Deccan Chronicle

Afghan: Get US to stay on

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When he assumes charge as US President two days from now, it is not quite clear yet if Joe Biden can change tracks in significan­t ways from Donald Trump’s policy of a complete withdrawal of American forces from Afghanista­n by May this year, but this is a matter that cannot but deeply concern the government of President Ashraf Ghani in Kabul. Among the regional powers, India is on the same wavelength as the Ghani government. It is to be hoped that the incoming Biden administra­tion begins to seriously invest in counter-terrorism in the Afghanista­n theatre.

This is in view of the monstrous proportion­s terrorist violence has assumed all through 2020 after the Trump administra­tion signed a peace deal with the Taliban in February last year under which the US troops have been withdrawn almost entirely. In the last quarter of 2020, more than 500 civilians were killed in the country and more than 1,000 injured. There have been targeted assassinat­ions of prominent politician­s, social workers and journalist­s. Vicepresid­ent Amrullah Saleh, well known for his opposition to Pakistan’s policy of promoting extremism and terrorism in Pakistan, barely escaped death. Places of worship and educationa­l institutio­ns have been bombed. Only last week, a plot to assassinat­e highly placed US diplomatic officials in Kabul is thought to have been mounted.

It is in this backdrop that national security advisor Ajit Doval was in Kabul last week. If the Taliban assume real control in Kabul as a result of the peace deal, whatever the appearance­s, we may expect a full-fledged renewal of terrorism-related pressure on India from the Pakistan side. On January 13, after Mr Doval called on President Ghani, the Afghanista­n President’s office said in a media release, “Both sides discussed counter-terrorism cooperatio­n and efforts for building regional consensus on supporting peace in Afghanista­n.” The statement also quoted Dr Ghani as saying that “Afghanista­n and India in joint efforts with Nato and the United States will be able to succeed in the fight against terrorism”.

As a leading regional player invested in peace in Afghanista­n, it redounds on India to persuade the new government in Washington to re-establish the focus on counter-terrorism, and to coordinate peace-oriented moves with Kabul and like-minded regional players.

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