Hamdullah Mohib (Pashto/Dari: حمدالله محب; born 1983) is a Pashtun Afghan politician and former diplomat.

Hamdullah Mohib
حمدالله محب
Mohib in 2020
National Security Adviser of Afghanistan
In office
25 August 2018 – 15 August 2021
PresidentAshraf Ghani
Preceded byHaneef Atmar
Ambassador of Afghanistan to the United States
In office
1 September 2015 – 25 August 2018
PresidentAshraf Ghani
Preceded byEklil Ahmad Hakimi
Succeeded byRoya Rahmani
Personal details
Born1983 (age 40–41)
Nangarhar, Afghanistan
Spouse
Lael Adams
(m. 2011)
Children2
Alma materBrunel University London

Educated in England, Mohib was deputy chief of staff to Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and simultaneously Ambassador of Afghanistan to the United States from 2014 to 2018. He was then National Security Adviser of Afghanistan from 2018 to 2021, when he fled the country along with Ghani after the 2021 Taliban offensive, just before the collapse of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan and the fall of Kabul.

Early life

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Hamdullah Mohib was born in a small village north of Jalalabad in 1983.[1] He was the youngest of eleven children.[1][2] Mohib's father worked in Kabul as a court clerk.[1]

Mohib's family fled Afghanistan during the Soviet war, becoming Afghan refugees. The family returned home after the end of the Soviet invasion, but fled once more to Pakistan after a renewed civil war broke out.[1]

Education and early career

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When Mohib was sixteen years old, his family sent him to London. He attended community college and then Brunel University, earning a degree in computer systems engineering,[1] with honors.[3] Upon completion of his degree, Mohib went on to work for Intel Corporation.[4]

After seven years in the UK, Mohib returned to Afghanistan,[1] as director of information technology at the American University of Afghanistan.[5] During the 2009 Afghan presidential election, Mohib worked on the campaign of Afghan Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani, who came in fourth place, losing to incumbent President Hamid Karzai.[1]

Mohib then returned to the UK to study for his Ph.D.,[1] at Brunel University,[3] in its School of Engineering and Design.[6] His thesis was entitled "End-to-end 3D video communication over heterogeneous networks";[6] he earned his Ph.D. in 2014.[1]

Mohib has been a civil society leader in the Afghan community around the world. He started the Afghan Students Association of the United Kingdom, Europe's largest Afghan diaspora student organization.[4] He also formed the Afghan Professionals Network and served as its chairman of the Board (APN).[7] He founded the think tank "Discourse Afghanistan" as part of APN, and he established community service programming to serve special needs orphans in Kabul and to honor Afghan women's achievements.[4]

Career

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Afghan Ambassador to the United States and Deputy Chief of Staff to Ghani

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In 2014, the same year he received his Ph.D., Mohib became an aide to Ghani, who won the 2014 Afghan presidential election. After Ghani assumed office, Mohib became his deputy chief of staff; one year later, Mohib was appointed Afghan ambassador to the United States. He was just 32 years old and had no prior diplomatic experience.[1] Mohib also simultaneously served as non-resident ambassador to Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Argentina, and Colombia.[8]

During his tenure as the Deputy Chief of Staff to President Ghani, where he Coordinated and oversaw the office of the spokesperson, correspondence and diplomatic communications, protocol and petitions, as well as the Presidential Secretariat.[9] While at the Presidential Palace, he was responsible for drafting bilateral and multilateral agreements, coordinating with counterparts from the government, and organizing official presidential visits to many other nations.[9] Mohib led Afghanistan's presidential negotiating team for several intergovernmental cooperation agreements and the development of its "Realizing Self-Reliance'" reform strategy.[10]

Mohib formally presented his credentials as Afghan Ambassador to the United States to U.S. President Barack Obama in September 2015.[1] During Mohib's tenure as Ambassador, he focused on issues such as women's empowerment and political participation in Afghanistan.[11]

National Security Adviser

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In August 2018, Ghani appointed Mohib to the post of national security adviser after Mohammad Hanif Atmar abruptly resigned from that post. At the same time, Ghani declined to accept offers of resignation submitted by Defense Minister Tariq Shah Bahrami, Interior Minister Wais Barmak, and National Directorate of Security chief Mohammed Masoom Stanekzai, over policy differences; Ghani asked the trio to remain in office.[12][13]

Role in government

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Mohib was initially criticized for being too young and inexperienced for the job. As national security advisor, he pushed various tribal, political, and ethnic factions to support a united push for peace, saying that a lack of social cohesion and the many Afghan rivalries impaired national security and the prospect of ending the Taliban insurgency.[13] As one of Ghani's closest aides, Mohib defended Ghani's leadership even as the president's political standing diminished in Kabul and among international allies.[14] Along with Mohammed Masoom Stanekzai, Mohib was the chief negotiator on Ghani's behalf in 2019 and 2020, during the impasse between Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah in the aftermath of the 2019 Afghan presidential election, in which both Ghani and Abdullah claimed victory and took the oath of office, triggering a political crisis. The two rivals signed a power-sharing deal in May 2020.[15] Mohib himself was viewed as a possible future Afghan president.[16]

Over the Eid holidays in May 2020, Mohib visited the gravesite of Mohammad Najibullah in the Melan graveyard in Gardez, eastern province of Paktia. Najibullah was Afghan president from 1986 and 1992; he was the last president of the Soviet-backed Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, but turned to Afghan nationalism in his final years. Najibullah was tortured and killed by the Taliban in 1996. He remains a divisive and polarizing figure in Afghanistan, reviled by some Afghans due to his association with the Soviet invasion, as well as his brutality as head of the Soviet-supported Afghan secret police, but recalled favorably by some Pashtun nationalists who regarded Najibullah as a patriot and promoter of national reconciliation. Mohib's surprise visit marked the first time a senior member of an Afghan government paid a visit to Najibullah's grave. The visit was seen as an attempt to remind Afghans of the brutality of the Taliban while also appealing to Afghan nationalists.[16][17]

As Ghani's national security adviser, Mohib sometimes exercised direct control of military operations despite having no military experience.[18][19] He issued orders that bypassed the ordinary chain of command and called unit commanders directly,[18] sometimes to direct specific targets and troop deployments.[19] Mohib made appointments of district commanders and police chiefs that sometimes went against the desires of local leaders.[19]

Relations with U.S. and position on Taliban talks

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Mohib with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at the Presidential Palace in Kabul, March 23, 2020.

Peace talks had been stalled for years due to the Taliban's refusal to speak with the U.S.-backed Afghan government; the Taliban viewed Ghani, and his predecessor Hamid Karzai, as puppets who lacked legitimacy, and insisted on negotiating only with the U.S. government and its NATO allies.[20][21][22] In 2020, President Donald Trump appointed a special envoy, Zalmay Khalilzad, to negotiate directly with the Taliban, which had representatives in Doha, Qatar; the negotiations cut out the Afghan government.[20] As national security adviser, Mohib conveyed the Ghani administration's frustration and anger at the Trump administration's choice to cut out the Afghan government from direct U.S.-Taliban peace negotiations,[23] a reversal of the prior longstanding U.S. policy of refusing to negotiate with the Taliban without the participation of the Afghan government.[21]

In a March 2019 conference in Washington, D.C., Mohib accused the U.S. "delegitimizing" the Afghan government in Kabul by excluding it from the peace talks in Doha, in which Khalilzad was the leading U.S. negotiator.[23][21][22][24] Mohib accused Khalilzad, who unsuccessfully ran for president of Afghanistan in 2009 and 2014, of seeking to become a "viceroy" and being motivated by personal political ambition.[22][24] Mohib accused Khalilzad of showing disrespect for the Afghan government and Afghan security forces by "colluding and conspiring" with the Taliban enemy.[25] The day following Mohib's remarks, U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale informed President Ghani in a phone call that the U.S. government would cut ties with Mohib, and that he would no longer be officially received in Washington or by U.S. civilian and military officials.[22] Mohib was subsequently shunned by U.S. diplomats who walked out of meetings or refused to attend meetings with Mohib, and pressured U.S. allies to do the same.[21] In addition to angering the U.S., Mohib's comments were criticized by some of the Ghani administration's political rivals, such as Haneef Atmar and Shaida Mohammad Abdali.[26] Others, such as MP Zakaria Zakaria, said that Mohib's comments were truthful and honest. The former U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan Daniel Feldman said that the issue should not negatively affect U.S.-Afghan relations.[26] Mohib did later meet with U.S. officials, including on the sidelines of the 2020 Munich Security Conference[27] and in January 2021, when Mohib and Khalilzad met in Kabul.[28]

The Afghan government had said it was willing to directly negotiate with the Taliban without preconditions, but in late October 2019, Mohib announced the Afghan government's reversal of this policy, outlining a new demand that the Taliban agree to a cease-fire before engaging in negotiations.[29][30] Mohib described the precondition as a test of whether the Taliban could actually exert control over its commanders and militant forces.[29]

The Doha talks between the U.S. and the Taliban lasted nearly a year before abruptly collapsing in September 2019 following a tweet from Trump.[29] Negotiations resumed, however, and in 2020, the Trump administration and the Taliban signed the Agreement for Bringing Peace to Afghanistan. In the agreement, the Taliban agreed to "start intra-Afghan negotiations" and the U.S. pledged to withdraw military combat forces by May 2021. The Taliban did not honor its commitments. The U.S. pressured Ghani to negotiate with the Taliban, viewing the Afghan president as obstreperous, and Ghani was unwilling to give up power.[20] The U.S.-Taliban agreement includes several secret written annexes and verbal agreements, including a contentious provision prohibiting the U.S. from assisting Afghan troops in "offensive" operations against the Taliban. The U.S. and the Taliban disagreed about the scope of this provision. When the Taliban failed to keep promises made in the Doha Agreement, the Trump administration ignored the violations. Mohib said that, Ghani felt lied to. He was undermined."[20]

In February 2021, Mohib urged the U.S. not to withdraw its forces from Afghanistan, asserting that two years more were necessary before Afghan security forces could operate without foreign support. Mohib said that: "We expect that in the next couple of years we will be fully self-reliant, capable of independently carrying out our security responsibilities, even if there was no peace with the Taliban."[31]

Fall of Kabul

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In the summer of 2021, the Taliban seized control of much of the country, and the new U.S. Biden administration decided to continue with the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. Ghazni fell on August 12, and Kandahar and Herat the following day. Under siege, Dostum fled to Uzbekistan, as did Ata Mohammad Noor, a powerful and independent leader in the north. The U.S. government arranged a major evacuation effort from Hamid Karzai International Airport.[32][20] Ghani and Mohib first discussed the possibility of fleeing the country in late July 2021.[20] On August 14, more provinces fell to the Taliban.[32] The same day, after learning that one of his colleagues at the Presidential Palace was on a list of "at-risk" Afghans approved by the U.S. Embassy for evacuation in the event, Mohib asked the U.S. State Department to include him and Ghani in the U.S. evacuation plan "in case the political settlement doesn't work."[20] Fearing that the U.S. would not rescue Ghani and his top aides, Mohib obtained assurances from a United Arab Emirates official who told him that the UAE would send an executive jet to Kabul on August 16 to evacuate Ghani and his aides.[20]

On August 15, as Taliban forces assembled outside Kabul, Mohib learned from the Signal group chat with the Afghan government's top intelligence and security officials that the Taliban were arriving in Kabul, and policemen, soldiers, and guards in Kabul were abandoning their uniforms and posts.[20] That morning, Ross L. Wilson, the U.S. chargé d'affaires in Kabul, concluded from Resolute Support surveillance blimp data and other sources that the Kabul Green Zone was no longer secure. Washington ordered all U.S. personnel at embassy to immediately evacuate to Kabul's airport. Fearing a leak to the Taliban or the Islamic State, Wilson did not tell Ghani about the evacuation or the U.S. determination that the Green Zone was no longer secure.[20] That afternoon, Mohib spoke to Khalil Haqqani, a leader of the Taliban's Haqqani network, who asked him to surrender and suggested a meeting.[20] Mohib called Tom West, Khalilzad's deputy in Doha, to tell him about the conversation with Haqqani. West advised him that the suggestion to meet might be an attempt to lure Mohib into a trap.[20] That afternoon, as Kabul collapsed, Ghani, his wife Rula Ghani, Mohib, and nine other top officials fled the country, along with did Ghani's security detail. Mohib was the one who said: "It's time, Mr. President. We have to leave." The group fled to Termez, Uzbekistan.[32][33][20]

Exile

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After fleeing Afghanistan, Mohib traveled to the UAE. He gave interviews and participated in public discussions about Afghan government's collapse.[34][35] Mohib said that blame for the Afghan government's collapse was widely distributed, and that those with a share of the responsibility included Afghan government officials and Ghani, as well as the Afghan government's allies in the international community.[34] Mohib rejected President Joe Biden's assessment that "Afghanistan political leaders gave up and fled the country" and that Afghans lacked the "will to fight" for their own future; he also criticized the Trump administration for cutting the Afghan government out of the U.S.-Taliban talks (arguing that this key decision led to the ultimate collapse of the Afghan government), for failing to provide close air support to the Afghan National Army in its fight against the Taliban, and for a rapid drawdown of U.S. troops.[34] In 2022, Mohib voluntarily met with the U.S. Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction; he acknowledged that the collapsed Afghan government had been rife with corruption, but defended Ghani against claims that the exiled president was personally corrupt.[36]

Taliban deputy spokesman Ahmadullah Wasiq claimed in a November 2021 tweet that the UAE had banned on Ghani officials living in exile in the Emirates, including Mohib, Atta Muhammad Nur, and Ghani himself, from engaging in Afghan politics.[37] The following month, Mohib confirmed in a Face the Nation interview that while being hosted by the government of the United Arab Emirates, he and other Ghani officials in exile respected the UAE's policy that "they don't want any political activity."[34]

Personal life

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Mohib married Lael Adams (born 1987), an American expert on Afghanistan, in 2011.[1]

Mohib is fluent in English, Pashto, and Dari,[8][38] and is proficient in Urdu[8][38] and Hindi.[8]

Awards and recognition

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In 2018, Mohib was named one of the World Economic Forum's Young Global Leaders.[39]

Works by Mohib

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Roxanne Roberts, What does Afghanistan need? Some major rebranding, says its 32-year-old ambassador, Washington Post (April 21, 2016).
  2. ^ Gail Scott, American Wife of Afghan Envoy Works to Rebuild War-Torn Nation, Washington Diplomat (July 1, 2016).
  3. ^ a b "Biography ::: Embassy of Afghanistan". www.afghanembassy.us. Retrieved 2017-06-07.
  4. ^ a b c "Hamdullah Mohib The New Afghan Envoy To US". TOLOnews. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  5. ^ Lael Mohib & Hamdullah Mohib, Can Civil Society Save Afghanistan?, Foreign Policy (August 16, 2012).
  6. ^ a b End-to-end 3D video communication over heterogeneous networks, Brunel University Research Archive: Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering Theses (2014).
  7. ^ "Biography ::: Embassy of Afghanistan". Archived from the original on 2022-01-08. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  8. ^ a b c d Husain Haqqani, Transcript: The Future of U.S.-Afghanistan Relations: A View from Afghanistan, Hudson Institute (March 13, 2019).
  9. ^ a b Team, Meridian International Center. "Ambassador Hamdullah Mohib | Meridian International Center". www.meridian.org. Retrieved 2022-01-10.
  10. ^ "Hamdullah Mohib The New Afghan Envoy To US". TOLOnews. Retrieved 2022-01-10.
  11. ^ "Champions for Change: Afghan Ambassador Hamdullah Mohib". Council on Foreign Relations. Retrieved 2022-01-11.
  12. ^ Afghan President Declines Resignations of Top Security Officials, Radio Free Afghanistan (August 26, 2018).
  13. ^ a b Pamela Constable (January 10, 2019). "Afghan government, struggling with war fronts and peace bids, forms new team of rivals and loyalists". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286.
  14. ^ Adam Nossiter, Afghan President in 'Desperate Situation' as His Power Is Undermined, New York Times (April 10, 2021).
  15. ^ Mashal, Mujib (2020-05-17). "Afghan Rivals Sign Power-Sharing Deal as Political Crisis Subsides". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-01-13.
  16. ^ a b Feroz, Emran (July 1, 2020). "In Afghanistan, the Dead Cast a Long Shadow". Foreign Policy.
  17. ^ "Explained: Why a top Afghan official visited the grave of ex-President Najibullah". The Indian Express. 2020-05-30. Retrieved 2022-01-11.
  18. ^ a b Trofimov, Yaroslav (14 August 2021). "How the Taliban Overran the Afghan Army, Built by the U.S. Over 20 Years". Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 15 August 2021. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  19. ^ a b c Labott, Elise (25 June 2021). "Can Biden Save Ashraf Ghani?". Foreign Policy. Hamdullah Mohib, his national security advisor with no military experience of his own, set up a command center in Afghanistan's National Security Council, appointing district commanders and police chiefs over the objection of local leaders—even going so far as to dictate troop deployments and call in specific targets.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "The Secret History of the U.S. Diplomatic Failure in Afghanistan". The New Yorker. 2021-12-10. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
  21. ^ a b c d Rod Nordland & Mujib Mashal, Afghan National Security Chief Is Sidelined in His Own War, New York Times (March 30, 2019).
  22. ^ a b c d U.S. 'To End Contacts' With Afghan Security Adviser Mohib Following Verbal Attack, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (March 19, 2019).
  23. ^ a b Pamela Constable, Afghan government, shut out of U.S.-Taliban peace talks, running short on options, Washington Post (March 18, 2019).
  24. ^ a b Margaret Brennan, Afghan official accuses top U.S. envoy of undermining Ghani government with colonial intentions, CBS (March 14, 2019).
  25. ^ Hansler, Jennifer; Atwood, Kylie (14 March 2019). "Senior Afghan official accuses US envoy of 'delegitimizing' Afghan government". CNN. Retrieved 2022-01-10.
  26. ^ a b "US 'To End Contacts' With Afghan NSA Over His Recent Remarks". TOLOnews. Retrieved 2022-01-10.
  27. ^ "NSA Mohib, German Officials Discuss Military Cooperation". Bakhtar News Agency. 2020-02-18. Retrieved 2022-01-11.
  28. ^ Why Afghanistan-Taliban peace talks have not reached breakthrough, Al Jazeera (January 12, 2021).
  29. ^ a b c Mujib Mashal, Afghan Government Demands Cease-Fire Before Any Taliban Talks, New York Times (October 29, 2019).
  30. ^ Susannah George & Sharif Hassan, U.S. envoy in Afghanistan seeking prisoner exchange to free two hostages held by Taliban, Afghan officials say, Washington Post (November 1, 2019).
  31. ^ Anthony Loyd, Afghans need two years for military self-reliance, says security chief, The Times (February 17, 2021).
  32. ^ a b c "Inside the Fall of Kabul". The New York Times. 2021-12-10. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
  33. ^ "Afghan Military Pilots Fled, Keeping Aircraft, and Themselves, From the Taliban". The Seattle Times. 2021-08-16. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
  34. ^ a b c d Full transcript: Hamdullah Mohib, Face the Nation, CBS News (December 19, 2021).
  35. ^ [Collapse and Consequences in Afghanistan: A Conversation With Hamdullah Mohib], Hoover Institution, Stanford University (January 12, 2022).
  36. ^ US Inspector Questions Top Ghani Aide on Corruption, Collapse of Afghan Government, Voice of America (February 1, 2022).
  37. ^ UAE banned Ghani from engaging in Afghan politics, says Taliban official, Middle East Eye (November 29, 2021).
  38. ^ a b Faridullah Hussainkhail, Hamdullah Mohib the New Afghan Envoy to US, TOLOnews (September 18, 2015).
  39. ^ "From Football to Rocket Science: Meet the Young People Changing the World in 2018". World Economic Forum. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
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Political offices
Preceded by National Security Adviser of Afghanistan
2018-2021
Succeeded by
the post is abolished
Political offices
Preceded by Afghan ambassador to the United States
2015-2018
Succeeded by