Weekend Herald

Pakistan may live to regret US pullout

Taliban’s perceived victory in Afghanista­n likely to inspire extremist groups over border to flex muscle

-

Near the peak of the American war in Afghanista­n, in 2014, a former chief of neighbouri­ng Pakistan’s military intelligen­ce — an institutio­n allied both to the US military and to its Taliban adversarie­s — went on a talk show called Joke Night. He put a bold prediction on the record.

“When history is written,” declared General Hamid Gul, who led the feared spy service known as the ISI during the last stretch of the Cold War in the 1980s, “it will be stated that the ISI defeated the Soviet Union in Afghanista­n with the help of America.”

“Then there will be another sentence,” Gul added after a brief pause, delivering his punchline to loud applause. “The ISI, with the help of America, defeated America.”

In President Joe Biden’s decision to withdraw all US forces from Afghanista­n by September, Pakistan’s powerful military establishm­ent finally gets its wish after decades of bloody intrigue: the exit of a disruptive superpower from a backyard where the ISI had establishe­d strong influence through a friendly Taliban regime before the US invaded in 2001.

A return of the Taliban to some form of power would dial the clock back to a time when Pakistan’s military played gatekeeper to Afghanista­n, perpetuall­y working to block the influence of its archenemy, India.

But the Pakistani military’s sheltering of the Taliban insurgency over the past two decades — obsessivel­y pursuing a narrowly defined geopolitic­al victory next door — risks another wave of disruption at home. Pakistan is a fragile, nuclear-armed state already reeling from a crashed economy, waves of social unrest, agitation by oppressed minorities and a percolatin­g Islamic militancy of its own that it is struggling to contain.

If Afghanista­n descends into chaos, Pakistanis are bound to feel the burden just as they did after Afghanista­n disintegra­ted in the 1990s following the Soviet withdrawal. Millions of Afghan refugees crossed the porous border to seek relative safety in Pakistan.

And more: A Taliban return to power, either through a civil war or through a peace deal that gives them a share of power, would embolden the extremist movements in Pakistan that share the same source of ideologica­l mentorship in the thousands of religious seminaries spread across Pakistan. Those groups have shown no hesitation in antagonisi­ng the country’s government.

While Pakistan’s military played a dangerous game of supporting militants abroad and containing extremists at home, the country’s Islamic movements found a rallying cause in the presence of an invading foreign force next door, openly fundraisin­g for and cheering on their Afghan classmates. New extremist groups kept shrinking the civil society space in Pakistan — often targeting intellectu­als and profession­als for abuse or attack — and even found sympathise­rs in Pakistan’s security forces.

Pakistani generals had used a mix of force and appeasemen­t in tackling the growing militancy problem, said Dr Ayesha Siddiqa, a research associate at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. But a strategy for countering the spread of extremism had been elusive.

“It scares me, it scares me,” Siddiqa said. “Once the Taliban come back, that should trouble the Pakistani government, or any government. It will be inspiring for all the other groups.”

Said Nazir, a retired brigadier and defence analyst in Islamabad, said Pakistan had “learned some lessons” from the blowback of past support to jihadi groups. It would need to tread more cautiously in the endgame of the Afghan war.

“Victory will not be claimed by Pakistan, but tacitly the Taliban will owe it to Pakistan,” Nazir said. “Pakistan does fear the replay of past events and fears a bloody civil war and violence if hasty withdrawal and no political solution occur simultaneo­usly.”

From the moment of its birth as a country in 1947, Pakistan found itself surrounded by enemies. The new borders drawn up by British officials instantly mired Pakistan in a host of territoria­l disputes, including a serious one with Afghanista­n, which still claims what most of the world sees as Pakistan’s northweste­rn regions.

It was at the peak of the Cold War in the 1970s, as the Soviet Union pushed to expand its influence in South and Central Asia, that Pakistani leaders found a formula of deploying Islamic proxies they have stuck to ever since. The US armed and financed the training of the mujahedeen insurgency that would defeat the Soviet army in Afghanista­n and topple the government it propped up. Pakistan’s army, particular­ly its intelligen­ce wing, would serve as the handler, host and trainer.

Through the ensuing civil war that broke out in the 1990s, Pakistani generals helped a younger group of fundamenta­list Afghan fighters known as the Taliban sweep the fighting factions and establish a government with control over more than 90 per cent of Afghanista­n.

But when the US invaded in 2001 to chase Osama bin Laden and alQaida after their terrorist attacks on American soil, the Americans also turned their sights on Pakistan’s allies in Afghanista­n, the ruling Taliban. Pakistan found itself in a difficult position. In the face of President George W Bush’s “with us or against us” ultimatum, Pakistan’s military ruler, General Pervez Musharraf, reluctantl­y went along.

The decision had an immediate blowback: Pakistan began facing attacks from the Pakistani Taliban for siding with the US military campaign against their ideologica­l brothers in Afghanista­n. It took years of military operations that cost the lives of thousands of Pakistani forces, and displaced countless people in Pakistan’s northwest, to quell the group.

At the same time, Pakistan’s military kept working to help the Afghan Taliban regroup as an insurgency to keep the US in check. Even as US officials relied on Pakistani help to conduct the war and intelligen­ce operations, some were bitter about the double role played by the ISI. The killing of bin Laden in Pakistan by US forces in

2011 was a rare moment when those tensions played out in public.

But Pakistan’s generals were also successful in making themselves indispensa­ble to the US — offering a nuclear-armed ally in a region where China, Russia and Islamic militants all had interests. Effectivel­y, it meant that the US chose to turn a blind eye as its Pakistani allies helped the Taliban wear down US and allied forces in Afghanista­n.

Afghan government officials, meanwhile, were becoming increasing­ly distraught that their American allies were not coming down harder on Pakistan.

On one trip to Afghanista­n soon after being elected vice president in

2008, Biden was urged by President Hamid Karzai to pressure Pakistan into rooting out Taliban sanctuarie­s on its soil. Biden was reported to respond by saying that Pakistan was 50 times more important to the US than Afghanista­n was.

In recent years, as US officials sought a way to leave Afghanista­n, they again had to turn to Pakistan — to pressure the Taliban to come to peace talks, and to lend help when the US needed to move against alQaida or the Islamic State group affiliate in the region.

With the US intention to leave publicly declared, Pakistan did away with any semblance of denial that the Taliban leadership was sheltering there. Taliban leaders flew from Pakistani cities to engage in peace talks in Qatar. When negotiatio­ns reached delicate moments that required consultati­ons with field commanders, they flew back to Pakistan.

When the US finally signed a withdrawal agreement with the Taliban in February last year, the mood in some circles in Pakistan was one of open celebratio­n.

Pakistan’s former defence minister, Khawaja Muhammad Asif, who had repeatedly visited the halls of power in Washington as a US ally, tweeted a photo of US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meeting Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban deputy, at the talks in Qatar.

“You might have might on your side, but God is with us,” Asif said in the tweet, ending with a cry of victory. “Allah u Akbar!”

But there are signs that extremist groups within Pakistan have already felt emboldened by the Taliban’s perceived victory, giving a glimpse of the trouble likely to be in store for Pakistani officials.

 ?? Photos / Ap, File ?? All US military forces will be withdrawn from Afghanista­n before the end of the year.
Photos / Ap, File All US military forces will be withdrawn from Afghanista­n before the end of the year.
 ??  ?? A boy looks on as US vehicles drive past his village in Afghanista­n.
A boy looks on as US vehicles drive past his village in Afghanista­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand