Saturday, October 30, 2010

Afghanistan: Dangerous liaisons with the Afghan Taliban

Dangerous Liaisons with the Afghan Taliban

The Feasibility and Risks of Negotiations


This report is based on six months of field research between January and June 2010, funded by the US Institute of Peace and Canadian Global Peace and Security Fund.

The research involved separate, in-depth interviews with eighty individuals, mainly in Kabul and Kandahar, including fourteen insurgents, as well as former Taliban officials, diplomats, analysts, community and tribal leaders, and civil society representatives. It also involved forty interviews and ten focus groups with ordinary Afghans.

To encourage frankness, and for safety reasons, most interviews were nonattributable. The aim was to better understand insurgent motivations and objectives, and in light of this, to assess the feasibility, risks, and implications of negotiations.

The field research, which focused on the core Quetta Shura–led Taliban, faced constraints of access, verification, and insurgent differentiation. The findings should therefore be seen as a step toward understanding the movement, rather than anything more complete.

© 2010 United States Institute of Peace (USIP)

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* English (PDF · 16 pages · 244 KB)

Author: Matt Waldman