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Peace Process in Afghanistan - A Vietnam Comparison

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August 06, 2019

What is the issue?

  • America’s retreat strategy in Afghanistan now reflects much its Vietnam war campaign in the late 1960s.
  • Here is a comparison of these two notable processes in history.

What was the U.S.’s role in Vietnam?

  • The U.S.’s involvement in Vietnam goes back to the last years of French colonial rule.
  • The U.S. first backed France against the Viet Minh guerrillas.
  • After France exited Vietnam in 1954, the U.S. backed South Vietnam against the communist-led North.
  • Initially, the U.S. involvement was limited to advisory roles.
  • But in August 1964, the U.S. destroyer, USS Maddox, was attacked by North Vietnamese torpedo boats in the Gulf of Tonkin, off the Vietnamese coast.
  • So, the Lyndon Johnson administration steadily escalated the U.S.’s role thereafter; the American troop deployment in Vietnam was increased.

How did U.S’s withdrawal happen?

  • Public opinion - In Vietnam, the U.S. was negotiating from a position of weakness.
  • By the late 1960s, American public opinion had largely turned against the war.
  • America’s search and destroy operations in communist-dominated villages in the south and its air campaign in the north only fuelled Vietnamese hostility.
  • Besides, the South Vietnamese regime that the U.S. had supported was unpopular, oppressive and weak at the same time.
  • Exit Strategy - Given these, Richard Nixon (elected the US President in 1968) first started “Vietnamising” the war, by reducing the U.S. troop presence in Vietnam.
  • He also shifted the focus from direct participation in land war to training and advisory roles, while continuing with air strikes.
  • Talks - Nixon assigned Henry Kissinger, the National Security Adviser, to hold talks with the communist North Vietnam, seeking “peace with honour”.
  • Mr. Kissinger started talks with Le Duc Tho, a North Vietnamese revolutionary and diplomat.
  • When talks were deadlocked, the U.S. offered to pull out of the South as a compromise.
  • Exit - The war became a long, divisive conflict between the communist government of North Vietnam, and South Vietnam and its principal ally, the U.S.
  • By the late 1960s, it became evident to American leaders that they could not win the Vietnam war.
  • The Americans were actually prolonging a war they had already lost.
  • The goal was not to defeat North Vietnam but to stop them from taking over the South, the American ally.
  • In 1973, the U.S., North Vietnam and representatives of South Vietnam and Viet Cong, the communist guerillas from the South, signed the Paris Peace Accords.
  • The North and the South agreed to a ceasefire and continue holding peace talks, while the U.S. agreed to pull troops out of Vietnam.

What is the present state in Afghanistan?

  • The U.S. went into Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on U.S.
  • At the peak of the war here, there were over 1,00,000 troops.
  • Despite the massive deployment of troops and superior air power, the U.S. got stuck in the war and failed to stabilize the country.
  • Consequently, America is fighting in Afghanistan for nearly 18 years, which is longer than America’s direct military involvement in Vietnam.

How is it similar with Vietnam?

  • Much like in Vietnam war, the U.S. has now realised that it cannot win the Afghan war.
  • Similarly, the American goal is no longer defeating the Taliban but to stop them, at least for now, from taking over Kabul.
  • Just as Nixon wanted to get out of Vietnam, President Donald Trump too wants to get out of Afghanistan.
  • In the case of Afghanistan as well, the U.S. is negotiating from a position of weakness.
  • The war entered a stalemate long ago. America’s allies in Afghanistan stand divided.
  • The government in Kabul, which the U.S. backs, is known for infighting and chronic corruption.
  • The security forces are struggling to ensure basic security to the public, even in the capital city.
  • Like Nixon’s “Vietnamisation”, U.S. President Barack Obama had started “Afghanising” the war.
  • He has pulled out most troops and moved the remainder to training and advisory roles.
  • The Afghan war is also unpopular in America, much as how Vietnam war was among Vietnamese.

What is the ongoing peace process?

  • Given the present conditions, the U.S. cannot unilaterally pull out, especially when the Taliban is on the offensive.
  • That would cause a lasting stain on America’s already weakened reputation as the world’s pre-eminent military power.
  • So, the situations demand a deal, and finding one is Ambassador Khalilzad’s mission (Khalilzad is an Afghan-American diplomat).
  • Mr. Khalilzad has already held multiple rounds of talks with the Taliban’s representatives in Doha, Qatar.
  • Reportedly, the U.S. and the Taliban have agreed to a road map for peace.
  • The U.S. has agreed for a withdrawal in return for the Taliban’s assurance that Afghanistan would not be used by terrorists.
  • The U.S. has already made two big compromises by agreeing to the Taliban demand that the Afghan government should be kept away from the peace process.
  • Second, the U.S. continued to hold talks even in the absence of a ceasefire.
  • As a result, the Taliban continued its terror campaign even when the peace process was under way. Click here to know more.

How does the future look?

  • When the U.S. was forced to pull out of Vietnam, the Southern and Northern governments had not reached any settlement but for the ceasefire.
  • In the 2 years after the U.S. pulled out, the communists captured Saigon in South and the government crumbled.
  • Likewise, what would happen to the Afghan government once America had withdrawn is uncertain.
  • However, in Vietnam’s case, the Communists unified Vietnam, and after early years of struggle, modernised the economy and rebuilt the country into an Asian powerhouse.
  • Unlike the Viet Cong, the Taliban is an anti-modern, anti-woman, anti-minority fundamentalist structure.
  • Given these, the peace process in Afghanistan is much more challenging.

 

Source: The Hindu

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