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© Hazel Henderson,
May 2009
(word count 576)
"PASHTUNISTAN: THE 193RD
MEMBER NATION OF THE UN?"
by
Hazel Henderson
An outside-the-box approach is needed for the
worsening problems of Afghanistan and Pakistan. US official policy in
its war in Afghanistan is to combat Al Qaeda and make sure there are no
further attacks on the USA from their safe havens. Yet, on his recent
visit to the USA, Afghan President Hamid Karzai said that there are no
Al Qaeda members in Afghanistan. General David Petraeus, US Central
Command Commander, also stated that no Al Qaeda members are in
Afghanistan.
The Taliban are resurgent in both Afghanistan and
Pakistan. In Afghanistan, the Taliban appear to control large areas of
the country and are threatening the capital, Kabul. In Pakistan, the
army is fighting to dislodge the Taliban from the Swat Valley, Buner and
Dir. According to the UN, over a million people are displaced or fleeing
the area.
Reality dictates that both the USA and its NATO allies
admit that there is no military way to drive the Taliban from
Afghanistan. Most Taliban come from the Pashtun tribal groups of about
45 million people who have always inhabited the mountainous region
between Afghanistan and Pakistan. A small percentage of these 45 million
tribes people are Taliban extremists. Even fewer of them belong to Al
Qaeda.
Since neither Afghanistan nor Pakistan can control these 45
million Pashtuns in their tribal areas, they cannot prevent them from
providing safe havens for their Taliban brethren. Neither NATO or US
forces have been able to prevent the Taliban's murderous attacks on
Afghan schoolgirls.
So imagine a scenario:
US President
Obama, President Asif Ali Zardari of Pakistan and Afghan President
Karzai jointly announce that they are supporting the creation of a new
nation: Pashtunistan, to become the 193rd member of the United Nations.
Immediately, the Pashtun tribal leaders turn inward, jockeying for who
will lead their new country, who will be chosen to be its ambassadors.
The Taliban re-focus their attention on their homelands. The leaders of
Pashtunistan now have little interest in continuing to destabilize
Afghanistan or Pakistan.
As Pashtunistan takes its place among the
UN community of nations, it will be required to observe the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and confer greater rights and freedom for
its women. All the UN treaties and agreements covering other nations
would apply, including protection of aid workers and the press. As the
"carrots" of full recognition of Pashtunistan are grasped, its tribal
peoples receive aid and development funds. The "price" for giving women
greater freedom from male oppression is weighed against all the new
benefits of nationhood. Pashtunistan eventually begins to contribute the
positive aspects of its long cultural heritage to the world.
Too
far out? Not when contrasted with current muddled policies which run the
gamut from "preventive war" against the non-existent Al Qaeda in
Afghanistan to the notions of "nation-building" and "protecting women."
The idea that 60,000 US troops can fight the Taliban Pashtuns as they
enter Afghanistan – or protect women by cozying up to their patriarchal
tribal leaders is even more fanciful than helping create Pashtunistan.
As I advocated after 9/11, the US should have called in INTERPOL to help
track down the Al Qaeda criminals, rather than declaring its wars on
Afghanistan and Iraq. Likewise, INTERPOLS's help is needed to find and
punish those Taliban criminals who attacked defenseless schoolgirls –
and rewards should be given to informants leading to their capture.
Who are the realists anyway?
*****
HAZEL HENDERSON is author of
Beyond Globalization, Ethical Markets: Growing the Green Economy and
other books. She co-created with the Calvert Group the Calvert
Henderson Quality of Life Indicators, updated regularly at
www.calvert-henderson.com,
www.EthicalMarkets.com,
www.EthicalMarkets.tv and
www.HazelHenderson.com.