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Can Britain reach the $10-a-day Taliban?
Nobody, but nobody is suggesting right now that we're talking to Mullah Omar and giving him parts of Afghanistan to run. That is absolutely not what reconciliation and reintigration means. What it means is the recognition that at some point, for this insurgency to die down and for Afghanistan to become a more peaceful, stronger place, there will need to be some sort of ongoing political understanding.
And who exactly is being "reintegrated?"
You're talking about the $10-a-day Taliban. At the moment the best deal he has is to accept that $10 and and go and shoot foreign or Afghan government troops. What we're trying to do by the reintegration philsophy is to try to introduce a better deal for him.
The official described a "comprehensive strategy" (what the U.S. calls a "whole-government" strategy aimed at giving Afghanistan the security it needs to keep militants under control and prevent the likes of al Qaeda from setting up shop). With presidential elections on the horizon, I asked the official if such an Afghan state need necessarily be democratic:
It's really not in our interest to set high standards of Western democracy in Afghanistan. We're not playing that game. That doesn't mean we don't want to hold dear the values that that western countries like yours and ours and the European countries have. Freedom of speech, women's rights: they're a very imporant part of the sort of activities we're conducting.... It doesn't mean that we're pounding the pavement, saying "you must have a vote on this" or demanding decisions be democratic. The phrase we've used is "going with the grain" of Afghan society.
While an Afghan strategy that encompasses negotiation with elements of the Taliban and is less concerned with democracy promotion may sound less ambitious, it will still likely entail a multi-year commitment. With rising U.K. casualties and an unpopular government, that could be a tough sell to British voters.
As Small Wars Journal's Robbert Haddick recently wrote on ForeignPolicy.com, the insurgents are likely very aware of this fact.
Christopher Furlong/Getty Images













Finally the penny has
Finally the penny has dropped; what we all knew for years; Afghanistan cannot be won; the Russians failed and the West will also fail unless dialogue take place. What is so amazing is that the might of the civilized West with its modern weaponry is having a tough fight against blokes on motorbikes with AK-47's and RP G's on their shoulders dressed in ganzies and turbans living on a few Almonds and water to survive; while western troops attempt to fight in 40 degree plus of heat carrying 50 pounds of kit in a "Vietnam" scenario. Again those running this war from the West just have not learned from history that this war cannot be won alone by force. Just like the teeth of a shark; the enemy will keep coming forever more and it is difficult to fight an enemy that does not fear dying for its cause. Iraq was a disaster and now; it seems; Afghanistan is about to be the same. Politicians continue to spend soldiers lives and waste them as usual. Lives are at stake. Money can be replace by cheap loans but cheap loans cannot be replace lives.