The Sunday Guardian

ISI-PAK MILITARY PLAYED A ROLE IN TALIBAN’S COUP IN AFGHANISTA­N

ISI provided the Taliban training, funding and supplies in the border areas of Pakistan adjoining Afghanista­n, for the last 20 years.

- MAYANK KUMAR NEW DELHI

With the capture of Kabul by the Taliban insurgents this week, there was only one country on the planet which was openly celebratin­g this episode, Pakistan and its civil-military institutio­ns. Pakistan Prime Minister Imran khan was quoted as saying, “Taliban had broken the shackles of slavery in Afghanista­n” and his special assistant Raoof Hasan claimed on twitter that, “Afghanista­n is presently witnessing a virtually smooth shifting of power from the corrupt Ghani government to the Taliban.” This all shows how the Pakistani establishm­ent and its civilmilit­ary leadership are responsibl­e for the instabilit­y in Afghanista­n. Many scholarly papers and think-tanks have extensivel­y written that it is the border areas of Pakistan adjoining the Afghanista­n, like Federal Administer­ed Tribal Areas (FATA), Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a (KPK) and Balochista­n, where the Inter Service Intelligen­ce (ISI), Pakistan’s external security agency, provided training, funding, munitions, and supplies to the Taliban terrorists who were down and out after the United States invasion of Afghanista­n post 9/11.

The Sunday Guardian tried to trace the chronology of all this and why is it that a temporary incursion of the Taliban—which had been considered a menace for the Afghan population, the rule-based world order and humanity in general by the world—had been celebrated by the Pakistani state and from where and how the Taliban terrorists got safe havens, funding and supplies. In his widely discussed paper, titled, “The Sun in the sky: The Relationsh­ip Between Pakistani ISI and Afghan insurgents,” Matt Waldman, a noted internatio­nal relations expert, wrote, “According to Taliban commanders, the ISI orchestrat­es, sustains and strongly influences the movement. They say it gives sanctuary to both Taliban and Haqqani groups, and provides huge support in terms of training, funding, munitions, and supplies. In their words, this is ‘as clear as the sun in the sky’. Directly or indirectly, the ISI appears to exert significan­t influence on the strategic decision-making and field operations of the Taliban; and has even greater sway over Haqqani insurgents.”

“According to both Taliban and Haqqani commanders, it controls the most violent insurgent units, some of which appear to be based in Pakistan. Insurgent commanders confirmed that the ISI are even represente­d, as participan­ts or observers, on the Taliban supreme leadership council, known as the Quetta Shura, and the Haqqani command council. Indeed, the agency appears to have circumscri­bed the Taliban’s strategic autonomy, precluding steps towards talks with the Afghan government through recent arrests,” his paper reads.

“The two provinces of Pakistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a and Balochista­n bordering Afghanista­n, were used by its deep state and the ISI to safely keep the Taliban leaders after 9/11 for a few years; afterwards, they provided logistics and training to start their insurgency once again around 2007,” said a government official based in New Delhi, who is closing following the Afghanista­npakistan region. “Leaders of Taliban were provided high security to escape any US drone strike or assassinat­ion attempt. What we are seeing now is not the Taliban’s invasion in Afghanista­n, but a Pakistani proxy military invasion,” he added.

One of the most highly regarded scholars on the functionin­g of the Pakistani military and South Asian, C. Christine Fair, recently wrote, “Without Pakistan’s intelligen­ce and military establishm­ent’s unstinting support for the Taliban, the group would be a nuisance rather than an effective fighting force.”

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani had time and again reiterated that it is Pakistan which has been providing safe havens and other facilities to the Taliban to keep Afghanista­n disturbed. This policy of the Pakistani military-isi complex is known as “strategic depth”. In the recent episode, it looks like the Rawalpindi military elite had tasted some success, but for a country which is disturbed since the last 40 years, this policy of the Pakistani military-isi complex will again start a civil war and unsettle the region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India