Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

China criticized Afghan war, but now worries about exit

- By Steven Lee Myers

The Chinese government rarely passes up a chance to accuse the United States of military adventuris­m and hegemony. In the case of Afghanista­n, though, it has changed its tone, warning that Washington now bears the responsibi­lity for the hasty end to its twodecade war there.

“The United States, which created the Afghan issue in the first place, should act responsibl­y to ensure a smooth transition in Afghanista­n,” China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, said this month at a forum in Beijing. “It should not simply shift the burden onto others and with draw from the country with the mess left behind unattended.”

While China has not called on President Joe Biden to reverse the military withdrawal he ordered, statements by senior officials made it clear they would blame the United States for any insecurity that spreads in the region.

China’s leader, Xi Jinping, and Russian President Vladimir Putin — neither of them close friends of Mr. Biden — raised concerns about the withdrawal in a telephone call June 29, citing “the increasing­ly complicate­d and severe security situation,” according to Xinhua, the state news agency.

An explosion and vehicle crash that killed nine Chinese workers in Pakistan last Wednesday has punctuated China’s fears of regional instabilit­y in the wake of the final U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanista­n and the chaos that is now spreading across the country.

China was quick to describe the explosion as an act of terrorism. Pakistan later described it as an accident, but the details remain murky, and China has previously found itself the target of threats from those opposed to its growing economic and diplomatic influence in the region.

Pakistan’s informatio­n minister, Fawad Chaudhry, said last week that investigat­ors had found traces of explosives, presumably on the bus carrying the Chinese workers.

“Terrorism cannot be ruled out,” he wrote on Twitter.

“They’re certainly feeling nervous,” said Barnett Rubin, a former State Department official and U.N. adviser on Afghanista­n who is a senior fellow at New York University’s Center on Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n.

With only a residual military contingent left to protect the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, the Taliban have been steadily expanding their political control as Afghan government forces crumble or retreat. This month, Taliban forces seized Badakhshan, the province that reaches the mountainou­s Chinese border throughthe Wakhan Corridor.

While that narrow territory poses little direct security threat, China fears that the breakdown of order in Afghanista­n could spill out of the country to other neighbors, including Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Pakistan.

Mr. Wang is traveling through Central Asia this week, with Afghanista­n high on the agenda.

“We don’t want to see a turbulent country around us that becomes such a soil for terrorist activities,” said Li Wei, of the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, a research organizati­on in Beijing affiliated with the Ministry of State Security.

The Taliban, when they governed Afghanista­n before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, gave haven to some Uyghur fighters resisting Chinese rule in Xinjiang, the predominan­tly Muslim province in western China that the fighters call East Turkestan.

Twenty-two of those fighters ended up in U.S. custody in the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, only to be released slowly to several other countries, including Albania, Slovakia, Bermuda and Palau. Uyghur militants have also fought in Syria’s civil war, and there are reports that some have returned to Afghanista­n.

“If there’s more disorder in Afghanista­n, the Uyghurs could get a foothold again, or a bigger one,” Mr. Rubin said.

After the Sept. 11 attacks, the United States designated the East Turkestan Islamic Movement as a terrorist organizati­on, in part to cultivate China’s support for U.S. efforts in the “war on terror.” The Trump administra­tion revoked the designatio­n last year, saying that there was noevidence that the group continued to carry out attacks. China has cited the threat of Uyghur extremism as a reason for its mass detention camps in Xinjiang.

According to the United Nations, the Uyghur group once maintained links to al-Qaida and organized attacks on targets inside and outside of China, including ones in Xinjiang that killed 140 people in 1998.

Liu Yunfeng, director of the Counter-Terrorism Bureau of the Ministry of Public Security, said last weekat a news conference that while there had been no major terrorist attack in China in the past four years, the East Turkestan Islamic Movement continued to promote terrorism from abroad and train fighters “to sneak into our territory.”

Open channels

With the U.S. withdrawal on the horizon, China has sought to keep channels open to both the Taliban and Afghan forces, appealing for a peaceful resolution to decades of conflict that predated U.S. interventi­on. It has been a delicate diplomatic balance.

China has praised the current Afghan government, including what it says are efforts to fight the East Turkestan militants. It also played host to a delegation of Taliban leaders in 2019. While China has said little about the nature of its discussion­s with the group, it has muted its criticism as the U.S.led military presence winds down.

In recent statements, Taliban representa­tives have also sought to assuage China’s concerns about its past support for enemies of Chinese rule, saying a restored Taliban government would pose no threat to the country. In fact, it would welcome Chinese investment­s.

After Chinese officials initially denounced last Wednesday’s deaths in Pakistan as a terrorist attack, they tempered their remarks when the Pakistani Foreign Ministry released a statement saying that the explosion that sent a truck tumbling into a ravine was caused by a mechanical malfunctio­n.

Exactly what happened remains unclear, however. At least two Pakistani paramilita­ry soldiers and two other civilians died, while more than 40 people were injured. It was not clear if the soldiers were

guarding the workers as they traveled to a Chinesebui­lt hydroelect­ric project at Dasu, a city in the country’s rural northwest, about 100 miles from the capital, Islamabad.

China has faced terrorist threats in Pakistan before. In 2018, three suicide attackers stormed the Chinese Consulate in Karachi, killing two police officers and two civilians before being killed themselves. The group that claimed responsibi­lity for that attack, the Baluchista­n Liberation Army, attacked a luxury hotel in Gwadar a year later, saying they were targeting Chinese guests.

In April, a different group attacked a hotel in Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchista­n, only moments before China’s ambassador was scheduled to arrive. Although it was not clear if the attackers knew of the ambassador’s arrival, the group that claimed responsibi­lity, the Pakistani Taliban, or Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, said its intended targets were “locals and foreigners” staying at the hotel.

After speaking with Pakistan’s foreign minister about the explosion last Wednesday, Mr. Wang, the foreign minister, called for greater security measures for Chinese constructi­on projects in Pakistan, many of them being built under Chinese initiative.

Chinese officials have offered to extend those projects to Afghanista­n but have made little progress. Previous Chinese projects there failed to live up to expectatio­ns, most prominentl­y a copper mine concession that Chinese companies acquired in 2007.

“If it is a terrorist attack,” Mr. Wang said of the episode last Wednesday, “the perpetrato­rs must be arrested immediatel­y, and the perpetrato­rs must be severely punished.”

 ?? Gilles Sabrié/The New York Times ?? People visit the Hotan bazaar in Xinjiang, China. The Taliban gave haven to Uyghur fighters resisting Chinese rule in Xinjiang when they were in power in Afghanista­n.
Gilles Sabrié/The New York Times People visit the Hotan bazaar in Xinjiang, China. The Taliban gave haven to Uyghur fighters resisting Chinese rule in Xinjiang when they were in power in Afghanista­n.
 ?? Jim Huylebroek/The New York Times ?? Pedestrian­s navigate a street corner on July 2 in Kabul, Afghanista­n. Recent statements by senior Chinese officials indicate they will blame the U.S. for any insecurity that spreads in the region after its military withdrawal.
Jim Huylebroek/The New York Times Pedestrian­s navigate a street corner on July 2 in Kabul, Afghanista­n. Recent statements by senior Chinese officials indicate they will blame the U.S. for any insecurity that spreads in the region after its military withdrawal.

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