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THE CRITICAL GAP BETWEEN LOCAL VERSUS INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON SECURITY AND JUSTICE AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR THE U.S.-LED INTERNATIONAL INTERVENTION IN AFGHANISTAN, 2001­ 2006: BETWEEN STATE-BUILDING AND THE GLOBAL WAR ON TERRORISM by Neamatollah Nojumi A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of George Mason University in Partial Fulfillment of The Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Conflict Analysis and Resolution Committee: (. 'J Chair of Committee i !' -'''---.­ J:LxUcLL Graduate Program Director Dean, School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution Di / d (Q I dOl ;:L Date: Spring Semester 2012 George Mason University Fairfax, VA The Critical Gap Between Local Versus International Perspectives on Security and Justice and Its Implications for the U.S.-Led International Intervention in Afghanistan, 2001-2006: Between State-Building and the Global War on Terrorism A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at George Mason University By Neamatollah Nojumi Master of Arts Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, 2001 Director: Kevin Avruch, Professor School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution Spring Semester 2012 George Mason University Fairfax, VA Copyright 2012 Neamatollah Nojumi All Rights Reserved ii DEDICATION This is dedicated to my loving other half Farhat, and my wonderful daughter Talia. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank the many friends, relatives, and supporters who have made this happen. My loving wife, Farhat, supported me in every aspect of my research. My daughter, Talia, helped me with keeping the environment desirable for completing this research. Bruce Esposito, Marc Gopin, Tom Barfield and other friends helped me with sourcing, material, and encouragement. Drs. Avruch, Paczynska, and McGlinchey, and the graduate coordinators, were of invaluable help. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS Page LIST OF FIGURES ......................................................................................................... ix ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................................x PREFACE ...........................................................................................................................1 INTRODUCTION..............................................................................................................6 CHAPTER ONE: PURPOSE OF STUDY ......................................................................6 Research Question .............................................................................................................10 Research Methods ..............................................................................................................11 Tufts University Field Research Data ..........................................................................13 United States Institute of Peace‘s Data From Mediation Between State and Non-State Actors ..........................................................................................................14 Applying Primary Sources of Data to the Case ...........................................................15 Validity ..............................................................................................................................15 Data Management and Analysis ........................................................................................16 CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW ...............................................................19 The Case of Failed and Failing States and Selected Literatures ........................................20 Key Assumptions of Failed States .....................................................................................23 Different Interpretations of a Failed State .........................................................................31 U.S. Foreign Policy and the Assumptions of Failed States ...............................................38 The Conceptual Gap in the Failed State Assumptions .......................................................42 The Question of Stability and Failure of the State in Afghanistan ....................................46 Relevant Conflict Resolution Assumptions .......................................................................54 The Question of Basic Human Needs Theory ...................................................................56 The Question of Culture .....................................................................................................59 Summary ............................................................................................................................63 CHAPTER THREE: Historical Overview ....................................................................65 The U.S.-Led Anti-Taliban Military Intervention .............................................................65 U.S.-Led Intervention Strategy ..........................................................................................66 U.S. Post-9/11 Policy Toward the Taliban ........................................................................70 Preparing for Anti-Taliban/Al Qaeda Military Intervention ..............................................71 The U.S.‘s Misreading of Internal Afghan Politics ...........................................................76 v The Military Outcomes of Operation Enduring Freedom ..................................................79 Operation Enduring Freedom‘s Regional Implications .....................................................82 Political Shortfall Challenged Military Gains ....................................................................85 Operation Enduring Freedom Caused Social and Political Rifts .......................................87 The U.S. Won the Fight But Not the War ..........................................................................91 The Reemergence of the Taliban .......................................................................................96 Summary ............................................................................................................................99 CHAPTER FOUR: SECURITY IN AFGHANISTAN ...............................................101 The Struggle Between Real and Symbolic Powers..........................................................105 Different Paradigms of Security ......................................................................................109 International Actors‘ Perspectives of Security ..........................................................109 Afghans‘ Perspectives of Security .............................................................................113 Local Level of Security as an Ontological Need .......................................................117 Post-Taliban Security Construct Hampers Governance ..................................................121 Differences of Interests and Basic Local Needs ..............................................................122 Rising Corruption.............................................................................................................126 Development of a Security Vacuum ................................................................................129 Centralization of the Political Order ................................................................................130 Theoretical Approach.......................................................................................................136 Human Development Theory .....................................................................................140 Level of Culture in Shaping Local Perspectives ....................................................... 146 Locals‘ Perspectives of Security ................................................................................147 Summary ..........................................................................................................................153 CHAPTER FIVE: JUSTICE DEFINITION AND REFORMATION IN AFGHANISTAN ............................................................................................................158 The 2004 Constitutional Loya Jirga ................................................................................162 The International Intervention Efforts in the Justice Sector ............................................168 Limits Within the Formal Justice System ........................................................................172 The Patron–Client Networks Undermine the Rule of Law ........................................173 Structural and Procedural Challenges ........................................................................175 Limits and Opportunities in the Jirga System ............................................................178 Afghanistan Between Two Legal Systems ......................................................................185 Decentralized Traditional Conflict Resolution ..........................................................189 Justice From the Perspective of Conflict Resolution .................................................193 Summary ..........................................................................................................................196 CHAPTER SIX: THE STUDY’S CONTRIBUTION TO THE LITERATURE .....199 Key Highlights of the Case ..............................................................................................205 Future Research ...............................................................................................................209 Conclusion .......................................................................................................................210 vi AFTERWORD: AFGHANISTAN SINCE 2006 .........................................................213 The Current Dynamic in the U.S.-Led Operation in Afghanistan ...................................219 The Perception of Security Versus Reality on the Ground ..............................................223 The National Solidarity Program and Economic Development ......................................228 Summary ..........................................................................................................................231 REFERENCES ...............................................................................................................233 vii LIST OF FIGURES Figure Page 4.1. Opium Production Increase in Afghanistan from 1998-2008 ...................................128 4.2. Suicide Attacks by Years Up Until 30 June 2007 .....................................................145 4.3. Question from World Opinion Poll...........................................................................149 5.1. People See Corruption as a Major Problem 2006 .....................................................171 5.2. Corruption Indicators in Afghanistan 2006 ..............................................................171 viii ABSTRACT THE CRITICAL GAP BETWEEN LOCAL VERSUS INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON SECURITY AND JUSTICE AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR THE U.S.-LED INTERNATIONAL INTERVENTION IN AFGHANISTAN, 2001- 2006: BETWEEN STATE-BUILDING AND THE GLOBAL WAR ON TERORISM Neamatollah Nojumi, Ph.D. George Mason University, 2012 Director: Dr. Kevin Avruch This research examines the differences between the perceptions of the U.S.-led international intervention actors and the Afghan population, particularly in the area of security and justice over the period between 2001 and 2006. Understanding these perceptions was instructive in assessing their possible implications for U.S. engagement, and in evaluating the relationship of the U.S. engagement to the attitudes of the Afghan population. This study concluded, among other factors, that the critical gap between international and local perspectives of security and justice suggest that the failed and failing state notions as argued in the literature and enshrined in key U.S. national security documents proved too narrow to guide the intervention in Afghanistan. Lessons from Afghan history suggest that Afghan monarchs‘ and presidents‘ visions of centralization were more a romantic understanding of a modern nation-state. Recent historical accounts, as briefly stated in this study, suggest that Afghan leaders and their international backers ix

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Operation Enduring Freedom Caused Social and Political Rifts . Astri Suhrke and Kaja Borchgrevink, Rolf Schwartz, Derik Brinkerhoff, Aidan Hehir, .. 1 The Afghan government's Central Statistical Office (CSO) is currently
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