The Sunday Guardian

PAK PLANNING TO USE TALIBAN TO OBJECT TO INDIA’S INCLUSION IN AFGHAN PEACE TALKS

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peace talks as both countries, according to Indian officials, were doing Pakistan’s bidding. However, the effort of these two countries seemed to have failed to get any traction, with the US strongly pitching for India’s involvemen­t.

Like the Pakistan government, the Taliban, too, has so far not reacted to the US proposal of involving India. The Sunday Guardian reached out to the Taliban spokespers­on repeatedly for their views on this developmen­t, but none was received until the time this report went to press.

According to people in the security establishm­ent in India, Pakistan is likely to put across its “objections” in the public domain by using Taliban as a front and seek India’s withdrawal from the table.

Policy deciders in Pakistan believe that the inclusion of India as a stakeholde­r in Afghanista­n’s peace process has come as a snub to the Pakistani government as their argument was that only those countries which share a border with Afghanista­n should be made a partner to the peace talks.

The concern in GHQ Rawalpindi, which decides the contours of Pakistan’s

internal and external policies, especially when it comes to Afghanista­n, is that US’ idea of asking India to “interfere” in Afghanista­n was the first step towards a “larger game plan” of establishi­ng India as a South Asian strategic power and a precursor to India putting its soldiers on the ground in and around Kabul in the coming months.

Indian officials, who are aware of the developmen­ts, said the speed with which the Quad has taken a formal step—with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, US President Joe Biden, Australian PM Scott Morrison and Japanese PM

Yoshihide Suga participat­ing in the first ever summit on Friday—has set alarm bells ringing among policymake­rs in Islamabad and Rawalpindi as, though the Quad is more focused on tackling China’s expansioni­st mindset, Pakistan’s interests, too, are likely to become a collateral loss in the “power games” among these countries.

The proposal of the Biden administra­tion to involve India in the peace talks became public after Kabulbased media outlet Tolo News published a letter outlining the proposals by US Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, was addressed to

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and proposing a Unconvened meeting of representa­tives of six countries, including India, to discuss a “unified approach to supporting peace in Afghanista­n”.

According to the letter, the US will be approachin­g the United Nations (UN) to convene foreign ministers and envoys from Russia, China, Pakistan, Iran, India and the US. This is described as the first step of a fourpronge­d strategy meant to “move matters more fundamenta­lly and quickly toward a settlement and a permanent and comprehens­ive ceasefire”.

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