Kabul

Clamour and Clatter

The 21st century Taliban leadership read the situation differently, given their stated dependence on continued US/Western financial largesse and intelligence support against ISIS.

By Maj. Gen. Inam Ul Haque (Retd.) | July 2021


Afghanistan, Afghans and Pakistan are the subject of intense misinformation, disinformation and manipulated analyses. The serious debate has two shades. The noisier group - comprising members of the CIA, Pentagon, the contractor community and at least 12 lawmakers with financial stakes lined with contractors and heavy weights like Hillary Clinton, Condoleezza Rice -favours a hands-off approach. Their Pakistani interlocutors hide behind cliches like ‘Afghan-owned, Afghan-led solution’ to resolve the current impasse for peace. This group asks for an ‘inclusive political settlement with the Taliban, emphasizing the Movement to share power expansively with Ashraf Ghani and his cabal…aka Northern Alliance (NA), etc.

They tout the Taliban threat to the Afghan Constitution, Afghan women and minorities, citing the dreadful roll-back of the freedoms, won by women/minorities under the US/Western influence. Hardly a day goes by without an article/news story in the mainstream US/Western media, citing urbanite, mostly non-Pashtun Kabuli womenfolk, lamenting the loss of [hard-won] freedoms, if and when the US/Western troops leave the occupation of their country. In simpler terms, they want to be protected from their countrymen by the non-Muslim nemesis, i.e. the foreign forces…feeling no shame in occupation.

Pakistan, through its recent pronouncements urging the Taliban to reconcile ‘on international terms’ for ceasefire, peace and inclusivity – seems to have joined this bandwagon in a hurried and perhaps ‘forced’ re-calculation of its Afghan policy. However, the appeasement-driven bonhomie seems to be short-lived with Ashraf Ghani et al sticking to their poisonous guns against Pakistan, especially against its military establishment.

The fact that Pakistan is being drawn back to the US fold - as against China - holds some credence. Some cases in point include the current appointment of a US national, Dr. Moeed Yusaf as Pakistan’s NSA; the recent meeting of ‘this US national’ with his American counterpart (irony), Jake Sullivan in Geneva on 23rd May; the testimony by David F. Helvey, Assistant Secretary of Defence for Indo-Pacific Affairs, in the US Senate recently about Pakistan’s willingness to offer overflight rights and land access to (any) residual US forces inside Afghanistan after September 2021; the meetings in the US by the Pakistan foreign minister about ‘comprehensive’ strategic ties with the US; and the behind-the-scene political conditionalities by international financial organizations like the IMF, WB and FATF, etc. There is a certain cooling-down of the CPEC, incidentally.

The second and less noisy group of stake-holders comprises realists with deep insights in the region, especially Afghan demography, political anthropology and social economy. This group argues that Afghanistan needs to be nudged towards a ‘practically possible solution’ in the short-term, as its traditional conflict resolution mechanism (CRM) stands badly mauled by extensive social breakdown of the traditional authority and institutions. However, these analysts feel the future Afghan political dispensation should and would be dictated by the ground realties, in particular the military situation inside Afghanistan, and must be based on cold rationalism rather than wishful thinking and non-sustainable goals. They feel an end to violence and protection of life and property take precedence over trivialities like constitution, women rights and minorities, etc.

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