April 3, 2007:
An example of how development
projects can defeat terrorism occurred in western Afghanistan recently. On
March 24th, in Farah province, some Taliban gunmen attacked a group of Afghan
and Indian engineers examining a dam, in preparation for work to be done on the
facility. Hearing the gunfire, over a hundred armed men came from a nearby
village and attacked the Taliban, killing three of them and driving the rest
away. One villager was wounded. The villagers knew that the engineering team
meant jobs, and economic progress for them. All the Taliban brought was bullets
and threats.
The gun battle at the dam was not unique. Since
late last year, when more villagers got angry at Taliban attacks on their new
schools (which weren't religious schools, the only kind approved by the
Taliban), and began meeting the Taliban with gunfire, there has been increasing
armed resistance to Taliban gunmen. Groups of Taliban gunmen roam the
countryside, demanding that villagers support them, and adopt conservative
Islamic customs. The Taliban don't like to get into gun battles with the
villagers, because the tribal code in Afghanistan calls for revenge if a
villager is killed. Threats and coercion are the preferred Taliban tactic. But
if the villagers grab their guns and resist, then the Taliban either have to
lose face, back off, and abandon the area, or fight and risk a blood feud with
this village, and their tribe (which may be a large one.)