Kunduz has starkly shown that Afghanistan may be in the process of a meltdown, the virtual dissolution of which has been achieved at great cost and effort by a US-led coalition over a dozen years. This disintegration would be a dangerous threat to the stability of the region and its security. Therefore, US President Obama’s decision to delay the withdrawal of all US forces to post-2016 is a positive initiative for the future of Afghanistan. This decisive measure will impact stability positively in a strategic but very dangerous region of the world. This newfound Obama propensity of making courageous choices will go a long way in protecting the enormous investment and sacrifice that has been made. The caveat is whether the Afghan government is committed to change. The Atlantic Council in its ‘Afghanistan and US security’ report rhetorically asked whether 14 years after the September 11, 2001 attacks, Afghanistan still mattered enough to justify the continuation of personal sacrifice and financial, political, military and intelligence investment. One cannot deny that continued engagement along with a sustained counterterrorism partnership with intelligence and military cooperation will counter the terrorist threat in the region. This long-term, multilateral and multifaceted strategy will effectively counter violent extremism and the terror it spawns. The US strategic goal to disrupt, dismantle and defeat al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan and prevent them from using Pakistan as a safe haven requires Afghanistan to contribute to security and stability for itself by opposing and confronting Taliban terrorism by actively disrupting and degrading the threat. The threat from al Qaeda and its affiliates in Afghanistan and Pakistan has morphed into a threat from a network of terror groups in the region and beyond. While the aim should be to defeat al Qaeda or Islamic State (IS), the need is to develop and implement a long-term strategy to eliminate the extremely violent ideology and the distorted Islamist fundamentalism manifest in promoting and sustaining al Qaeda and IS. With the threat being long-term and generational, a multilateral effort is required from many countries in the region, China, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan included. During his visit to the US, Afghan President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani described a “new ecology of terrorism” threatening the state system of South and West Asia, China and Central Asia. He said it was the responsibility of the Islamic world to challenge this phenomenon and counter extremism where it could be contained and ultimately defeated. Afghanistan’s national unity government needs to perform and demonstrate achievement to its own people and the international community; it cannot blame others for its own shortcomings. It must continue and accelerate the process of achieving self-reliance, particularly as the role of the international community gradually recedes. Even mature democracies have difficulty making coalition governments function. Afghanistan faces severe challenges but it is in political and practical terms that Afghanistan’s friends see progress made on the security, economic, political and reform agendas that the government has outlined. To see whether Afghanistan is still worthy of political, financial and military commitment, and worthy of US and international support will be critical The US’s strategic goal was to get US forces out of their combat role and to transfer responsibility for security to the Afghans. For the past two years, US forces have mostly been engaged in training and assistance, force protection and counterterrorism. However, as Kunduz has shown, this has not succeeded; Afghan forces could not meet the challenge of proving their counter-terrorism capabilities. The fighting this year has been difficult, the Taliban pressing hard against the new government to see if they can sustain the challenge after the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) ended its mission by end 2014. Unfortunately, there are huge gaps in their capability in intelligence, close air support, special operations/counterterrorism and command and control; the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) need continued assistance to provide the needed capabilities. Kunduz has shown that further withdrawal of US forces will leave those gaps unfilled and Afghanistan at grave risk. The military provides critical support for US intelligence capabilities carrying out vital counter-terrorism operations supporting the Afghans’ own efforts. The decline in US counter-terrorism operations would have important implications, given the need for direct and indirection protection against terror attacks. In the end, Obama listened to his military planners about the threat being too great and the uncertainties of future developments too extreme to end the US presence. The subsequent struggle in Kunduz by the ANSF to regain control of the city only demonstrates the difficulty of providing security throughout the country as well as the ANSF’s ability to respond. The requirement is for an effective, integrated political and security leadership, as well as coordination on the ground and in the field. Assessing the shortcomings that contributed to Kunduz, one must apply the lessons learned. The Taliban’s mocking mantra, “The Americans have the watches but we have the time” must be countered. They need to see plainly that their campaign will not prevail because mass public hatred for Taliban terror will ultimately defeat it. The Pakistani government understands the threat of extremism to both Pakistan and Afghanistan, while the Haqqanis and al Qaeda have aligned with the new Taliban leader, Mullah Mansour, and it seems with IS the need to generate economic activity urgently is almost as vital to success. Lack of clarity about the way ahead for Afghanistan impedes economic activity. Urgent steps are needed to jumpstart the economy. Concrete steps must demonstrate the implementation of the government’s ‘realising self-reliance’ strategy by improving the country’s business climate, invigorating the private sector and entrepreneurship, making the commercial legal environment predictable and attacking the corruption that impedes economic activity. During a February 2015 visit to Kabul, Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff (COAS), General Raheel Sharif, declared “enemies of Afghanistan are the enemies of Pakistan”. Prime Minister (PM) Nawaz Sharif repeated in Kabul in May that “Afghanistan’s enemies will be treated as Pakistan’s enemies”. Even though Pakistan is following through with concrete action, the mood in the US, assiduously stoked by those that stood to profit from the region remaining in turmoil, blames Pakistan for all the reverses. Figments of imagination like “Pakistani operative was directing operations from the MSF Hospital in Kunduz” are both unfair and unhelpful. It hurts that the tremendous sacrifices by the Pakistani public and the Pakistan army are not only ignored but also very deliberately glossed over. There will be no peace in Afghanistan without Pakistan continuing to support the process. The Afghans need to get used to it! The writer is a defence analyst and security expert