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Showing posts with label New strategy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New strategy. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Taliban of the 21st century

Taliban of the 21st century 

The Taliban’s agility and ability to adapt has been remarkable. Their gradual acceptance to of the fact that unrestricted violence would hurt their quest for popular support, transformed into sophisticated policy planning and implementation of developmental activities. Step -by -step, they revived and re-started parts of their governance, and invented other systems through trial and error. Much of this process appears to be from the ground-up and influenced by popular demand and local experiences. Their leadership also proceeded to correct many of the flaws and shortcomings that undermined their rule in the 1990s. The ban on women and girls attending school has been removed, though most Taliban officials claim that no ban ever existed, and have publicly stated that women should have access to education. The ban on opium cultivation and its trade, which was a disaster during their earlier government times is clearly no longer in place, but the Taliban do not publicizeise this shift in policy and down-play the opium connection in public. Other subtle differences are their stated respect for other ethnic groups and their embrace of technology, limited as it may be. Circumstances have radically changed for the Taliban since 2001, and their policies and goals have shifted accordingly. Far from being a revolutionary movement of the 1990s, prior to 2022, they considered themselves as a deposed government and the main armed opposition fighting the pro-Western government supported by foreign soldiers. The Taliban leadership itself has also been transformed. Circumstances have forced them to travel outside their villages and also outside the country at times, and they have learned from their travels.

The simple fighters of yester-years are worldly trained politicians today,; transforming themselves from being traditional conservatives into modern Islamists. They have also become better at managing external perceptions, having realised that appearing as educated people is an advantage and it is helpful in manipulating the media. They have become sophisticated; with professional-standard glossy publications, a website in several languages, videos made of high-quality production and highly capable spokesmen that respond rapidly to questions and criticism across social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook and WhatsApp; even though what is publicized on the social media is vastly different from the ground reality in Afghanistan. What exactly do the changes in Taliban policy means for Afghans and the future of Afghanistan will depend on the critical study and analysis of their on-ground actions. The Taliban are led by the Emir ul-Mumenin (leader of the faithful), currently Mullah Haibatullah Akhunzada. The scope and complexity of this position varies according to the person who occupies it, and the current Emir’s functions are more spiritual and political, than as an operational military commander. He is assisted by two deputies, as well as the leadership shura. At the provincial level, there is a governor, appointed officially by the leadership shura. The Taliban now has a quasi-professional core of individuals who have served for several years across multiple provinces. These governors and local councils / commissions are not completely ‘civilian’, and the governors may serve in a military capacity to varying degrees depending on the context and broader requirements of the office for local governance. Provincial ministers are appointed by the leadership of the relevant council, viz,: education, health and finance; in consultation with the governor of the province. The system has grown more comprehensive over the years, with a dozen committees, some with multiple departments covering a multitude of issues. Significant autonomy is granted to province and district- level officials within the overall framework of the policy.

This flexibility is intentional, in order to accommodate different views and reduce dissent to as little as possible. It also helps to prevent the Taliban from splitting into different factions; since local politics and preferences based on history play a significant role in governance. Some areas might have a higher demand for health services than others, while others might want to give priority to education. The extent to which services have been available in the past also matters.  Areas where customary structures of governance are influential and respected, are in a stronger position to bargain for amenities from the Taliban officials. Individual relationships also influence policies, although the Taliban does not generally welcome individual opinions, since such interactions could be perceived as corruption.  In practice however, the Taliban rely on relationships in every aspect of their governance, due to a lack of trust in general and the widespread suspicion of their motives by the locals and the international interlocutors. Arrangements between the Taliban and civilians are based on a mutual yet unequal exchange, leading to an informal social contract that renders to the Taliban a legitimate authority, and strengthening its credibility as an acceptable form of government; even though it is not a government- based on the choice and free will of the people of Afghanistan.

The Taliban’s agility and ability to adapt has been remarkable. Their gradual acceptance of the fact that unrestricted violence would hurt their quest for popular support, transformed into sophisticated policy planning and implementation of developmental activities. Step -by -step, they revived and re-started parts of their governance, and invented other systems through trial and error. Much of this process appears to be from the ground-up and influenced by popular demand and local experiences. Their leadership also proceeded to correct many of the flaws and shortcomings that undermined their rule in the 1990s. The ban on women and girls attending school has been removed, though most Taliban officials claim that no ban ever existed, and have publicly stated that women should have access to education. The ban on opium cultivation and its trade, which was a disaster during their earlier government times is clearly no longer in place, but the Taliban do not publicize this shift in policy and down-play the opium connection in public. Other subtle differences are their stated respect for other ethnic groups and their embrace of technology, limited as it may be. Circumstances have radically changed for the Taliban since 2001, and their policies and goals have shifted accordingly. Far from being a revolutionary movement of the 1990s, prior to 2022, they considered themselves as a deposed government and the main armed opposition fighting the pro-Western government supported by foreign soldiers. The Taliban leadership itself has also been transformed. Circumstances have forced them to travel outside their villages and also outside the country at times, and they have learned from their travels. 

The Taliban in 2024

Many analysts are of the opinion that the Taliban of 2021 are is different from the earlier Taliban of 2001. While the new leaders are still committed to their traditional ideology, they have learnt new tactics for interactions with the rest of the world, especially the non-Islamic countries. Even today, the command-and-control structure is controlled by the ‘Rahbri Shoora’ (Grand Council of Leadership), and most of its members are veterans of the resistance that battled the Western armies and the Afghan government forces sponsored by the U.S. and NATO. The Supreme leader of the Taliban, Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada is the ultimate authority on religious, political and military affairs; and is assisted in his decisions by Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, a founding member of the modern Taliban who looks after the political branch, Mullah Yaqoob (son of Mullah Omar) who heads the military branch, and Sirajuddin Haqqani (son of guerrilla commander Maulvi Jalaluddin Haqqani) who looks after eastern Afghanistan. Non-Pashtuns were a part of the Taliban in the 1990s, but now the Tajiks, Uzbeks, Hazaras and Turkmens have made deep inroads into the Taliban hierarchy. The Tajik leader Qari Deen Muhammed is a member of the Supreme Council while fellow Tajik Qari Fasihudin is the Chief of the General Staff of the armed forces, and Uzbek leader Abdul Salam Hanfi from Faryab is the acting second deputy Prime Minister in the Taliban government.

The Western countries constantly hope for democracy in Afghanistan. However, this is almost an impossibility in an organization like the Taliban who are dedicated to the hardline interpretation of Islamic values. While the Taliban are flexible in the inclusion of ethnic minorities in their government, their views towards women’s empowerment has not changed and women are still denied basic rights to obtain an education or employment. With the passage of time since coming to power, the Taliban have realized that while one generation defeated the Soviet Union and the latest generation defeated the combined forces of the USA and NATO,; administration of a complex country like Afghanistan is extremely difficult. They need international support to assist the people of their country with their basic human needs, and this cannot be achieved through isolation from the world.

Since coming to power, the Taliban has imposed a harsh interpretation of Islamic law in the country, ignoring their earlier pledges to respect the rights of women, and religious and ethnic minority communities. Since regaining control, their actions are reminiscent of their earlier brutal rule of the 1990s, where they are struggling to provide the people of Afghanistan with adequate food supplies and other basic needs. Within a period of just 16 months of forming the government, numerous human rights violations have been recorded against them by the UN mission in Afghanistan. Intimidation of journalists, restriction of freedom of expression, regular suppression of demonstrations and forced disappearance of those who protest against their governance are a regular feature of the Taliban governance. They have re-established the ‘Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice’ to implement Islamic law as defined by the Taliban. Restrictions against women and girls have risen and their access to employment, education, public interactions and other fundamental rights such as access to justice, have been heavily curtailed. Flogging of women for ‘moral crimes,, physical torture of women’s rights activists, banning them from public parks, limiting their visits to the markets (compulsorily accompanied by a male relative as a chaperone) and requiring women to cover their faces in public,; are contributing to women being erased from public life. According to Mahbouba Seraj, a women’s rights activist, the women of Afghanistan went from being part of the society, being doctors, judges, engineers and officials, to nothing under the Taliban rule. "Even the most basic right, the Right to Education, has been taken away from them" she has stated.

The new power structure has wiped out the gains in the standard of living that were achieved over twenty years of the Western powers’ presence in Afghanistan, with almost all of the population now living in poverty. Most of the people are suffering from some form of food insecurity and the situation is becoming more critical with the stoppage of foreign aid. Violence remains wide-spread with the increased attacks of Taliban by members of the Islamic State of Khorasan, that add to the public suffering. There is a rising concern among international observers that the Taliban’s support to al-Qaeda will pose a continued threat to regional and international security. Despite the Taliban’s publicly stated policy that they will not allow Afghanistan to be used as a base for global terrorism, their policy of offering safe haven and increased freedom to the al-Qaeda has not changed. The United Nation’s April 2024 report states that “al-Qaeda is likely using Afghanistan as a friendly environment to recruit, train and fund raise,, and is suspected to be re-establishing a strong presence in Afghanistan. 



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