South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Caretakers will keep neighbors up

- By Bobby Ghosh

A week ago, anxious Afghans and credulous Biden administra­tion officials were trying to take comfort in reports that Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar would head the Taliban’s new government in Kabul.

It seemed like the least bad option. As leader of the group’s political wing, Baradar had been the Taliban’s chief representa­tive in peace negotiatio­ns with the U.S. in Qatar and was thought to hold somewhat more moderate views than most of the military commanders. In interviews, he promised an “inclusive” government, representi­ng all of the country’s ethnic and tribal groups.

As it turned out, Baradar may himself have been fortunate to be included in the government. Announced on Tuesday, the new caretaker administra­tion is dominated by the Taliban’s military faction, with hard-liners in key positions. Baradar is only in the third tier of the hierarchy, as one of two deputy prime ministers. He will report to Prime Minister Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund, who will in turn answer to Supreme Leader Haibatulla­h Akhundzada.

Baradar’s relegation undermines Afghan hopes for a kinder, gentler “Taliban 2.0.” Far from being inclusive, the cabinet is entirely male, overwhelmi­ngly from the Pashtun community and has no representa­tive from the Shiite minority. This makes it even harder to believe the group’s other reassuranc­es, whether about women’s freedoms or religious tolerance.

More alarming for the wider world, the new dispensati­on in Kabul abounds with men with bona fides that would be welcomed at the high tables of al-Qaida and the Islamic State. The compositio­n of the government lengthens the odds on President Joe Biden’s gamble that the Taliban will make common cause with Washington in the fight against jihadist terrorism.

The most prominent of the hard-liners in office is Sirajuddin Haqqani, a U.S.-designated terrorist with long ties to al-Qaida and other jihadist groups. Afghans with a morbid sense of humor can now claim the $10 million bounty offered by the FBI “for informatio­n leading directly to the arrest” of their new interior minister.

If Mohammed Yaqoob, the defense minister, doesn’t have Haqqani’s terrorist credential­s, he more than makes up for this in lineage: He is the eldest son of Mullah Omar, the Taliban’s first supreme leader and host of Osama bin Laden. Yaqoob has supervised the Taliban’s military operations in recent years, as the group has embraced many al-Qaida tactics, including the use of suicide bombings against civilian targets.

The new intelligen­ce chief, Abdul Haq Wassiq, completes the troika of security bosses. He is under United Nations sanctions for his role in the previous Taliban administra­tion, when he was “in charge of handling relations with Al-Qaida-related foreign fighters and their training camps in Afghanista­n.” (More than half the 33-man cabinet are under U.N. sanctions.)

If al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri could pick three men to run Afghanista­n’s security services, it is a safe bet that Haqqani, Yaqoob and Wassiq would have been at the top of his list. The Biden administra­tion must assume that they will make it their business to turn Afghanista­n once again into a safe haven for terrorism.

It is unlikely to be much of a consolatio­n for Washington, but the government in Kabul will also alarm other countries with an interest in Afghanista­n. For instance, there will be disquiet in China about army chief Qari Fasihuddin, who has had a long associatio­n with the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, which Beijing accuses of terrorism in its Xinjiang province. (The Trump administra­tion last year removed the ETIM from the State Department’s list of terrorist groups.)

Meanwhile, the Shiite shutout will cause grave concern in Iran, which regards itself as protector of the minority sect. There are fears of a resumption of the persecutio­n of the predominan­tly Shiite Hazara community that characteri­zed the previous Taliban administra­tion in the late 1990s.

And there’s bad news for India, which invested heavily in Afghanista­n over the past 20 years. The hard-liners are all closely tied to Islamabad. The Taliban has historical­ly sided with Pakistan in its dispute with India over Kashmir, and many Indians fear the group will contribute more than just moral support to insurgents in the restive region.

Just as in Washington, fingers were crossed in Beijing, Tehran and New Delhi in the hope of a Baradar-led Afghan government. Now they must all brace for the worst.

 ?? AAMIR QURESHI/AFP ?? A vendor sells posters of Taliban leaders Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, right, and Amir Khan Muttaqi, on Aug. 27 in Kabul.
AAMIR QURESHI/AFP A vendor sells posters of Taliban leaders Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, right, and Amir Khan Muttaqi, on Aug. 27 in Kabul.

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