On October
5 in Brussels, seventy-five countries and over twenty international
organizations agreed to continue support for the government of Afghanistan with
$15.2 billion in development assistance over the next four years. This aid
complements the promises of continued security assistance made earlier at the
2016 NATO Warsaw summit.
While the Taliban launched attacks in
Kunduz and Helmand Provinces during the Brussels meeting, the Afghan government
won donor support with commitments to reform, better governance, and improved
performance. The World Bank’s most recent assessment makes clear that
substantial assistance from partners will remain essential for Afghanistan
through 2030, and in Brussels, donors promised to continue to provide
significant but gradually declining aid on the premise that Afghanistan will
become increasingly self-reliant.
Donors and partners are concerned about the Taliban’s threats to security. They
also recognized the major tasks remaining to fight corruption, improve
government efficiency, grow a strong private sector, create jobs for young
people and to fight poverty, while strengthening security forces. But, the
continued donor support for Afghanistan after almost fifteen years reflects a
broad sense that Afghanistan remains a key front in a generational conflict
against violent extremism, which is taking place in many countries today.
Despite the challenges, Afghanistan’s
partners seem to accept that they cannot escape the conflict. In Brussels, many
cited the need to find a way to peace. The communiqué welcomed the Afghan
government’s willingness “to engage with all armed groups in a political
process without preconditions.” But the communiqué also reiterated “we remain
determined to counter all forms of terrorism and violent extremism as
fundamental to international peace and stability.”
Many of us who have worked on these issues
over the years conclude that the international community should not risk again
leaving Afghanistan unsupported prematurely, as happened in the early 1990s. We
paid dearly for that with 9/11 and the events that followed. Donor governments
agree that Afghanistan should not again be a source of extremism and
instability.
The government of Afghanistan is willing
to partner politically and military, and the donors in Brussels accepted that
it is committed to pressing ahead with reforms and improvements to governance
across the board, as demonstrated by the range of serious actions, programs and
plans discussed. Secretary of State Kerry argued in his Brussels remarks “year
by year, our shared effort -- one of the largest international coalitions ever
assembled and maintained over a sustained period of time – is, in fact,
yielding encouraging dividends.”
A Complex and Difficult Mission
There is no question that the United
States and its allies need partners in Afghanistan’s volatile region. Some
understandably ask if it is worthwhile to continue the effort. The United
States has contributed dearly in Afghanistan, with over 2,300 soldiers killed,
many thousands seriously injured, and over $800 billion in resources spent.
Afghanistan’s other partners have also contributed much.
This has been a great diplomatic,
development and military commitment and a complex mission. The results have
been mixed. We have seen some amazing improvements in education, health, life
expectancy, access to telecommunications and media, infrastructure, etc. Yet,
efforts to achieve peace have not borne sufficient fruit. Relations under the
former president of Afghanistan were difficult in recent years. The
international coalition consistently faced a very challenging dual played role
by Pakistan, which greatly hindered progress regarding the Taliban and related
groups.
Since the drawdown of international
troops, the Taliban and other extremist groups have had successes against
Afghan government security forces. The local economy and social indicators
suffered severely from the loss of foreign military and aid spending, and many
headed to Europe. Corruption remains a serious problem. Division and paralysis
in local politics slowed and burdened government effectiveness.
U.S. Perspectives
Given the growing security challenges
posed by the Taliban and others, President Obama decided to freeze the U.S.
troop drawdown and allow more active U.S. military support for the Afghan
military. This has helped stabilize the security situation, but the Taliban
attacks over the past week underscore the challenges.
The next president will need to consider
the U.S. approach for the coming years. U.S. military and financial assistance,
and that of our partners, is more modest than it was earlier. The several
billion dollars a year from the international community should be sustainable
and that aid remains critical for the Afghan government.
A number of former U.S. ambassadors, ISAF
commanders, senior officials and scholars with Afghan experience have been
working together to develop assessments of the situation and advice for the
next President. In September, we recommended that the
way forward should be an enduring partnership between Afghanistan and its
international partners, based on mutual commitment over the next decade to
build stability, better governance, and a stronger economy.
This longer-term
engagement would be conditional. Afghans would do their part to strengthen
security institutions and the effectiveness of military leadership and to
improve governance, economic growth and social progress. In return, the United
States and Afghanistan's other international partners would maintain the
support needed by Afghanistan through security, development and related
assistance. This support would be at a sustainable level, not an open ended
amount. But it would be made available over a decade or more, if Afghan
government performance and the situation merit it.
From a strategic perspective, this
approach would seek to secure Afghanistan as a pillar in the global campaign
against terrorism and violent extremism and as a needed contributor to
stability in the broader region. Having a committed and capable government in
Afghanistan would be worth the relatively modest levels of continued security
and development assistance needed.
Mutual Commitments and the Brussels Conference
This notion of conditional engagement, or
mutual accountability, is central to the October 5 outcome in Brussels. Donors
agreed to provide significant but gradually declining financial support
throughout the “Transformation Decade” (2015–24), if the Afghan government
delivers on its commitments. The stronger working partnership would build
Afghan responsibility, capacity and self-reliance while producing measurable
results from the aid provided. The final communiqué in Brussels includes a
thorough discussion of the areas of progress and challenges, and of plans and
priority topics for work. It now needs to be converted into practical results
in Afghanistan and presented in a clear, digestible way to skeptical publics.
The Afghans argued in Brussels that
despite the evident setbacks suffered since 2014, they have held their own
against the Taliban and are advancing on reforms and stabilizing the economy,
since the massive withdrawal of NATO troops and related spending. They argued
that they have “turned the corner,” having made the “basic system fixes” and that
they are now ready to push ahead with better performance across the government.
Many non-Afghan participants agreed. As
one senior European diplomat told me, “Given what many people thought of the
prospects when the troop and spending drawdown began in 2014, the fact that we
are having this conference at all and that we have continued commitments from
so many donors is a miracle.”
Afghan officials urged donors gradually to
provide more assistance through Afghan government channels and to allow the
government more flexibility to move money around when projects are stalled or
ministries can’t disperse funds. The donors agree in principle
but seek increasing evidence of the government’s ability to use the aid well,
to eliminate corruption, to improve delivery of services, and to fix internal
bottlenecks before moving increased funds (now over 50 percent) through Afghan
government channels.
World Bank Assessment
The World Bank argues that Afghanistan
will be heavily resource constrained and aid-dependent through 2030. The Bank
says that increased aid, with more of it on budget, is needed to achieve a
higher long-term growth trajectory. The Bank’s analysis no doubt supports the
agreement in Brussels and makes clear why serious follow up in Kabul is vital.
The Bank argues for increased infrastructure
investment to create jobs and to prepare for future growth. It proposes steps
focused on development of the agriculture and mining sectors. The agricultural
sector can increase food production and create jobs. Long-term investments in
the mining sector will prepare the way for enhanced income over the longer
term.
The World Bank identifies increased
investment in human capital as vital. Afghanistan is living through a massive
youth bulge. It needs to create new jobs each year and it needs those new
workers to have skills needed to power economic growth. The World Bank makes
clear that continued institutional strengthening, including improved collection
of public finances, remains central.
The Bank also argues for programs aimed at
meeting the needs of those at risk and living in poverty. Steps to prevent more
migration and to absorb returning migrants from Europe and from neighboring
Pakistan are key. European officials were eager in Brussels to get an agreement
to allow the EU to send home Afghans not found to be qualified to stay in the
EU.
The sustained donor support agreed in
Brussels is essential for the Afghan government to: (1) boost short-term
growth; (2) create sufficient jobs; (3) expand delivery of public services and
collection of government revenue; (4) support private sector growth; (5) make
investments for future growth; (6) reduce corruption and improve justice sector
performance; (7) grow regional trade and infrastructure; and (8) sustain
security spending, which would otherwise squeeze out non-security spending.
At the heart of the Brussels Conference
was an agreement providing more discretionary donor assistance to finance
Afghan-owned development in return for more accountability to deliver on
promises for more efficient assistance delivery and better governance. This
deal needs to be made effective in the months ahead.
Peace and Security
The prospect for peace was on the minds of those in
Brussels, with the recognition that near term progress with the Taliban seems
unlikely. But, the announcement of a peace agreement with former warlord
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar signaled that progress is possible. Secretary of State
Kerry highlighted the agreement in Brussels, adding that the “conflict cannot
end and will not be won on the battlefield” but via a political settlement
negotiated with the Afghan government.
Whatever the near term prospect for peace, the operational goal shared
by its partners is an Afghanistan increasingly capable of handling its security
challenges and governance duties with increasingly modest foreign help. In the
longer term, Afghanistan’s partners seek a peaceful, prosperous and
better-governed country that contributes to regional security.
The agreement to emerge from Brussels is an essential element in moving
toward these overarching goals. Assuring sustainable development aid flows
needed to make economic and social progress possible is vital as is the
effectiveness of Afghanistan’s security forces. International support is
essential here too. Afghan forces have demonstrated courage and suffered many
casualties. Yet, their performance, and their leadership, must continue to
improve if they are to contain and weaken the Taliban and other violent and
extremist actors, and increase the prospects for a path to peace. Advances
require progress against ethnic divisiveness and corruption in the security
forces.
Equally important is that Afghanistan's government and its political
elites find ways to avoid the paralysis and delay that characterized too much
of the last two years and that they agree on a way forward on the internal
political agenda, including parliamentary elections.
A New U.S.
President
In the United States, the new president will review the situation and
work through key decisions about U.S. engagement, for example, on the U.S.
troop presence, strategy and force mix, on the size and focus of development
assistance, on coordination with the Afghan government and other partners, and
importantly, on policy toward Pakistan.
Those former U.S. officials and experts with Afghan experience who
issued the report cited above in September argue that a mutual commitment for a
long-term partnership with the Afghan people and government is in the interests
of the United States and others now supporting Afghanistan. The outcomes of the
Brussels Conference are a key part of making that long-term partnership a
reality.
Earl Anthony Wayne is a former U.S. Ambassador and Assistant Secretary
of State for Economic and Business Affairs. He served in Kabul from 2009-2011.
He is currently a Senior Non-Resident Advisor at CSIS and a Public Policy
Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson Center.
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