
major battlefield victory, a regular force - which is by definition 
better-funded, -trained, -organized and -armed - will almost always smash the 
irregulars. As such, the default guerrilla tactic is to attrit and harass the 
occupier into giving up and going home. The guerrillas always decline combat in 
the face of a superior military force only to come back and fight at a time and 
place of their choosing. Time is always on the guerrilla's side if the regular 
force is not a local one. 

But while the guerrillas don't require basing locations that are as large or as 
formalized as those required by regular forces, they are still bound by basic 
economics. They need resources - money, men and weapons - to operate. The 
larger these locations are, the better economies of scale they can achieve and 
the more effectively they can fight their war. 

Marjah is perhaps the quintessential example of a good location from which to 
base. It is in a region sympathetic to the Taliban; Helmand province is part of 
the Taliban's heartland. Marjah is very close to Kandahar, Afghanistan' s 
second city, the religious center of the local brand of Islam, the birthplace 
of the Taliban, and due to the presence of American forces, an excellent 
target. 

Helmand alone produces more heroin than any country on the planet, and Marjah 
is at the center of that trade. By some estimates, this center alone supplies 
the Taliban with a monthly income of US$200,000. And it is defensible: the 
farmland is crisscrossed with irrigation canals and dotted with mud-brick 
compounds - and, given time to prepare, a veritable plague of improvised 
explosive devices. 

Simply put, regardless of the Taliban's strategic or tactical goals, Marjah is 
a critical node in their operations. 

The American strategy 
Though operations have approached Marjah in the past, it has not been something 
NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) ever has tried to hold. 
The British, Canadian and Danish troops holding the line in the country's 
restive south had their hands full enough. 

Despite Marjah's importance to the Taliban, ISAF forces were too few to engage 
the Taliban everywhere (and they remain as such). But American priorities 
started changing about two years ago. The surge of forces into Iraq changed the 
position of many a player in the country. Those changes allowed a reshaping of 
the Iraq conflict that laid the groundwork for the current "stability" and 
American withdrawal. At the same time, the Taliban began to resurge in a big 
way. Since then, the George W Bush and then Barack Obama administrations inched 
toward applying a similar strategy to Afghanistan, a strategy that focuses less 
on battlefield success and more on altering the parameters of the country 
itself. 
As the Obama administration' s strategy has begun to take shape, it has started 
thinking about endgames. A decades-long occupation and pacification of 
Afghanistan is simply not in the cards. A withdrawal is, but only a withdrawal 
where the security free-for-all that allowed al-Qaeda to thrive will not 
return. And this is where Marjah comes in. 

Denying the Taliban control of poppy farming communities like Marjah and the 
key population centers along the Helmand River Valley - and areas like them 
around the country - is the first goal of the American strategy. The fewer key 
population centers the Taliban can count on, the more dispersed - and 
militarily inefficient - their forces will be. This will hardly destroy the 
Taliban, but destruction isn't the goal. The Taliban are not simply a militant 
Islamist force. At times they are a flag of convenience for businessmen or 
thugs; they can even be, simply, the least-bad alternative for villagers 
desperate for basic security and civil services. In many parts of Afghanistan, 
the Taliban are not only pervasive but also the sole option for governance and 
civil authority. 

So destruction of what is in essence part of the local cultural and political 
fabric is not an American goal. Instead, the goal is to prevent the Taliban 
from mounting large-scale operations that could overwhelm any particular 
location. Remember, the Americans do not wish to pacify Afghanistan; the 
Americans wish to leave Afghanistan in a form that will not cause the United 
States severe problems down the road. In effect, achieving the first goal 
simply aims to shape the ground for a shot at achieving the second. 

That second goal is to establish a domestic authority that can stand up to the 
Taliban in the long run. Most of the surge of forces into Afghanistan is not 
designed to battle the Taliban now but to secure the population and train the 
Afghan security forces to battle the Taliban later. To do this, the Taliban 
must be weak enough in a formal military sense to be unable to launch massive 
or coordinated attacks. Capturing key population centers along the Helmand 
River Valley is the first step in a strategy designed to create the breathing 
room necessary to create a replacement force, preferably a replacement force 
that provides Afghans with a viable alternative to the Taliban. 

That is no small task. In recent years, in places where the official government 
has been corrupt, inept or defunct, the Taliban have in many cases stepped in 
to provide basic governance and civil authority. And this is why even the 
Americans are publicly flirting with holding talks with certain factions of the 
Taliban in hopes that at least some of the fighters can be dissuaded from 
battling the Americans (assisting with the first goal) and perhaps even joining 
the nascent Afghan government (assisting with the second). 

The bottom line is that this battle does not mark the turning of the tide of 
the war. Instead, it is part of the application of a new strategy that 
accurately takes into account Afghanistan' s geography and all the weaknesses 
and challenges that geography poses. Marjah marks the first time the US has 
applied a plan not to hold the line, but actually to reshape the country. We 
are not saying that the strategy will bear fruit. Afghanistan is a corrupt mess 
populated by citizens who are far more comfortable thinking and acting locally 
and tribally than nationally. In such a place indigenous guerrillas will always 
hold the advantage. No one has ever attempted this sort of national 
restructuring in Afghanistan, and the Americans are attempting to do so in a 
short period on a shoestring budget. 

At the time of this writing, this first step appears to be going well for 
American-NATO- Afghan forces. Casualties have been light and most of Marjah 
already has been secured. But do not read this as a massive battlefield 
success. The assault required weeks of obvious preparation, and very few 
Taliban fighters chose to remain and contest the territory against the more 
numerous and better armed attackers. The American challenge lies not so much in 
assaulting or capturing Marjah but in continuing to deny it to the Taliban. If 
the Americans cannot actually hold places like Marjah, then they are simply 
engaging in an exhausting and reactive strategy of chasing a dispersed and 
mobile target. 

A "government- in-a-box" of civilian administrators is already poised to move 
into Marjah to step into the vacuum left by the Taliban. We obviously have 
major doubts about how effective this box government can be at building up 
civil authority in a town that has been governed by the Taliban for most of the 
last decade. Yet what happens in Marjah and places like it in the coming months 
will be the foundation upon which the success or failure of this effort will be 
built. But assessing that process is simply impossible, because the only 
measure that matters cannot be judged until the Afghans are left to themselves. 

(This report is republished with permission of STRATFOR.) 


 








      

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke