Recovering the Frontier State: War, Ethnicity, and State in Afghanistan

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This book examines the prospects for rebuilding state and nation in Afghanistan with regard to “Operation Enduring Freedom' currently being undertaken by the international coalition. It starts by delineating the conceptual basis of Afghanistan's status as a frontier state. Looking at geo-strategic aspects, Afghanistan's position as an historical buffer between empires, and its internal characteristics-weak authority structure, internal conflicts, interventions by neighbours, legitimacy of internal conquest, and trans-national ethnicities, the book provides insights into Afghanistan's unique geo-political context. Whilst the author deems the legacy of the previous intervention for containment to be a major contributing factor to the disorder in Afghanistan's state and society, he draws on lessons from the past intervention to assuage current obstacles and the stalemate that is hindering political, social, and economics development. Focusing on the impediments to development, the background against which the problem needs to be analysed, and consequently countered , is effectively set out. Incessant war and insurgency has led to mobilization along ethnic and religious lines and has had profound effects on the kinds of intuitions that have perpetuated over time. Ethnic and religious groups have applied constant pressure on the state and this dissonance has had enduring negative impacts on nation building, social cohesion, and state-society relationships. Pre-emptive and reactive intervention by neighbouring state and their links to ethnic groups inside Afghanistan is another dimension which is analysed. An extensive exploration is made into the geo-political history of social groups of Afghanistan with an intensive account of the rise of various power contenders as a function of their history, their links with external actors, and their traditional position in the indigenous vertical hierarchy. Unconventional war and counter-insurgency operations funded by foreign and local elements are examined and policy guidelines for negotiations and conflict resolution discussed. The work provides fresh insights into the rise of the Taliban, and adds further to the scholarly debate about the causes for the consolidation of Taliban power. It traces the history of the Afghan crisis, and critically evaluates the roles played by different national and international actors. A major contribution is the articulation of the need for an integrated nation-and state-building strategy which takes into account the sensitivities of the Afghanistan experience instead of treating it like other post-conflict zones.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Rasul Bakhsh Rais

Rasul Bakhsh Rais is professor of political sciences in the Department of Social Sciences, Lahore University of Management Sciences. Dr Rais has a Ph.D. in political sciences from University of California-Santa Barbara. Before joining  LUMS, he served as professor/director of the Area Study Centre and prior to that was associate professor in the Department of International Relations, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, for nearly twenty-two years. He was professor of Pakistan Studies at Columbia University, New York, for three years, from 1991-1994. He took a Fulbright fellowship at Wake Forest University, 1997-1998, Social Science Research Council fellowship at Harvard, 1989-1990, and a Rockefeller Foundation fellowship in International Relations at the University of California-Berkeley, 1985-1985. He is author of War Without Winners: Afghanistan’s Uncertain Transition after the Cold War (Oxford University Press, 1996); Indian Ocean and the Superpowers: Economic, Political and Strategic Perspectives (Croom Helm, London, 1986), and editor of State, Society and democratic Change in Pakistan (Oxford University Press, 1997). He has published widely in professional journals on political and security issues pertaining of South Asia, the Indian Ocean, and Afghanistan.

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Bibliographic information

Title
Recovering the Frontier State: War, Ethnicity, and State in Afghanistan
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
9780195477252
Length
xii+238p., Tables; Bibliography; Index; 24cm.
Subjects

tags

#Afghanistan