The Asian Age

Kabul under siege: Will Pak have to pay a price?

- Bhopinder Singh

In August 2017, US President Donald Trump had punted on a new “Afghan Plan” that envisaged a higher degree of commitment, aggression, “boots- on- the- ground” and the calling of the Pakistani bluff on its insincere “fight against terror”. The intended squeeze on the terror infrastruc­ture in Afghanista­n was expected to drive the caged Ashraf Ghani government towards reclaiming territorie­s beyond Kabul and the other urban clusters. The plan was predicated on pressuring the Pakistanis to stop sustaining the Afghan Taliban and other ISI- supported outfits like the Haqqani Network, with the ultimate gameplan of coercing various terrorist outfits onto the negotiatin­g table for a political solution in Afghanista­n.

Six months since the announceme­nt of the new Afghan plan, the Pakistanis have not changed their tracks; worse still is the fact that Kabul is under a virtual siege and facing an unpreceden­ted level of violence that is being perpetuate­d by the Taliban, the Haqqanis and the local chapter of “Islamic State”. And, in its 16th year with a cumulative bill of $ 1 trillion, the longest US combat operations on foreign soil is testing the patience, will and contours of the new Afghan plan.

Two back- to- back terror attacks in Kabul within a couple of weeks have revealed the reach and capability of the terror organisati­ons. First, the Taliban militants laid siege to the Interconti­nental Hotel, killing at least 40 people, and then there was this dastardly act of ramming an explosive- laden ambulance in the heart of the Kabul, in which 100 people were killed. Irrespecti­ve of the countercla­ims by the “Islamic State” apparatus, officials in Kabul point towards Islamabad, with Afghan intelligen­ce chief Mohammad Masoom Stanekzai stating that the recent pressure on Pakistan had “translated into revenge on the Afghan people”. Even Afghan President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai echoed the Pakistani retaliator­y line by saying: “They did it at the behest of their masters so that their masters can get out of political isolation”. Mr Trump’s earlier irate tweet that Pakistan had thanklessl­y gobbled up $ 33 billion in American aid and reciprocat­ed in “nothing but deceit and lies” had an ominous ring of truth, as the continued tragedy of the proverbial “great game” in Afghanista­n, acquired even more sinister proportion­s.

Today, Kabul has checkpoint­s choking the dangerous streets; the walls of the protected compounds of expats have gone higher and thicker, and the US government officials landing at Kabul Internatio­nal Airport are no longer taking the three- km road to their destinatio­n, they are instead ferried back and forth from the airport to the US headquarte­rs by helicopter­s. Suicide bombers lurk everywhere and the spate of attacks on government buildings, mosques, embassies and local police stations have wounded the psyche of the city under unrest. The Afghan President solemnly admits: “There are factories producing suicide bombers. We are under siege”.

The latest vortex of violence in Kabul defies the usual cycle of the terrorlull in winters. The inherent symbolism of shifting the epicentre of violence from the rural swathes to the fortified government encampment in Kabul is not lost on either Washington or Islamabad.

Neither the Interconti­nental Hotel attack nor the ambulance suicide attack had any military target or objective for the terror- perpetuato­rs, the grotesque irony of abusing the ambulance to inflict the macabre massacre was unpreceden­ted in its moral perversion. The frequency and intensity of the Kabul- specific violence is testing the resolve and confidence of the alreadybel­eaguered Afghan Army, as well as the faltering and confused administra­tion of President Ashraf Ghani. It is little consolatio­n that some experts attribute these desperate terror attacks in Kabul to the consequenc­es of a cornered terror industry and its principal benefactor in Islamabad, as the mutation of terrorism in Afghanista­n towards full- fledged urban warfare in Kabul will surely test the competenci­es and instincts of the still- developing Afghan security forces. Urban warfare by its nature is asymmetric, hybrid and entails tactical sophistry that unintentio­nally ends up pitting locals against their own government forces, given the collateral damage to life and property, in such conflicts.

The viciousnes­s of the bloodbath in Kabul resulted in Afghan interior minister Wais Ahmad Barmak and Afghan spy chief Masoom Stanekzai to rush to Islamabad and hand over yet another set of incontrove­rtible evidence that had its fingerprin­ts traceable to the “terror nurseries” in Pakistan — the eerie

The US security aid to Pakistan is already under suspension... Washington could also use its obvious muscle to extract similar restrainin­g orders from other multilater­al donor agencies towards Pakistan. sense of déjà vu in the analogous optics of the multiple “dossiers” given by the Indian government to Islamabad of the Pakistani complicity in terror acts is writ all over the Afghan initiative, including the fate of such “dossiers” and its expected dismissive­ness by the Pakistanis.

The road to the disentangl­ement of the virtual siege in Kabul and the empowermen­t of the Ashraf Ghani- led Afghan government ultimately lies in Islamabad. Washington’s tough talk of expanding the military “hits” beyond the sovereign borders of Afghanista­n has got clarified with a carte blanche to its military commanders to deal with, “terrorist safe havens in both Afghanista­n and Pakistan”.

The US security aid to Pakistan is already under suspension given its establishe­d misuse and duplicitou­sness. Further, Washington could also use its obvious muscle to extract similar restrainin­g orders from other multilater­al donor agencies towards Pakistan. Till now, the Pakistani establishm­ent has got away with vacuous platitudes, infrequent compliance and even sheer bravado by waving the Beijing card as a counter- narrative to the US aid. However, it is a fact the threatened noose of sanctions and embarrassm­ent against Pakistan has never been implemente­d in their entirety. But now the growing portents of a possible failure of the new “Afghan Plan” for Mr Trump may force him to unleash punitive measures, both military and economic, on Pakistan — giving Islamabad its first real taste of the consequenc­es of “imposing” wars in its neighbourh­ood. As US secretary of state Rex Tillerson concludes: “There can be no tolerance for those who support or offer sanctuary to terrorist groups.”

The writer is a retired lieutenant- general and a former lieutenant­governor of Andaman & Nicobar Islands and Puducherry

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