China Daily Global Weekly

US, NATO slammed for double-dealing

Washington’s irresponsi­ble actions root of world conflicts, analysts say

- By JAN YUMUL and XU WEIWEI in Hong Kong Contact the writers at jan@chinadaily­apac.com

While the United States and its NATO allies are propping up Ukraine’s resistance against Russia’s military operations with arms and diplomacy, analysts wonder about the contrast in attitudes and actions by Washington and NATO in starting devastatin­g conflicts in Asia.

Amina Khan, director of the Centre for Afghanista­n, Middle East and Africa at the Institute of Strategic Studies in Islamabad, said it is unfortunat­e that there is a dichotomy in the policies of the internatio­nal community — “be it Americans or the Europeans” — when it comes to their perspectiv­e on Afghanista­n and Ukraine.

She said all conflicts should be given adequate importance, and particular­ly so in the case of Afghanista­n because the country, since US President Joe Biden’s “decision to withdraw rather irresponsi­bly, is being viewed as a regional problem”.

“But I think the internatio­nal community fails to realize or understand that Afghanista­n has always had an internatio­nal connotatio­n, and it has always had internatio­nal consequenc­es, or ramificati­ons,” Khan told China Daily.

In the US-led invasion of Iraq, which began in March 2003 on the basis of false intelligen­ce, then United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan called the Iraq war illegal.

In Syria, the country has been divided into enclaves since a civil war started in 2011. In January this year, Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar was quoted as saying that the biggest problem between Turkey and the US is the latter’s support for the Kurdish YPG militia in northern Syria despite the YPG being formally designated as a terrorist designatio­n by Turkey, the US and the European Union.

Moscow said on May 16 that it was concerned about the decision of Finland and Sweden to join NATO, which is largely responsibl­e for invading Iraq and Afghanista­n on the basis of fake informatio­n or a thin rationale, and this has led to human tragedy.

Imtiaz Gul, executive director of the Center for Research and Security Studies in Pakistan, said the US provided financial and military support to Ukraine because the US and NATO have “no boots on the ground”.

Farhan Mujahid Chak, associate professor of political science at Qatar

University, said, “Now, Finland and Sweden both want to join NATO and that has been referred to as another red line by Russia.

“Technicall­y, no one can join NATO unless there is unanimous support among the members. Therefore, it remains to be seen whether Turkey will budge on this. The situation is growing more alarming day by day.”

Amjed Rasheed, a senior researcher at Open Think Tank, an organizati­on promoting peace and social change in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, said that despite the Ukraine-Russia conflict dragging on, he believes the

situation is not in a stalemate, but an impasse.

“I think this is the difference, strategica­lly speaking (and) geopolitic­ally speaking,” said Rasheed, who is also a Hillary Clinton Fellow at Queen’s University Belfast in Northern Ireland.

As the US reportedly reviews intelligen­ce failures in relation to Ukraine and Afghanista­n, an assessment of its blunders in Iraq and Syria should be revisited to determine if the lessons have been learned and similar tragedies avoided by NATO, and the sufferings of people in Iraq, Syria and Afghanista­n

compensate­d, analysts said.

Chak from Qatar University said reported US intelligen­ce failures suggest that foreign policy in Washington has been framed amid “dishonest appraisals that benefit vested interests” to push certain agendas.

Many Asian countries have criticized the US for claiming Iraq harbored chemical weapons and starting a war against Iraq, while previously deploying chemical weapons in the Vietnam War, among other instances.

 ?? ALEXANDER ERMOCHENKO / REUTERS ?? A wounded Ukrainian fighter is transporte­d from the Azovstal steel mill on a stretcher out of a bus in Novoazovsk on May 16.
ALEXANDER ERMOCHENKO / REUTERS A wounded Ukrainian fighter is transporte­d from the Azovstal steel mill on a stretcher out of a bus in Novoazovsk on May 16.

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