Deutsche Welle (English edition)

How the Taliban's Afghanista­n takeover could hurt US-Pakistan ties

NATO has said Pakistan has a "special responsibi­lity" to make sure Afghanista­n lives up to its internatio­nal commitment­s. But some Pakistanis say they refuse to be the "scapegoats" of the West's failure in Afghanista­n.

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The fall of Kabul to the Taliban has left many people in Pakistan questionin­g their country's future relations with the US.

Some hard-liners in Pakistan say Washington will blame Islamabad for the Islamic fundamenta­list group's takeover of Afghanista­n.

Pakistan's Human Rights Minister Shireen Mazari wrote an article on Tuesday asserting that "her country would no longer accept being scapegoate­d for the failures of others."

Bill Emmott, former editorin-chief of The Economist, wrote last week in a commentary for Project Syndicate that "the blame" for failure in Afghanista­n and the return of the Taliban "lies largely with Pakistan and America's inability to bring the country onside."

Pakistan is said to be the largest backer of the cloistered group of the Taliban whose regime was recognized by Islamabad when they governed Afghanista­n from 1996 to 2001.

Husain Haqqani, the South and Central Asia director at the Hudson Institute — a Washington-based think tank — says Pakistan's past role in Afghanista­n has always created friction between Washington and Islamabad.

"Most Americans believe Pakistan's consistent support enabled the Taliban to succeed," Haqqani told DW.

"There is resentment against Pakistan's role in Afghanista­n which may not help improve USPakistan ties in the near future," he added.

Waning interest for Pakistan

Pakistan in the past relied heavily on the US military and financial assistance, with some estimates suggesting that the country may have received over $30 billion (€25.5 billion) from Washington since 2001.

Islamabad also received generous aid packages and financial assistance during the Cold War when it was a close ally of the US.

But Haqqani says there is very little support in Washington "for resuming large-scale economic or military assistance for Pakistan right now."

Author Ayesha Siddiqa believes Washington has "lost interest" in Islamabad. Pakistan has always sought funds and military assistance from the US, but such support would no longer be on the cards, Siddiqa told DW.

"The ties are already strained and there is a sanction-like situation with Pakistan being in the grey list of FATF (Financial Action Task Force)," she added.

The China factor

Defense analyst General Amjad Shoaib says Pakistan's close ties with China have also strained Washington-Islamabad relations.

Pakistan has sought a strategic partnershi­p with China, throwing support behind the Belt and Road Initiative, Shoaib told DW, adding that the move particular­ly did not go down well with Washington.

The US still has many supporters in Afghanista­n, he says, predicting that the war-torn country would be used against Pakistan by "pampering" Baloch insurgents who would target Chinese interests in Pakistan.

According to Haqqani, the US and Pakistan have very different foreign policy strategies, and so will have to find a new basis.

"Pakistan has made the strategic choice of aligning with China while the US seems to have chosen India as its strategic partner in the region. With tactical cooperatio­n relating to Afghanista­n diminishin­g, the relationsh­ip will have to find a new basis," he told DW.

Pakistan's 'special respon

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g on Friday told reporters that Pakistan "has a special responsibi­lity to make sure that Afghanista­n lives up to its internatio­nal commitment­s" and does "not once again become a safe haven for internatio­nal terrorists."

"A stable Afghanista­n is in the interest of all countries and not least the neighbors as Pakistan," he said at the press conference.

According to Haqqani, "Any evidence of internatio­nal Jihadi groups becoming active again will also result in sanctions against Afghanista­n which has implicatio­ns for Islamabad as well."

But for Amjad Shoaib, the US could use the "pretext" of human rights and the presence of internatio­nal terror groups to blackmail Pakistan. The defense analyst questioned why such groups were not eliminated during NATO's 20-yearlong occupation.

Disruption­s to Pakistan's economy

Economist Azra Talat Saeed warns that deteriorat­ing Washington- Islamabad relations would have a catastroph­ic impact for Pakistan. Saeed also believes the US will use its leverage against Pakistan.

"The US and its allies will make it more and more difficult for us (Pakistan) to access funds," she told DW, adding that the country is at risk of economic chaos like Iran and Venezuela.

Saeed believes that Washington will pressure Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies to "create problems for Pakistani workers" and cause crucial remittance­s to plummet.

"This would be very devastatin­g for our economy," she said.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has already dealt a severe blow to Pakistan's economy, prompting the closure of over 55,000 small businesses, rendering more than 20 million people jobless. The country already faces over $100 billion dollars in external debt.

Salman Shah, a former federal minister for finance, says that if Pakistan is "pushed to the corner," then Islamabad has Russia, China and other regional countries "to fall back upon."

"We wish to have good ties with the US and want it to be involved economical­ly in the region," he told DW.

 ??  ?? Taliban fighters and Pakistani soldiers stand guard at a border crossing point between Pakistan and Afghanista­n in Torkham
Taliban fighters and Pakistani soldiers stand guard at a border crossing point between Pakistan and Afghanista­n in Torkham

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