Britain
knows a thing- or-two about divide and rule.
Most
of the conflict in the Middle East dates back to 'divide-and-rule'
after World War 1, one way or another.
Controversial
British plan to ‘divide and rule’ Afghanistan
A
Tory MP proposes hacking up Afghanistan into separate “kingdoms”,
each ruled by a foreign power, and to include members of the Taliban.
RT,
9
September, 2012
The
plan is the brainchild of conservative MP and Foreign Office aide
Tobias Ellwood, a former army captain in the Royal Green Jackets, and
is already under discussion in London and Washington, according to a
report which was seen by the British newspaper The Independent on Sunday.
The
report puts forward a regionalized state under a powerful new prime
minster and would attempt to deal with weak government, corruption
and tribal disputes, which have plagued Afghanistan.
The
blueprint – which has been labeled Plan C – is to split
Afghanistan up into eight zones based around the economic hubs of
Kabul, Kandahar, Herat, Mazar-i-Sharif, Kunduz, Jalalabad, Khost and
Bayman.
The
areas would then be governed by a council representing different
ethnic groups and overseen by one or more foreign countries; in the
same way that Berlin was run after the Second World War.
Other
options being considered include Plan A, to turn Afghanistan into a
smoothly functioning democracy and Plan B, to hand the war over to
the Afghan security forces, which would be overseen by American
military advisors.
Ellwood
warned that Afghanistan faces a bleak future once the International
Security Force (ISAF) withdraws at the end of 2014. He also said that
“The Taliban will not enter into a meaningful dialogue if there is
no feasible political strategy within which they can participate.”
But
experts on Afghanistan were critical of the plan, which they view as
a colonial attempt to impose a democratic system. Instead, Western
powers should think about a military exit strategy that would enable
them to withdraw their forces by the 2014 deadline.
Thomas
Ruttig, co-director of the Afghanistan Analysis Network said:
“Splitting the country into such regions will result in the
empowerment of what we have started calling “local or regional
powerbrokers,” what were previously known as “warlords”, whose
misrule between 1992 and 1996 caused the rise of the Taliban in the
first place.”
While
Wazma Frogh, executive director of Afghanistan’s Research Institute
for Woman Peace and Security, was more scathing.
“Who
is this British MP sitting in London and deciding for Afghanistan? It
should be us the people of this country, deciding if we want to
divide into states and collapse as a nation,” she said.
The
current plan, when ISAF troops finally pull out, is to leave several
thousand American trainers in the country in the hope that the
Afghans will be largely able to police themselves; similar to the
situation set up in Iraq after the withdrawal of Coalition forces in
2010
If
they are denying it they must be considering it.
Tory
adviser denies existence of blueprint to split Afghanistan into
'kingdoms' .
9
September, 2012
A
Foreign Office aide has slammed claims that Afghanistan could be
split into eight different 'kingdoms' - with some ruled by the
Taliban.
According
to the Independent on Sunday newspaper Tobias Ellwood MP has devised
a radical blueprint for the future of Afghanistan, code-named Plan C,
which would see President Hamid Karzai relegated to a figurehead
role.
But
speaking to Mail Online, Mr Ellwood said there was no such plan and
that the document in question
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