The National - News

Peace between the Taliban and Kabul will help the fight against ISIL

As the Taliban regroups, the fight for Afghanista­n has entered a dangerous new phase. With ISIL gaining a foothold in Central Asia, Tom Hussain argues that the Nato-backed Afghan government and the Taliban could soon find accord

-

As it enters a 16th year of hostilitie­s, Afghanista­n stands at a crossroads. The country’s opposing parties, the government and its Nato allies, and the Taliban can either continue along a destructiv­e path that threatens to plunge the country into the kind of chaos that prevailed after the Soviet withdrawal in 1989. Or they can pre-empt it by endeavouri­ng to find enough common ground to bring about a mutually acceptable process of political reconcilia­tion that would deny space to miscreants, whether they be the regional states that are using Afghan territory as a proxy battlefiel­d for their competing geopolitic­al interests or the regional ISIL franchise, which is steadily growing into a serious threat to all parties involved.

“The key issue is trust,” according to Rafiquddin, a veteran Taliban special forces commander. “As matters stand, we believe there is barely a two per cent chance of successful peace talks. But we have to try or everything that we have fought for will be lost. Already, matters are moving in reverse.”

That realisatio­n has prompted the Taliban to undertake an exhaustive process of internal consultati­ons since October, when preliminar­y contacts were re-establishe­d with the Afghan government.

The current Taliban chief Mullah Haibatulla­h Akhundzada has dispensed with the secretive top-down decision-making style of his predecesso­r Mullah Akhtar Mansoor.

His failure to disclose the 2013 demise of the movement’s founder Mullah Mohammed Omar and to seek a consensus on his assumption of leadership were viewed by many as unforgivab­le acts of treachery.

Cognisant of the threat of fragmentat­ion, Akhundzada has engaged 45 prominent personalit­ies representi­ng the kaleidosco­pe of opinions within Taliban with the aim of forming the strategy on future political engagement.

So far, the Taliban’s internal consultati­ons have generated at least three interestin­g proposals that could become part of the agenda of future talks, participan­ts based in Pakistan have told The National.

The first has already been made public. Earlier this month, the Taliban issued an unsolicite­d assurance that it backed “all national projects which are in the interest of the people and result in the developmen­t and prosperity”. It directed its fighters “to help in the security of all national projects that are in the higher interest of Islam and the country”.

The second proposal calls for a truce between the Taliban and the Nato- backed Afghan security forces in areas where either or both are engaged in military operations against domestic and foreign militants who have joined ISIL, which has establishe­d a beachhead in several eastern provinces. This proposal was readily agreed to by Taliban leaders because of a Quranic edict issued in 2014 by the grand mufti of Saudi Arabia, and subsequent­ly confirmed by religious authoritie­s around the Muslim world, which declared ISIL as hypocrites and apostates. Consensus among the Taliban on the proposal for a partial truce was reached on the basis of there having been a precedent in the history of Islam.

The third proposal deals with the tricky issue of participat­ion in the governance of Afghanista­n while foreign troops remain deployed in the country. That remains a red line that most Taliban opinion makers are not prepared to cross.

Instead, the movement is considerin­g the possibilit­y of nominating mainstream Afghan politician­s “who share most of our ideologica­l goals” as proxy members of a new interim government, according to an aide of Sirajuddin Haqqani, deputy chief of the Taliban and leader of the notorious Haqqani Network.

To take the process forward in a manner that does not create internal divisions, the Taliban leadership has created a 30-member vetting council.

The proposals generated by the Taliban’s internal consultati­ons tally with parts of a 19- point peace plan for Afghanista­n drafted by the Pugwash Conference­s on Science and World Affairs, a non-government organisati­on, after a series of meetings this year attended by Afghan politician­s, leaders of mujahideen factions that fought the Soviets and former members of the Taliban.

The Taliban’s promise to protect developmen­t projects directly responds to point 13 of the Pugwash draft, which proposes that both sides “welcome internatio­nal cooperatio­n for economic developmen­t”. However, that is little more than a confidence-building gesture. The primary challenge is reaching an agreement on a ceasefire, a preconditi­on set by president Ashraf Ghani. The major stumbling block for Kabul is the Taliban’s sanctuarie­s in neighbouri­ng Pakistan and Iran.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid last month claimed that the movement’s leadership council had moved from Pakistan to an undisclose­d location in Afghanista­n.

However, my sources have confided that only its top military commanders have so far been relocated, mostly to rural areas of southern Helmand province seized over the last year. Another emerging hurdle is Kabul’s anger at the willingnes­s of foreign powers to independen­tly engage with the

‘ Were the Taliban’s proposal of an ISIL-specific partial truce to become a formal offer, it is likely to find favour with US president-elect Donald Trump

Taliban, based on the premise that it alone is in a position to prevent the spread of ISIL from Afghanista­n. Russia has recently admitted to such direct contacts, facilitate­d by the government of Tajikistan. The Taliban has claimed that similar dialogue has been undertaken with Iran, which members of the Afghan parliament have accused of providing funding and arms to the insurgents. Tehran denies both charges.

The Taliban’s diplomatic outreach campaign has also infuriated the commander of Nato forces in Afghanista­n, general John Nicholson, who earlier this month spoke against the “malign influence” of external actors.

“We’re concerned about the external enablement of the insurgent or terrorist groups inside Afghanista­n, in particular where they enjoy sanctuary or support from outside govern- ments,” he told reporters at the Pentagon.

However, were the Taliban’s proposal of an ISIL-specific partial truce to become a formal offer, it is likely to find favour with US president-elect Donald Trump. “I imagine the Trump administra­tion, with its fixation on destroying ISIL, would welcome a truce like this in a big way,” said Michael Kugelman, senior South Asia associate at the Woodrow Wilson Centre, a Washington think tank.

“This initiative, should it come to pass, would be a remarkable developmen­t. It is clear that there is no military solution to the war, and so a truce between Kabul and the Taliban – and one preceded by no formal peace process to boot – would be a tour de force. It would also be a powerful stabiliser. ” Tom Hussain is a journalist and political analyst in Islamabad

 ?? Allauddin Khan / AP Photo ?? The Taliban continues to wield extensive influence in Afghanista­n and they may find the key to defeating ISIL.
Allauddin Khan / AP Photo The Taliban continues to wield extensive influence in Afghanista­n and they may find the key to defeating ISIL.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates