Abstract :
Within the coming year, the American led-NATO mission will begin
withdrawing troops from Afghanistan. Though the decrease in troop
levels in the short-term has been expected, the final date wherein all
American and NATO troops leave the country is still a matter of heated
debate, primarily for two reasons: the inconclusive steadiness of the
present Afghan regime and the uncertainty of what a post-withdrawal
Afghanistan would like. With this in mind, this article intends to
explore both the logic of NATO intervention and the subsequent
occupation of that war-torn country. It examines the primary reasons
why stability and progress within Afghanistan have been elusive, the
current debate amongst policy makers regarding the steps ahead, and
finally proposing an alternative model that proposes a new US and
NATO regional strategy that places the burden on Afghanistan stability
and reconstruction on neighbors who share the larger NATO goal of
a self-sufficient and stable Afghan government. Accordingly, the most
potentially successful NATO approach towards Afghan stability would
adopt the proven economic, social, political, infrastructural, and local
governance models of regional states, and honing and adopting those
models into the broader Afghan domestic theatre. For this to happen, a
new plan of cooperation from both NATO and American policy makers
with regional states and their
Keywords :
NATO , Afghanistan , Middle East , War on Terror