Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Fresh Attacks on Afghan Peace Maker Poses Fresh Trouble

Every plan of action is easier said than done. The hurdles faced during the execution of an action are far from anticipated. For the American troops, while scouting the Taliban, the hurdles where nothing less than the extreme climatic conditions and the rugged terrains of Afghanistan accompanied by a neighbor which served as a safe haven for Taliban. The attack on the Afghan Peace Council Chief clearly states that neither the Afghan security forces nor the American troops can match up to the thoroughness and preciseness of Taliban attacks, to protect the unstable fortress of democracy put up by the post Taliban government.

The assassination is a directed missile to amputate any hand of cooperation or negotiation to end Taliban interference. The message is clear. They are still powerful and can easily go through the final fencing of Afghan defense. It will not be a surprise if the splinters of Taliban reunite to form a girth of impactful militants. The latest assassination of a peace-maker diplomat along with the receding number of US troops from the Afghan heartland and Pakistan serving as an aid to the Taliban can cause a disconcerting descent of Afghanistan people from hopefulness to the unease of future threats.

A final faceoff with Pakistan is urgently required, as it is playing a pivotal role in dispensing aids to terrorists for years and serving as a breeding ground for militants. The series of bombings in Delhi and Mumbai and the latest assassination in Afghanistan squarely suffice for Pakistan‘s contribution in supporting terror. Perhaps India should place the issue on the table of next UN General Assembly.

1 comment:

Hardik said...

What plagues US more than anything else is their strategic fragility in finding the optimum solution. The US troops sought to extend their hand of friendship as a last flailing effort to scratch some dust out of a sunk ship. US fell flat on their nose based on cynical diplomacy in trying to deal with war-fatigued yet brazen Taliban and much of this failure can be attributed to their neo-nazism which has ailed them in bridging the divide with the afghan civilians. The bottomline is that US is fighting far too many wars in far too many places.