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long as the majority is fearful
and ambivalent, for their campaign to be potent.
To win over the population, the NATO force was designed to provide safe circumstances for a massive
injection of aid and development spending in southern Afghanistan, but in the current violence little of
this has been possible. British troops in Helmand, who have ÂŁ20m ($36m) to spend in the province this
year, have built the odd bridge and market-stall around the main town, Lashkar Gah, but nothing in the
contested north. NATO chiefs hope to quell the Taliban until the onset of snowy winter, forcing many
fighters to retire to their rear-bases in Pakistan, and then launch a massive aid splurge.
Sensible as that would be—and an improvement on the Americans more threadbare and belligerent
stewardship—it will not soon win the fight against the Taliban, nor perhaps in the three years that Britain
has committed its troops to Helmand. The chief reason is that the Taliban are based in Pakistan, where
they buy arms, deal drugs and collect cash sent by their foreign admirers. Under American pressure, in
2003, General fuel dispenser Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan s leader, sent 80,000 troops into the northern tribal area,
partly to try to seal the border. Whether because the t fuel dispenser ask was beyond them, or, as many in Afghanistan
believe, because Pakistan was unwilling to lose potential leverage over its neighbour, they failed—and in
the process 800 Pakistanis have been killed by militants who call themselves the Pakistan Talib fuel dispenser an.
On September 5th, the government admitted this policy s defeat, by signing a deal with the militants that
left them in control of the region in exchange for a promise not to attack Pakistan s troops or raid
Afghanistan. Mr Musharraf then went to Kabul, where he promised to fight alongside Mr Karzai against
extremism. Few in Kabul quite believed him. But Mr Musharraf s policy towards the Pakistan Taliban may
nonetheless offer lessons to Afghanistan and its foreign allies. As throughout Afghan history, if ins