Business Standard

After Omar, power centre shifts in Afghanista­n

Pakistan, which has propped up the new Taliban leadership, would be keen to use its influence over the group to neutralise India’s presence in the region

- AJAI SHUKLA

should have known it before anyone else. deputy from the Haqqani network, Sirajuddin Haqqani, son of the legendary Jalaluddin Haqqani, who reportedly died in April 2013. In 2011, Admiral Mike Mullen, then America’s top military commander, deposed before the US senate that the Haqqani network was a “veritable arm” of ISI. The Haqqanis, who operate from North Waziristan, have held themselves aloof from Mullah Omar’s so-called “Quetta Shura”, which is based in Southern Afghanista­n. Yet, now, in a move that suits ISI design, Jalaluddin Haqqani has apparently risen from the dead to post a statement on the Taliban website, urging factions to unite under Mansour. A split house Even so, divisions are fast appearing within the oncemonoli­thic Taliban. On Sunday, Mullah Omar’s brother, Mullah Abdul Manan, issued a statement saying that Mansour’s appointmen­t had been carried out in haste and was not acceptable to many Taliban factions. The fragility of Taliban unity is also evident from reports that Mullah Omar’s son, Yaqoub, had been killed by a rival faction.

While Mullah Omar’s custodians­hip of Afghanista­n from 1996 to 2001 is remembered for fundamenta­list oppression, the Taliban leader never kowtowed to Pakistan, even though Islamabad remained a steadfast supporter. Mullah Zaeef, the Taliban’s trusted ambassador to Pakistan, recounts how Mullah Omar rebuffed Islamabad when it conveyed Washington’s message to hand over Osama bin Laden. Zaeef revealingl­y describes the Taliban’s fraught relationsh­ip with ISI, and Mullah Omar’s determinat­ion to act in Afghanista­n’s best interests, not those of ISI and Pakistan.

The Taliban regime’s fate was sealed after the 9/11 strikes on the US. According to legend, Mullah Omar left Afghanista­n in November 2001, travelling on the pillion of a motorcycle from Kandahar to Quetta. Since that day, when he became a guest of ISI, there has been no forensical­ly verifiable evidence of his being alive. Yet either he, or someone on his behalf, directed Taliban fighters operating from safe havens in Pakistan, bloodying an internatio­nal coalition of more than 100,000 soldiers enough to cause it to leave Afghanista­n to the Afghans.

At this point, the stakes could not be higher for Pakistan, which is using its influence with the Taliban to neutralise India’s presence in Afghanista­n. For this, it has struck a deal with Ghani, a political lightweigh­t who believes Pakistan’s goodwill is essential for his political survival. In exchange for bringing the Taliban to the dialogue table, Ghani has promised Pakistan’s army chief, General Raheel Sharif, that Indian influence would be minimised in Afghanista­n.

Ghani’s outreach to Pakistan is troubling most Afghans who regard Pakistani meddling and ISI’s support to various militias (the Taliban is just one) as the root cause of problems in their country. The Afghan public was outraged when Ghani, on his visit to Pakistan last November, drove straight from the airport to the army’s Rawalpindi headquarte­rs and met General Sharif, even before meeting his counterpar­t, Nawaz Sharif, in Islamabad.

Afghan sentiment was doubly outraged by the signing, in May, of an agreement between Afghanista­n’s National Directorat­e of Security (NDS) and ISI to cooperate in fighting terror.

Even so, most Afghans recognise there can be no peace without the Taliban. With the death of Mullah Omar causing the Taliban to start splinterin­g, there is little certainty than ever about Pakistan’s grand scheme to gain influence in Kabul.

 ??  ?? KEY PLAYERS ( From left) Afghanista­n President Ashraf Ghani, Pakistan Army General Raheel Sharif and Pakistan President Nawaz Sharif; Taliban’s Mullah Omar ( below)
KEY PLAYERS ( From left) Afghanista­n President Ashraf Ghani, Pakistan Army General Raheel Sharif and Pakistan President Nawaz Sharif; Taliban’s Mullah Omar ( below)
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