Bangkok Post

Powers jostle as US quits Afghanista­n

- Peter Apps Peter Apps is a writer on internatio­nal affairs, globalisat­ion, conflict and other issues. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.

As US troops quietly quit their last key bases in Afghanista­n last weekend, Russian-backed Syrian forces were stepping up their bombardmen­t and siege of Idlib and preparing for a possible closure of the last humanitari­an crossing from Syria to Turkey.

It was a reminder of just how much the Middle East and South Asia have changed since Nato forces began their attempts to stabilise Afghanista­n 20 years ago. As late as the Libya interventi­on in 2011 — and against Islamic State as recently as 2019 — the United States was still the key intervenin­g power in conflicts, at least when it wished to be.

On rare occasions, that might remain the case — even with the number of troops reduced to a few hundred in Iraq and Syria, plus now a similar sized detachment guarding the US embassy in Kabul, US air and naval forces remain significan­tly more powerful than any other player. On the ground where it counts, however, other players are now dominant, facing off for influence in a way that has already redefined the wars in Libya and Syria.

Indeed, whether America itself really knows what role it wants to play remains unclear. Institutio­nally, the US military and many agencies of the US government have been embroiled in the Mideast and Afghanista­n for so long they may inevitably wish to remain engaged. The domestic and other drivers to pull back, however, are becoming ever stronger.

Going forward in Afghanista­n, the ongoing presence of US and British troops guarding their respective embassies is largely dependent on a Turkish deal to retain control of Kabul airport, now likely to become the only other significan­t internatio­nal presence in the country.

As in multiple other conflicts, Turkey is looking to position itself as a key internatio­nal player — but Russia, China and other states also see opportunit­ies to increase influence and mitigate risks.

For China, that means deepening discussion­s with long-term partner Pakistan and the authoritie­s in Kabul, reportedly including a potential motorway from the Afghan capital to Peshawar in Pakistan’s North West Frontier province. That could revolution­ise the region and significan­tly antagonise India — but would require a very different security situation.

Russia’s closest central Asian ally, Tajikistan, on Wednesday requested Moscow’s support to secure its mountainou­s border with Afghanista­n. Moscow has its own history in Afghanista­n, but as in the Middle East it is unlikely to pass up an opportunit­y to supplant the United States and has stepped up diplomatic and military outreach across Central Asia.

According to local media reports, some of Afghanista­n’s most significan­t roads now pass through Taliban control and 15 of Afghanista­n’s 34 regional capitals are now

largely encircled by the militants, including the key northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. US intelligen­ce estimates cited by US media predict the Afghan government itself could fall in six months to a year — although with Afghan troops already said to be melting away in some areas, any unravellin­g could come faster.

In Libya, Syria, Iraq and Yemen, Washington remains involved to various degrees — but other nations are now often more influentia­l. That has particular­ly benefited Russia, which now has a significan­t presence in Syria and Libya supporting its much more assertive naval forces in the eastern Mediterran­ean. Regional dynamics are more complex still, benefiting smaller powers.

In Libya, where Washington and its Nato allies marshalled an ad hoc coalition to oust Moammar Gadhafi in 2011, the war is now a complex fight between elements backed

by foreign powers including Russia, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, France and others, in part driven by a desire for oil and gas reserves.

In Syria, where the United States retains a modest military presence in some oil-rich Kurdish areas, the primary drivers of the conflict now include a much broader confrontat­ion between the Russian-backed regime of Bashar al-Assad and Turkey, which controls some areas along the border with its own troops and Turkish-backed militias.

As well as shaping the war on the ground with troops and air power since its interventi­on began in 2015, Russia has also used its veto at the United Nations to control diplomatic actions on Syria, including the latest potential border closure.

In contrast to 2011, developmen­ts in these conflicts are now barely covered by internatio­nal media. Activities of US forces are also

much more unreported — with little clarity, for example, over reported explosions at a US base in Syria this week.

Indeed, many of the key developmen­ts in US-Mideast relations – such as the visit to Washington this week of Saudi Deputy Defence Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman — go largely unreported or at least officially unannounce­d. The same goes for an uptick in US strikes against Iranian-backed forces in Iraq earlier this month, one country where the United States remains more involved than expected after withdrawal of combat troops but has also seen its power fade.

What happens next in Afghanista­n may go similarly largely ignored. Most coverage so far has focused on what the United States and Britain might do next, not what is happening on the ground. Whether Turkey can control the internatio­nal airport may come down to whether it is able to strike a deal with a dramatical­ly resurgent Taliban — but the details of that and whether or not it truly happens may also barely be reported.

That doesn’t mean multiple countries will not be paying attention. The West might wish Afghanista­n had ceased to exist once its troops are no longer there, but in many ways the 21st-century “Great Game” for influence there is only just beginning.

In many ways the 21st-century ‘Great Game’ for influence there is only just beginning.

 ?? AFP ?? Afghan militia gather to support Afghanista­n security forces against the Taliban, in Afghan warlord and former Mujahideen Ismail Khan’s house in Herat yesterday. US intelligen­ce estimates predict the Afghan government could fall to the Taliban in six months to a year.
AFP Afghan militia gather to support Afghanista­n security forces against the Taliban, in Afghan warlord and former Mujahideen Ismail Khan’s house in Herat yesterday. US intelligen­ce estimates predict the Afghan government could fall to the Taliban in six months to a year.
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