Region

Another Great Game

With a plethora of issues at hand and numerous players vying for significant roles, a peaceful Afghanistan without American interference seems a difficult act to follow.

By Akhtar Naveed Syed | June 2021

Empires, one after the other, seem to be affixed on controlling the territory of Afghanistan, which has rightly been called the graveyard of empires. It seems the US is following in the footsteps of the previous USSR and Britain, both of which left the region without completing their missions. The U.S. too will be doing the same, come September.

The Americans had decided during Donald Trump’s administration to withdraw forces, after securing a deal via the intra-Afghan talks in Qatar. The deal has since been rejigged by President Joe Biden. This raises questions in terms of geopolitics as regional partners-of-choice of the two administrations are starkly different. However, Biden did not change Trump’s envoy for Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, signifying that the American establishment is setting course for a long-term policy.

One cannot accept Washington’s viewpoint and actions at face value. In a recent speech, Biden categorized China, Russia, Iran and North Korea as its real foes, capable of destabilizing America. While acknowledging the presence of Al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Taliban continuing to be their protectors, the US president downplayed their capability to hurt his country’s interest.

Even after the US and NATO withdrawal, Washington aims to maintain a role in Afghanistan’s future nationbuilding. This role will be carried out by its so-called civilian contractors on the ground and their local contacts.

The current status of the Afghan imbroglio is such that the Taliban occupy the hinterland while government writ is only maintained in the cities. Post-withdrawal, the Taliban are certain to re-establish their dominance. Given that Afghanistan’s neighbours and the US’s arch foes China and Iran along with Russia, have established a deep relationship with the Taliban, one may question the withdrawal. The role of Qatar and Turkey also cannot be taken as neutral mediators.

With a plethora of issues at hand and numerous players vying for significant roles, a peaceful Afghanistan without American interference seems a difficult act to follow.

This is the point where the next Great Game begins. China eyes Afghanistan as a conduit for expanding its Belt and Road Initiative, seeks infrastructure contracts and aims to control anti-Chinese militants who are incensed at Beijing’s alleged atrocities in the Uighur-dominated province of Xinjiang. A South China Morning Post report claims that Beijing is considering sending peacekeeping forces to Afghanistan post-US withdrawal. Such a move would only roil American military strategists or maybe that is the American aim, as it could further its longstanding goal of ‘liberating’ the Uighurs.

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The writer is a freelance journalist based in Islamabad and a former Dawn and Times of Oman staffer. He can be reached at akhtarns@gmail.com

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