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Light reading for the Afghan War enthusiast

These are not great days for the media in Afghanistan, I’d argue. For dedicated observers of the war — or whatever you prefer to call it, at this point — there hasn’t been much in these past weeks that manages to do more than present (often dire) new facts or attempts to drill down past the standard viewpoints offered by optimistic leaders and pessimistic critics.
Except, maybe, for this new piece — a book review actually — by a former-journalist turned professor (of terrorism, no less), who begins his article with this eye-rattling opener:
The United States and its allies today find themselves in a position in Afghanistan similar to that of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, after Mikhail Gorbachev decided on military withdrawal by a fixed deadline. They are in a race against the clock to build up a regime and army that will survive their withdrawal, while either seeking a peace agreement with the leaders of the insurgent forces or splitting off their more moderate, pragmatic, and mercenary elements and making an agreement with them. The Soviets succeeded at least partially in some of these objectives, while failing utterly to achieve a peace settlement.
Please note — and be warned — that the article moves on from here to attain even greater heights of controversy (for the insiders: comparing the Soviet and U.S/NATO efforts in Afghanistan is an absolutely reliable way of annoying anyone deeply involved with the mission, for reasons too complicated to explain here.)
That said, the article is still pretty awesome. At the very least, it’ll make you think.
How about this:

On the basis of my conversations in recent years with former leading figures in the Taliban and Pakistanis close to Mullah Omar and his colleagues, my own judgment is that a peace settlement between the US, the administration in Kabul, and the Afghan Taliban would probably have to be based on some variant of the following elements:

(1) complete withdrawal of all US troops according to a fixed timetable;

(2) exclusion of al-Qaeda and other international terrorist groups from areas controlled by the Taliban;

(3) a government in Kabul headed—at least nominally—by men the Taliban would see as good Muslims and Afghan patriots;

(4) negotiations on a new Afghan constitution involving the Taliban and leading to the transfer of most powers from the center to the regions;

(5) de facto—though not formal—Taliban control of the region of Greater Kandahar, and by the Haqqanis of Greater Paktika;

(6) a return to the Taliban offer of 1999–2001 of a complete ban on opium poppy cultivation and heroin production in the areas under their control, in return for international aid.

Here, the professor is pointing out that — among other things — the province Canada fought for, Kandahar, is quite likely to be handed back to the fundamentalists, once all the bargaining is said and done.
What do you think?
Read the article and comment below with your opinion.

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