Any increase to the troop levels in Afghanistan should only be made on the condition that Kabul carries out an ambitious reform program, the EU's former Special Representative for Afghanistan tells Deutsche Welle.
Francesc Vendrell says troop increases in Afghanistan are conditional on political reforms
Francesc Vendrell, a Spanish diplomat, was EU Special Representative for Afghanistan from 2002 to 2008 and the UN Secretary General's Personal Representative for Afghanistan from 2000 to 2001. In the academic year 2008/2009 he was a visiting professor at the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University.
Deutsche Welle: US President Barack Obama will soon decide on the new strategy for Afghanistan. What do you expect it to look like?
Francesc Vendrell: I would imagine from the few signals that one gets that there will be a decision to increase the number of US forces, probably not to the number of 40,000 but more in the middle range of 20,000 or something like that. I would like to hope that it is somehow made conditional on a 180-day program of reforms that the Afghan government ought to undertake and that if this reforms happen or are seen to be taking place that then the United States would send more forces. But sending more forces without a government that has legitimacy and the capacity to deliver isn't going to make much of a difference.
There is a lot of talk that once the Obama administration makes this decision that they will of course also come to Europe and ask for the Europeans to play their part. What could Europe and Germany as the third biggest troop contributor do in Afghanistan?
That's a very difficult question to answer. To the extent that the discussion over the last three months has centered a lot around increasing the number of military forces, I think Europeans feel a little bit left out, because obviously we are not going to match anything near the number of forces that the US is talking about. What would have been desirable, but again difficult to implement would have been for example if the Europeans were able to say look, we are going to take care of training the police and this is going to be our task. So we will coordinate with you, the US about your efforts to build up the national army, but leave the police to us.
Unfortunately, it's too late. And we are not willing either or capable of coming up with the required numbers. So at the end of the day, I think what will happen is that we will play an auxiliary policy to the Americans. And yes, I think on issues like human rights, women's rights and maybe some rule of law aspects I think we can do much more and we will probably do more.
This secondary role will only grow because the US will send a lot more troops while the Europeans will probably only slightly increase their numbers, so it will look even more like an American mission. Does that make it not again much harder to convince the European publics of those efforts?
I think what needs to be done is, that the newly elected President Karzai needs to carry out major reforms in 180 days in order to awaken the Afghan public to the fact that things are now going to change. This will also help with our own public opinion. If our publics begin to read that now there is progress in fighting corruption, that some of the more notorious figures have been thrown out of the government, that there are some prosecutions, I think you will see a greater willingness by the European countries and the European public to accept that yes, we may have to accept losses in the course of that.
But if the perception is that we are losing people fighting against the Taliban and in a way for the sake of a government that is corrupt and incompetent then of course it isn't going to happen.
Read more about the expectations for Afghanistan