Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
International

The West Should Have Left Taliban Alone And Just Hit Al-Qaida: Former Commander

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Feb, 2016 10:47 AM
    OTTAWA — The West made a mistake deposing the Taliban regime in the aftermath of 9/11 and should have simply trained its guns on al-Qaida, says the Canadian commander who led NATO into southern Afghanistan a decade ago.
     
    Retired major-general Dave Fraser commanded both the Canadian task force and the military alliance's expanded mission to extend the authority of former Afghan president Hamid Karzai beyond the capital of Kabul in 2006.
     
    At the time, it was just over four-and-a-half years into the Afghan war and three years into the larger, bloodier struggle in Iraq after the toppling of Saddam Hussein. 
     
    "We thought, naively, that regime change was the solution to the problem," Fraser told The Canadian Press in an interview to mark the 10th anniversary of the Canadian combat deployment into Kandahar.
     
    No one, back then, seemed to appreciate how profound the power vacuum was and that the West had "created for ourselves a 30- or 40-year problem" in not only Afghanistan, he said, but throughout the Middle East.
     
    "Looking backwards, I would have actually left the Taliban government in power and said (to them): 'Stay out of the way. We're here to find al-Qaida. And as long as you stay out of the way, the special forces will go in there, they will do what is necessary to get al-Qaida and we will leave,'" Fraser said.
     
     
    "Had we done that, we wouldn't be where we are today."
     
    The comments are unexpected and surprising, not the least because they come from a soldier whose troops were the first to face a Taliban resurgence in south; someone who championed the combat mission's aims and articulated the goal of bringing stability to the ungoverned region.
     
    "We compounded the problem by getting rid of the Taliban regime," he said. "I didn't like the Taliban regime, but why did we go there in the first place? It was because of al-Qaida. Not because of the Taliban."
     
    The reflections come just a day after the it was announced the Afghan government is expected to resume face-to-face talks with Taliban leaders next week in Pakistan. The negotiations are aimed at reviving a peace process that dissolved last summer after it was revealed that the Mullah Omar, the movement's reclusive leader, had died a few years ago — an event kept secret by the insurgent group.
     
    Fraser said the West has only repeated the same mistakes over the last decade. 
     
    "We repeated it in Iraq," he said. "In Libya, we didn't put any ground troops in and we created an even bigger mess because there's no government whatsoever in Libya. We went back into Iraq and now for the very first time the international community is beginning to appreciate that regime change is not the solution — hence why we're not pushing to do a regime change in Syria."
     
     
    The West has insisted that Syrian dictator Bashar Assad should go, but it has not pushed him out of power — one of the factors in that country's long, bloody civil war.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-American Professor R. Paul Singh Named World Agriculture Prize Laureate

    Indian-American Professor R. Paul Singh Named World Agriculture Prize Laureate
    R. Paul Singh, a distinguished professor emeritus at the University of California, Davis, has been named as the 2015 Global Confederation for Higher Education Associations for Agriculture and Life Sciences World Agriculture Prize laureate.

    Indian-American Professor R. Paul Singh Named World Agriculture Prize Laureate

    'Tanned, Rested, Ready' Jindal Swings At 'Hyphenated Americans'

    The $20 official T-shirt which is supposed to be a nod to Jindal's Indian heritage and his dislike of "hyphenated American" modifiers as well as a play on a famous Richard Nixon line, is apparently his way of getting back at the "liberal media."

    'Tanned, Rested, Ready' Jindal Swings At 'Hyphenated Americans'

    Over 48,000 Indians Acquired Eu Citizenship In 2013

    In 2013, round 985,000 people acquired citizenship of a European Union (EU) member-state, among them 48,300 Indians, three-quarters of whom acquired British citizenship.

    Over 48,000 Indians Acquired Eu Citizenship In 2013

    Sushma Swaraj's Thailand Visit Signals Major Cultural Push For India

    Barely a week after the organisation of International Yoga Day, the Indian government moved ahead with a concerted effort to promote ayurveda and Sanskrit in Thailand. 

    Sushma Swaraj's Thailand Visit Signals Major Cultural Push For India

    Northern B.C. Port Blames Abandoned Pipe For Fuel Leak Into Ocean

    Northern B.C. Port Blames Abandoned Pipe For Fuel Leak Into Ocean
    PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. — The Prince Rupert Port Authority says workers are trying to stop an abandoned pipe from slowly leaking fuel into the ocean in northwestern B.C.

    Northern B.C. Port Blames Abandoned Pipe For Fuel Leak Into Ocean

    113 Feared Dead In Indonesian Military Plane Crash

    113 Feared Dead In Indonesian Military Plane Crash
    All 113 people on board a Hercules C-130 military cargo aircraft were feared killed when the military plane crashed into a residential area in Medan city on Indonesia's Sumatra island on Tuesday, media reported.

    113 Feared Dead In Indonesian Military Plane Crash