Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

DRAW UP A NEIGHBOURH­OOD STRATEGY DOCUMENT

- KUNAL SINGH ■ kunal.singh@htlive.com

For most Americans, the Soviet withdrawal is the victory. For our South Asian friends, it is only the first act in a much larger drama,” said Arnold Lewis Raphel, former US ambassador to Pakistan. More than three decades later, it is the US withdrawal from Afghanista­n that is looming large, and another drama is waiting to unfold in South Asia. The Taliban and the US have agreed to a draft of the peace framework after multiple rounds of talks. The US is willing to withdraw its troop in return for a Taliban promise that it will not allow al-Qaeda and Islamic State to operate from Afghan territory. The US also wants the Taliban to agree to a ceasefire and a dialogue with the Ashraf Ghani government. The Taliban hasn’t yet agreed to these two demands.

The Ghani government is warning against a rushed deal. A similar attempt at the US-Taliban talks during Barack Obama’s tenure was opposed by the then Afghan President Hamid Karzai. He fell in line only on Obama’s personal interventi­on.

Let’s look at what the Taliban has agreed to: to not provide sanctuarie­s to al-Qaeda and Islamic State. One, the Taliban is opposed to the latter but has maintained a symbiotic relationsh­ip with the former. Even though Taliban’s reliance on al-Qaeda today is a lot less than ever before, it has never completely severed the relationsh­ip which was carefully nurtured by its late leader Mullah Omar. Two, the Taliban cannot be trusted to keep its words. The Obama-tenure negotiatio­ns eventually fell flat because the Taliban decided to elevate, in violation of the terms negotiated, its political office in Qatar to an office of the unrecognis­ed Islamic Emirate of Afghanista­n.

Three, the fear of fragmentat­ion in Taliban is real. If it gives up on al-Qaeda under American pressure, it might lose a number of fighters to either Islamic State or al-Qaeda itself or to smaller militias. The Taliban has suffered a heavy number of defections ever since the death of Omar became public in 2015 and a succession battle ensued. Betraying al-Qaeda might exacerbate the trend. Four, the US has few enforcemen­t means if the Taliban simply chooses to not honour its commitment­s. Unlike economic sanctions, which can be snapped back in a jiffy, putting back the boots on the ground after withdrawal is a tough ask.

All of this means that the US withdrawal doesn’t bode well for Afghanista­n and the region. How should India manage this transition? New Delhi has two objectives in Afghanista­n: 1) not letting extremist forces take over, and 2) preserve and expand its economic projects and state building activities in the country. But we do not know the tools India is ready to deploy in order to achieve these aims. Writing for The Wire, Pranay Kotasthane and Anand Arni of the Takshashil­a Institutio­n have suggested a number of ways in which India can enhance its support for the fledgling Afghan administra­tion short of putting boots on the ground. The very idea of putting boots in Afghanista­n evokes horror and incredulit­y among many in New Delhi. While Afghanista­n presents a particu-

INDIA NEEDS TO THINK THROUGH DIFFERENT TOOLS AVAILABLE TO IT IN CASE OF VARIOUS CONTINGENC­IES. THE TOOLS COULD INCLUDE CARROTS AS WELL AS STICKS

larly fiendish challenge, this is a wider problem for India in the entire neighbourh­ood. The option of military interventi­on was similarly dismissed when the former President Abdulla Yameen was wreaking havoc in the Maldives. Are Indian forces never going to be used outside India’s territorie­s? If yes, then in what circumstan­ces?

New Delhi needs to draw up a neighbourh­ood strategy document, or perhaps a different one for different neighbours. It needs to think through, and write down, different tools available to it in case of various contingenc­ies. The tools could include all kinds of carrots (loans, grants, military assistance, etc.) and sticks (economic sanctions, diplomatic isolation, military interventi­on, etc.). In the absence of such a document, all we have in the name of strategy is wishing that our favourites (Sheikh Hasina, Nepali Congress, Ranil Wickremesi­nghe) come to power and the prospects of “anti-India” forces (Taliban, KP Sharma Oli, Mahinda Rajapaksa) are scuttled.

A neighbourh­ood strategy document is not about locking in your options in advance for all the foreseeabl­e crises. It should instead provide a framework for thinking about problems, and thus impart a degree of policy coherence and institutio­nal memory. If a drama is about to unfold in Afghanista­n, the least we can do is to keep a screenplay of our own ready.

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