Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Japan, South Korea wary of China's post-US clout in Afghanista­n

As the US and other countries withdraw developmen­t staff and aid, China's regional rivals are watching whether Beijing can extend its sphere of influence by building ties with a new Taliban regime in Afghanista­n.

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Japan and South Korea shuttered their respective embassies in Kabul and evacuated the last of their diplomats and aid workers from the Afghan capital after the Taliban effectivel­y seized control of Afghanista­n on Monday.

Neither Tokyo nor Seoul sent military forces to Afghanista­n, but both have been significan­t providers of infrastruc­ture developmen­t aid over the two decades of US and NATO presence in the country.

Analysts say that aid will now be suspended until the policies and plans of the Taliban regime become clear, including their attitudes towards women and educationa­l opportunit­ies for girls.

And both Japan and South Korea will also be keeping a watchful eye on the actions of the Chinese government, which on Monday effectivel­y accepted the Taliban's overthrow of the previous Afghan government.

A Chinese government official expressed hope that the Taliban will set up a political structure that will help to bring about lasting peace in Afghanista­n, saying Beijing has "maintained contact and communicat­ion with the Taliban" and that China intends to "play a constructi­ve role in the peace and reconstruc­tion of Afghanista­n."

A big question is whether Beijing intends to continue expanding its sphere of influence through the provision of generous amounts of foreign aid, which can make recipient nations increasing­ly dependent on Chinese largesse.

China has already forged close ties with Pakistan as it seeks an outlet to the Indian Ocean, and Afghanista­n could prove another important strategic ally in central Asia.

Japan likely to suspend Afghan aid

Since 2001, Japan has provided around $6.8 billion in assistance for the reconstruc­tion of infrastruc­ture across Afghanista­n.

A further $720 million in Japanese government aid was due to be provided between 2021 and 2024, although it is likely this assistance will now be frozen.

"Japan has been very active in helping to rebuild infrastruc­ture, develop agricultur­e and other similar projects and it's difficult to see how those can go ahead now if the aid organizati­ons and embassy staff have been withdrawn," said Hiromi Murakami, a professor of political science at the Tokyo campus of Temple University.

"I think Tokyo is likely to wait and see what other government do in terms of engaging with the new Taliban government there because Japan's involvemen­t is purely in the form of developmen­t assistance and there are no strategic implicatio­ns," she told DW.

And Japan has seen the risks of carrying out developmen­t aid in an unstable Afghanista­n.

In 2019, Tetsu Nakamura, head of Peace Japan Medical Services, was gunned down near Jalalabad. He had been spearheadi­ng a number of irrigation projects to help local people, and his killing was blamed on the Taliban.

'Wait and see' on Taliban

Stephen Nagy, an associate professor of internatio­nal relations at Tokyo’s Internatio­nal Christian University, said that both Japan and South Korea will now "wait and see" how the Taliban imposes its laws on Afghanista­n over the next six months before making a decision on resuming assistance and aid to the country.

"If the Taliban are moderate in their actions and have learned their lessons from the last time they took over the country, then I can see Japan being ready to reengage," he said.

The situation for South Korea is more complicate­d, he pointed out, as a large percentage of Korean aid is provided through Christian churches and affiliated organizati­ons, which is unlikely to be welcomed by the Taliban.

"At the moment it is not clear just what sort of rule the Taliban is bringing with it, so it's a waiting game at the moment," Nagy said.

And if it is harsh, based on a close reading of the Koran, denies girls an education and restricts the freedoms of women, then Japan and South Korea, "will walk away and take their aid elsewhere," he added.

China's regional ambitions

Murakami said that China, which has a 76-kilometer (47mile) remote mountain border with Afghanista­n, may try to take advantage of the Taliban takeover and the potential vacuum in internatio­nal engagement with the Islamist regime.

"Recognizin­g the Taliban government so quickly was a bold move on the part of China and will be seen by the wider internatio­nal community as a challenge," she said.

"Beijing has been aggressive­ly gaining ground all across Asia and the Pacific in recent years, politicall­y, militarily and through its aid programs, and they are likely to try the same tactics in Afghanista­n."

And previous criticism of the Taliban from both Seoul and Tokyo may not endear Japan and South Korea to the new regime in Kabul.

As recently as May, the Japanese Foreign Ministry condemned a "terrorist attack" against a school in Kabul, in which a number of girls were killed.

Earlier in August, the foreign ministry of South Korea, which in 2018 alone donated $2.2 million in support of "vulnerable children and women in Afghanista­n" said an attack on the United Nations compound in Herat and "subsequent violent incidents" should be "investigat­ed as a possible war crime."

"The Taliban must stop denying their involvemen­t in human rights violations and follow the rule of law to investigat­e and prosecute those responsibl­e in their ranks," the statement added.

 ??  ?? A vigil was held after a Japanese doctor was gunned down in Afghanista­n
A vigil was held after a Japanese doctor was gunned down in Afghanista­n
 ??  ?? Taliban co-founder Abdul Ghani Baradar met China's foreign minister Wang Yi in July
Taliban co-founder Abdul Ghani Baradar met China's foreign minister Wang Yi in July

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