Tough Road Ahead for Taliban

Published by
Manish Rai
Taliban has achieved victory through military means, but the path ahead is full of big challenges Which need to be sorted out in time. otherwise, Talibs will witness a mass uprising against them sooner than later

 

The Taliban, after much wait, has finally announced its 33-member interim Cabinet. This new Government is exclusively Taliban, and almost all the Ministers are of Pashtun ethnicity. Women have no positions in this new set up. The Ministry of Women’s Affairs has been abolished, and the sinister Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice has been re-established. This clearly illustrates that the Taliban will carry on with its medieval conservative interpretation of Islam. More than a dozen members of the new Cabinet are on the UN Security Council’s sanctions list. Sirajuddin Haqqani, deputy leader of the Taliban and now the Interior Minister of the country, heads the Haqqani network and is responsible for some of the most gruesome attacks on Afghan civilians as well as Government and military targets throughout the war. He is on the FBI’s most wanted men list with a $10 million bounty on his head. It tells that the Taliban is nothing more than an extremist group that has grabbed power as it tightens its hold on the country and dictates policy matters. The road ahead for them looks tough. So let's look at some of the major challenges which Taliban has to face in the coming days.

Stretched too thin

The Afghan Government used to have security forces numbering around 3,00,000 to maintain law and order, fight insurgency, and control borders. With almost all of Afghanistan under their control and only around 80,000 to 90,000 active fighters, the Taliban is stretched thin. The Taliban found it easy to seize a large number of districts and provincial capitals with its size of the force. But holding on to major cities is another proposition that requires significant manpower and resources, which the group surely doesn't have. 

Growing Resistance 

As the Taliban failed to form an inclusive Government, resentment among other ethnic groups grew with each passing day. Former Vice-President Amrullah Saleh and Ahmad Massoud, son of legendary Mujahideen commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, is leading the resistance against the Taliban, but other leaders are also voicing their support for them. Most notably, Ismail Khan, a Tajik leader backed by Iran, announced his  support for Ahmad Massod–led National Resistance Front (NRF). As of now, it looks that the Taliban doesn't have any considerable opposition, but there is an undercurrent that has a full-fledged potential of developing into a major threat for the Taliban regime.

Lack of Governance

Efficiently and effectively governing 38 million people will be a major challenge for the new regime. The Taliban has been good at one thing, i.e. fighting. But governing such a diverse country with many ethnicities will be a mammoth task. Talibs have yet to demonstrate their capability to deliver good governance. They did not do so when they ruled Afghanistan for the first time during 1996-2001. The Taliban, at times, has been given credit for being good at maintaining security through very heavy-handed means and providing efficient forms of traditional justice. But they have little to no technocratic and administrative understanding of how to perform the other Government functions. The group is bound to struggle to deliver effective governance to the common people. The Government does not have sufficient funds to spend on public services like-healthcare, sanitation, and drinking water. “There are the issues of retaining enough manpower, bureaucracy, and civil servants to run the affairs of the Government. With an exodus of people, one vulnerability could be an insufficient number of professionals and people in the technocratic cadres to run state institutions,” said Omar Samad, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. 

Keeping Own House United 

Taliban itself is engulfed with factionalism. The different factions in the Taliban are fighting among themselves for greater share and say in the new power dynamics. The Taliban is currently divided into three main camps. The first one is the political wing that negotiated a peace deal with the United States and is led by Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar. The second group is the military wing led by Molavi Yakoob, son of Taliban founder Mulla Omar. The last one is the Haqqani Network, headed by Sirajuddin Haqqani. The Taliban's success as an insurgent outfit rested on its ability to remain cohesive despite NATO pressure and efforts to fragment the group. But the group's challenge of maintaining cohesiveness among its many different factions of varied ideological intensity and material interests is difficult now that it is in power. 

Taliban is currently divided into three main camps. The first one is the political wing that negotiated a peace deal with the United States led by Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar. The second group is the military wing led by Molavi Yakoob, son of Taliban founder Mulla Omar. The last one is the Haqqani Network, headed by Sirajuddin Haqqani

Flattered Economy 

Afghanistan is one of the world's poorest countries, and more than 20% of its gross income comes from foreign aid. The United States froze $9.5 billion of Afghan Central Bank’s assets in the wake of the Taliban takeover, while the international Monetary Fund (IMF) suspended access to its funds. In addition to this, more than 5 million Afghans are estimated to be internally displaced. The United Nations says nearly 400,000 people have been displaced this year alone due to the ongoing violence. For rehabilitating these people, urgent aid is required from humanitarian agencies. Even if these agencies agree to deliver the aid, the Taliban currently have institutional structures to receive the funds. 

Diplomatic Isolation

Taliban's first regime in 1996 was more or less a pariah globally. But this time, they appear keen on wide international acceptance, even as most nations have suspended or closed their diplomatic missions in Kabul. Also, none of the countries has recognised them yet, and the United States has said any legitimacy “will have to be earned”. Hence for any kind of acceptance by the international community Taliban has to pass the tough scrutiny of their actions. Taliban has achieved victory through military means, and they have a firm grip over the power, but the path ahead is full of big challenges. Which needs to be sorted out in time; otherwise, Talibs will witness a mass uprising against them sooner than later.  

 

 

Share
Leave a Comment