Hindustan Times (Delhi)

A new chapter in the Great Game

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Pakistan has an advantage; the US is managing a strategic defeat. India must be more proactive

The terrorist attack against vicepresid­ential candidate and President Ashraf Ghani’s running mate, Amrullah Saleh, on July 28 in Kabul was a part of an attempt to eliminate strong Afghan leaders opposed to the Taliban and its patron, Pakistan. Last October, another formidable and outspoken critic of the Taliban and Pakistan and Kandahar’s police general, Abdur Raziq, was killed. Fortunatel­y, for Afghanista­n — but not for the Taliban or Pakistan — Saleh escaped only with a minor injury.

At 46, Saleh embodies the hopes of thousands of young Afghans for a forward-looking country which continues to be rooted in its moderate Islamic and national cultural traditions. A fearless and astute security profession­al, he became the head of Afghan intelligen­ce at 32. That assignment, and his earlier associatio­n with Ahmed Shah Masood, gave Saleh an insight into Pakistan’s relentless interferen­ce in Afghanista­n through the Taliban and other groups. It also instilled in him a fierce desire to defeat these machinatio­ns.

Saleh will not be deterred by this terrorist attack, but these are difficult days for leaders

of his persuasion. The Afghan enterprise that was put in place with internatio­nal assistance after the United States (US), with the help of Northern Alliance forces, ousted the Taliban regime in November 2001, is unravellin­g. The Taliban and Pakistan are clearly in an advantageo­us position. President Donald Trump’s silly bombast of the US’ capacity to win the war if it was willing to kill 10 million people is true in terms of US power. But are such wars ever waged and won only with raw power? The fact is that the US allowed the war to grind on because it refused to cross the Durand Line to destroy Taliban safe havens. It is, now, in the process of managing a strategic defeat.

Over the past nine months, the US has been negotiatin­g with the Taliban, and the insurgent group backed by Pakistan is behaving like a victor. It has compelled the US to abandon its vital negotiatin­g positions on ceasefire and direct Taliban-afghan talks. Worse, despite threats to Pakistan to give up its deviousnes­s or face US wrath, Trump has been compelled to seek its help to erode Taliban obduracy. Zalmai Khalilzad, the US envoy negotiatin­g with the Taliban, is hopeful of reaching an agreement soon with the Taliban on the issues of US troop withdrawal and Taliban assurances that it will not allow the presence of internatio­nal terrorist groups on territorie­s under its control. The US is willing to go along with vague Taliban guarantees on the latter issue; perhaps, it hopes that a continuing intelligen­ce presence will enable it to monitor what is happening in the country. The current sticking point is the time frame of US troop pull-out. The US wants to do it over a year, while the Taliban is insisting that it should be much quicker. It is likely that both sides will reach a compromise on this point, for the US has agreed to quickly close down a majority of its Afghan bases.

After the Us-taliban agreement, the focus will shift to intra-afghan talks, which will have to be inevitably held amid continuing violence. The Afghan government, political groups, and civil society as well as the internatio­nal community have already conceded primacy to the Taliban in this dialogue process. In all the interactio­ns which have taken place so far among the Afghans, whether in Doha or Moscow or elsewhere, only the Taliban have been represente­d as a group — the rest have participat­ed only as individual­s. It remains to be seen if the Taliban will agree to sit with the government as part of a larger intra-afghan dialogue, involving other political actors and civil society representa­tives, including women.

The Taliban is aware that Afghanista­n has moved on since its time in Kabul. Neither vast sections of the Afghan people, nor the major powers, will agree to another Islamic emirate. What is uncertain is how far the Taliban will push for its version of Islam in future Afghan governance.thisiscrea­tinggreatu­ncertainty, and many Afghans with means are once again looking to foreign shores. Along with continuing Taliban and ISIS violence, criminalit­y, too, has become a major national issue.

The government is pressing ahead with presidenti­al elections scheduled for September 28. The leading candidates are Ghani, chief executive Abdullah, and the former national security adviser, Hanif Atmar. Even if a credible election takes place in prevailing uncertaint­ies, it is doubtful if a new president will be taken more seriously by the Taliban, for it will insist on an interim arrangemen­t.

The downside of a flawed election will be political breakdown in Kabul, with adverse implicatio­ns for the cohesion of the Afghan forces. Ethnic relations, already strained by the prospect of the inclusion of the Taliban in formal governance structures, will come under strain. It is in these confusing times that leaders like Saleh will have to work to preserve the gains of the past two decades and keep Pakistan at bay. Pakistani generals are exulting at perceived Indian discomfitu­re in Afghanista­n. Indian diplomacy has to be proactive and reach out to all in Afghanista­n, including the Taliban, to safeguard the country’s interests.

 ?? AFP ?? Amrullah Saleh, who survived a terror attack, has a major role in preserving the gains of the last two decades
AFP Amrullah Saleh, who survived a terror attack, has a major role in preserving the gains of the last two decades
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