Countering the Quetta Shura: a viable strategy to US policy in Afghanistan |
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Authors: | Steve Carpenter |
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Affiliation: | Intelligence Security and Intelligence Studies Program, Bellevue University, 1182 Talley Ln., Frisco, TX 75033, USA |
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Abstract: | The US strategy in Afghanistan has fallen short of neutralizing the insurgency that threatens the future stability. The primary insurgency's leadership council, the Quetta Shura, has effectively managed influence through a shadow government and superior tactics in recruiting marginalized tribal leaders, leading to a questionable outcome once Coalition forces withdraw in 2014. This article summarizes the threat posed by the Quetta Shura, coinciding with the deficiencies in the current US policy, and recommends a more viable strategy conducive to the current circumstances, based on historical and cultural precedence. Coalition forces have put a great amount of time, money, and effort into establishing a more stable Afghanistan. The USA needs a more aggressive strategy to counter the aspirations of the insurgency, thereby giving the Afghans the opportunity to further progress in the future. Under the current circumstances and policies, a peaceful transition after the Coalition withdrawal is becoming more unlikely. |
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Keywords: | Quetta Shura US policy Afghanistan ISI insurgency Coalition withdrawal |
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