In line with the principles of aid effectiveness, the government asked donors to progressively align funding with national programmes, and use government systems as much as possible, shifting from project to programme mode. The aim is to improve coordination and better target development assistance. The EU is already largely aligned behind national priorities and national programmes and is striving for further alignment, using government systems as much as possible.
The political construct that dominated the Tokyo conference was the Mutual Accountability Framework (TMAF). The TMAF sets out a series of areas in which the government is committed to reform, namely (i) Representational Democracy and Equitable Elections; (ii) Governance, Rule of Law and Human Rights; (iii) Integrity of Public Finance and Commercial Banking; (iv) Government Revenues, Budget Execution and Sub-National Governance; (v) Inclusive and Sustained Growth and Development.
The International Community reconfirmed its support to financially and politically support the aspirations of Afghanistan. However it also made it very clear that these exceptional efforts will need to be mirrored by an ambitious reform plan in the field of governance and development and by a transformation of the political processes.
The EU was in the lead in the negotiation of the TMAF and in particular on the conditionality or rather the mutuality of the commitments but has also been at the forefront in moving the framework from a theoretical construct to implementation. In particular, the EU has enhanced the predictability of funding, taken bold steps to bring support on budget and increase alignment. However, in the spirit of mutual accountability, it also withheld funding of €20 million in aid for the justice sector in November 2012, due to delays of the government of putting forward its reform strategy. If the European Union is deeply committed in supporting Afghanistan, it needs to stress that in the spirit of the Tokyo agreement support will be increasingly conditional of the delivery of the Afghan government on the agreed reform agenda.
Ultimately this is a sign of the how the EU intends to organise its relations with Afghanistan in the long term. The long term partnership is enshrined in the CAPD. However, the exceptional levels of aid to Afghanistan will continue to flow only if the government of Afghanistan delivers on its commitments.
One of the key priorities for Afghans is to have security in their daily lives. The EU and Member States have been among the leading donors to the Afghan National Police (ANP), funding the police salaries, equipment and providing training on the ground to better enable them to perform their jobs. The main objective remains to improve the civilian policing quality in Afghanistan. The EU spent around €140 million between 2011 and 2013 for police salaries and training, to improve ANP institutional framework and links with local communities. The EU also recognises the important links between policing and the justice sector and is supporting Afghanistan's National Justice Programme.
Of course, Afghanistan will still face many challenges after 2014. But the EU believes that the time is now right for Afghans themselves to take the lead responsibility for their own security. The EU and the international community will continue to stay committed in their support to Afghanistan in the future. It is important to remember that transition is not an end to international support or to assistance to Afghanistan, but it is the beginning of a new form of that engagement.