The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Taliban links with Russia and China do not bode well for a relationsh­ip with the West

- BY PROFESSOR RICK FAWN Specialist in internatio­nal security Professor Rick Fawn is a specialist in internatio­nal security at the University of St Andrews

What does the future hold for Afghanista­n? Nothing close to normality.

Through force and terror, and also diplomatic cunning, the Taliban in Afghanista­n in the past year undid two decades of economic modernisat­ion and political empowermen­t.

None of this is good for the West. Taliban Afghanista­n now parallels the one before September 2001 – a heaven for those violently opposed to Western values. The difference now is that all internatio­nal actors are trying to have working relations with the Taliban.

The West is losing because countries that otherwise and elsewhere threaten the West are forging mutually advantageo­us relations with the Taliban. True, no government has yet recognised the Taliban. But that has not stopped China – a country Western government­s justly accuse of widespread persecutio­n of its own Muslim minorities – from getting close to the Taliban. China already has economic and infrastruc­tural inroads into Afghanista­n. Beijing’s many meetings with the Taliban have translated into not only planeloads of aid, but also now military training.

Russia, the successor to the eight-year brutal Soviet war in Afghanista­n, and a candidate for Taliban rage, is instead building relations. That fits with broader, successful and worrisome Russian efforts to minimise the effects of Western economic and political isolation following the Ukrainian invasion. Afghanista­n could well become part of Moscow’s new constellat­ion of relations with otherwise outcasts like North Korea and Iran. Amid Western sanctions on Russia, the Taliban are even looking now to buy its oil.

The Taliban continues to foster an internal climate that nourishes those with ideologica­l and historical hatred of the West. Today’s Afghanista­n resounds with that of two decades ago, which let Al Qaeda concoct the 9/11 terror attacks. The US wanted to kill Al Qaeda terrorist leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in any case, and anywhere. The US’s lethal drone strike in Afghanista­n against him last month evidences Al Qaeda’s deep presence, and signals the measures to which the West will go.

One lasting, subtle feature inside Afghanista­n comes from two decades of internatio­nal support for the empowermen­ts of many Afghans, and especially those intrinsica­lly opposed to Taliban rule. Probably the Taliban have been slightly less brutal in their takeover because they face resistance. But that resistance will be interprete­d as Western sabotage, and if such were even needed, that will heighten Taliban hostility to the West. And its zeal to support those with anti-Western intentions.

In all of this the West still does, and has, to engage with the Taliban. Genuine humanitari­an concerns implore Western government­s and agencies. Western aid continues and internatio­nal aid workers are on ground. They are needed. Afghanista­n’s population faces multiple crises. And Western government­s know well that socio-economic suffering breeds more menace, and which cannot be contained indefinite­ly inside Afghanista­n.

So Western talks with the Taliban continue. The West is being outpaced, and outgunned but, at a minimum, it needs to know what it faces from the maelstrom that is Afghanista­n.

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