The National - News

Pakistan may still support the Taliban in Afghanista­n – but not like it used to

- JOHANN CHACKO Johann Chacko is a writer and South Asia analyst

US President Joe Biden’s April 14 announceme­nt of the withdrawal of combat forces from Afghanista­n caught many observers by surprise. The Pakistan Army was not one of them. It has insisted for two decades that foreign military victory over the Taliban was impossible, and that the western presence was as unsustaina­ble as was the Soviets before them. Although US forces have now been in-country for twice as long as the Soviets, the latter’s experience and the Pakistani response are useful guides for what lies ahead.

The Soviets in 1979, like the Americans in 2001, had never intended to linger in Afghanista­n. But year after year, Kabul pleaded for more time to turn the corner. The result was that they found themselves trapped by the inability of their new client regimes to contain the insurgenci­es that bloomed in the countrysid­e.

Unsurprisi­ngly, the Soviet politburo and the White House alike badly wanted out long before the world realised it, held back only by the fear of what a retreat might look like to friends and foes around the globe. But eventually former Russian leader Mikhail Gorbachev, just like Mr Biden and his predecesso­r Donald Trump, lost patience and cut his own deal with Pakistan and the Afghan insurgents, with scant regard for the Kabul government’s concerns.

Like the Soviets in 1988, the Americans are vowing to remain deeply engaged despite the military pullout, and to continue to prioritise supplying material and diplomatic support to the Kabul government. Certainly it appears that, like the Soviets before them, the US will retain a very substantia­l intelligen­ce and consular presence in Afghanista­n.

More so than the Soviets, the US is signalling that its forces in the region will strike if its enemies reorganise on Afghan soil. The Biden administra­tion is also threatenin­g the Taliban with total diplomatic isolation if they return to power with the same anti-woman and anti-minority policies pursued in their 1996-2001 stint.

Should the Americans be taken seriously? Moscow kept its promises for three years, despite initial pessimism. When in 1988 the Kremlin signed the Geneva Accords with Pakistan – which set the timetable for Soviet withdrawal from Afghanista­n – it mistakenly assumed that Kabul would collapse like a house of cards after its forces left.

Instead, the withdrawal removed a source of unproducti­ve bureaucrat­ic friction between the Red Army on the one hand, and the KGB and the Afghan government on the other, thereby stabilisin­g the regime. It was only former US president George HW Bush’s arm-twisting amid the upheaval of a collapsing Soviet Union that forced the abandonmen­t of their Afghan comrades in 1991, opening the door to the mujahideen. Ironically, communist rule in Kabul outlasted party control in Moscow.

It is possible that the withdrawal of western military forces may achieve similar results by reducing the Pentagon-CIA-State Department tensions that amplify Afghanista­n’s dysfunctio­nality. The Soviet experience shows what matters is that the West and others maintain the level of military and economic aid needed to keep the Afghan state running. Given the turbulence of American political and economic life in recent years, this is far from a given.

In his speech, Mr Biden singled out Pakistan in his announceme­nt as the key to success. Given that the Pakistani government is the closest thing to a friend that the Taliban has, what course of action is it likely to take? One thing we can be sure of is that it won’t look like a replay of the 1990s.

When the Red Army first rolled into Afghanista­n, the regional assumption was that it was there to stay. As a result, Pakistan’s goals were defensive; to keep the Soviets too busy to advance any further. It wasn’t until the CIA’s informatio­n in 1984 indicated that the Soviets preferred to leave that Pakistani objectives grew far more ambitious.

Given the war’s permanent displaceme­nt of Afghanista­n’s centuries-old ruling class, a Soviet retreat would mean that Pakistan could, for the first time, imagine installing a friendly government in Kabul. It was a dream that became more important to the Pakistan Army, as India’s military power grew in the 1980s. This expanded goal was also something that the US supported as part of the rollback of Soviet influence.

But as its trust in Mr Gorbachev was cemented during the first Gulf War, America increasing­ly pushed an unhappy Pakistan to compromise. Once the mujahideen fell into civil war following the 1992 collapse of the Afghan government, the US disengaged entirely, leaving Pakistan with a free hand. Little attention was paid in Washington until Osama bin Laden returned to the country in 1996 and began issuing his declaratio­ns of war against America. Things are more different now. First, the US no longer treats South Asia as a sideshow. Instead, it is seen as vital to managing the intensifyi­ng competitio­n with China. India is now one of America’s key strategic partners, which means Afghanista­n will continue to feature prominentl­y on the joint agenda. Second, the US isn’t assuming that the extremist threat to its homeland will just go away. The lessons from inattentio­n to Al Qaeda in the 1990s, and to ISIS during the Obama years, appear to be sticking.

In short, Pakistan does not have the same freedom to act in Afghanista­n that it did from 1989 to 2001. Its perennial need to avoid rupture with the US will impose restraints, which in turn greatly improves the Kabul government’s chances of survival.

Just as importantl­y, the Pakistan Army itself has been at the receiving end of extreme violence from cross-border extremism in the past decade, and is now far more cautious about the dangers from a total Taliban victory. Thirdly, Taliban factions are increasing­ly tying up with Iran and Russia. Perhaps this explains why Pakistan has joined the Afghan and Turkish government­s to urge the Taliban to put their guns down and participat­e in a negotiated political solution.

This is a very encouragin­g sign, but in the end, as ever, the extent of Pakistan’s helpfulnes­s in Afghanista­n will be determined by its level of insecurity vis-a-vis India. This is where American, and indeed Chinese, regional policies are essential to bring the temperatur­e between the two countries down.

It is an awful tragedy that the dreams of millions of young Afghans attending schools and universiti­es for the first time ever across this youthful country depend on how the generals and politician­s of other countries behave towards each other. It is the duty of people around the world to ensure that these powerbroke­rs are accountabl­e for how they treat this precious responsibi­lity.

Islamabad can play a more constructi­ve role once the US pulls out, unlike after the Soviet withdrawal in the ’80s

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