The Elusive Afghan Peace and India's Way Forward
The WireFebruary 11, 2019Sharat Sabharwal
President
Donald Trump’s intent to withdraw US troops from Afghanistan, reiterated in
his State of the Union address, has thrown the already fraught
situation in a state of flux.
Saddled with
a tough brief from his boss, US special representative Zalmay Khalilzad has met
the Taliban a number of times in recent months. His wish list includes a
ceasefire, paving the way for withdrawal of US forces with the exception of
some counter-terrorism presence, a pledge by the Taliban not to permit use of
the Afghan soil by international terrorists and an intra-Afghan dialogue
involving the Taliban and the Afghanistan government to settle the details of
power sharing and a future political set up.
After
Khalilzad’s meeting with the Taliban in Abu Dhabi in December last year, along
with the representatives of Pakistan, UAE and Saudi Arabia, they dodged him for
a month, accusing him of trying to expand the agenda of talks beyond withdrawal
of foreign forces, which seems to be their primary focus.
Eventually,
they met him in Qatar for six days, beginning January 21 – the most
substantive round of dialogue so far – even as in a show of
force, the Taliban attacked the training school of the National Directorate for
Security in Maidan Wardak province, killing a large number of persons.
Information
trickling in from both sides suggests that the Taliban had their way in keeping
the agenda narrow. There was agreement in principle on withdrawal of US forces
from Afghanistan, though no specific timeframe was agreed upon, and a return
commitment by the Taliban that they would do what is necessary to “prevent
Afghanistan from ever becoming a platform of international terrorist groups or
individuals,” as Khalilzad put it.
There was
clearly no meeting of minds on a ceasefire and intra-Afghan dialogue. While
Khalilzad stated that “Nothing is agreed till everything is agreed, and
“everything” must include an intra-Afghan dialogue and comprehensive
ceasefire”, the Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said that progress on
other issues was impossible until the issue of withdrawal of foreign forces was
settled.
It was
reported that the talks would reconvene on February 25 in Qatar. Increasingly
marginalised in the process, President Ashraf Ghani insisted in an address to
the nation that the Taliban engage with Kabul. He looked even more isolated
when the Taliban sat with a number of Afghan leaders, including former
President Hamid Karzai, in a Russia-engineered meeting in Moscow, organised by
the ‘Council of the Afghan Diaspora in Russia’, which was dubbed as a political
drama by the Afghan foreign ministry.
Uncertainty
hung over the Presidential election due in July this year because of the
reports concerning setting up of an interim government following a deal with
the Taliban, reinforced by a plan circulated by the RAND Corporation that
envisages an 18 month transition period and a transitional government with
rotating chairmanship.
The talks so
far seemed headed increasingly towards what Karzai described at the Raisina
dialogue as a deal between the US and Pakistan on Afghanistan. The only silver
lining was the appointment of Mullah Abdul
Ghani Baradar, who co-founded the Taliban with Mullah Omar and is
reported to be a votary of peace, as the head of the Taliban Political Office
in Qatar.
Hurdles in the future
Going by the
interests and compulsions of the key players, the prospects of the ongoing
efforts bringing about durable peace and stability to Afghanistan do not look
good. The process will face many hurdles as it moves forward.
Even though
Khalilzad has said that the US is seeking a peace agreement and not an
agreement to withdraw its troops, his president’s professed desire to pull out
of Afghanistan and his publicly articulated impatience (Khalilzad said recently
that the timing of a peace settlement from the American point of view would be
sooner the better) have left him with a weak hand.
Therefore,
the Taliban, who are adept at running rings around their interlocutors, may
succeed in making the war-weary Americans accept a face saver for their exit
rather than working for an inclusive arrangement with adequate safeguards for
its survival (though the best of safeguards can fail in an environment like
today’s Afghanistan!)
Pakistan’s
policy has been and continues to be driven by the India obsession of its
security establishment, which seeks a pliant regime in Kabul. This quest and
the consequent Pakistani actions to destabilise Afghanistan have generated
widespread hatred against it, including among a large number of Pakhtuns. The
result is that the only card available to Pakistan to stay relevant to
Afghanistan, which it should have been able to in many positive ways as an
immediate neighbour, is its influence over the Taliban.
Reports
emerging from the US state that Pakistan, a spoiler earlier, is now
facilitating the US-Taliban dialogue. However, it needs to be recalled that
when Mullah Baradar engaged in a behind the scenes dialogue with the Karzai
government, he was arrested by the Pakistanis in early 2010 and was released
only late last year in response to a US demand. There is no reason to believe
that Pakistan will not throw a spanner in the works again, should it feel at
any stage that the dialogue does not conform to its
Taliban already look the winners
With nearly
all international partners of Afghanistan now willing to talk to the Taliban,
they already look winners. Their spokesman has said they are not looking for
monopoly on power, but to live with their countrymen “in an inclusive Afghan
world”.
However, the
propensity to control the entire country and shape it after their worldview is
hardwired in their DNA. If there are any moderates among them, they have never
held sway over the movement. They have not fought all this while to share
power. Even if they initially accept a power sharing arrangement, they could be
expected to push for complete dominance, thereby unleashing yet again a power struggle,
particularly with the ethnic minorities (Tajiks, Uzbeks and Hazaras) and other
local warlords.
They may not
harbour international terrorists, but their control over the country will
facilitate the projection of their obscurantist ideology and religious
extremism to the rest of the region. The joint declaration issued after their
above mentioned meeting with some Afghan leaders in Moscow is full of
generalities and pious wishes. Thus it speaks of protection of the social,
economic, political and educational rights of the Afghan women and of the
entire people of Afghanistan “in line with Islamic principles”.
Ironically,
when they ruled the country the last time, they always maintained that they
were running it in keeping with the principles of Islam. It is just that they
practice a very extreme version of Islam combined with archaic tribal
traditions.
Speaking to
an audience in Washington, Khalilzad said that he had talked to all the
neighbours of Afghanistan, with the exception of one or two, but they have not
yet agreed on a formal framework for regional participation. The regional
countries and other major partners of Afghanistan have varied interests that
could create hurdles for whatever is settled between the Americans and the
Taliban.
The Russians
have publicly expressed their dissatisfaction with the American peace moves. A
recent Russian foreign ministry statement attributed the move to postpone the
Afghan presidential election from April to July this year to the US needing
additional time to prepare for holding the voting “in accordance with its
patterns and building a peace process in Afghanistan according to own
scenario”. It alleged that the Americans were looking to create, in the context
of the planned reduction of their military contingent in Afghanistan, some
Afghan ‘counter-terrorism units’, which will not be controlled by Kabul but
will work in the interests of the US Special services.
Separately,
a Russian foreign ministry spokesperson, while welcoming the US resolve to
launch a peace process, noted that Khalilzad’s efforts to convince the Taliban
to engage with an official delegation from Kabul had not succeeded in spite of
the support of several Gulf states and Pakistan and it was premature to talk
about the results of the “US unilateral effort” to launch the peace process in
Afghanistan, “which reaffirms the need to find a collective solution that would
take into account the interests of all the neighbouring countries and main
partners of Afghanistan.”
If the Americans are able to retain a long term
residual security presence as alleged by the Russians, it would cause concern
among countries like Russia, China and Iran that may feel compelled to take
some counter-measures.
India’s deep and abiding interest
India has a
deep and abiding interest in Afghanistan, not only because of the
civilisational links between the two countries, but also because turmoil in
Afghanistan does not leave us untouched and more importantly, Afghanistan now
serves as our transit to the geopolitically important and resource rich Central
Asia through the Chabahar port.
The
traditional goodwill for India in Afghanistan has been reinforced in recent
years by the development work done by us since 2002. However, we have depended
upon others to provide security for our development activities. Putting boots
on the ground has not been an option as it would bring us in conflict with
Pakistan and its proxies, with the logistical advantage lying with them.
Pakistan has
not responded positively to our past proposals to engage on Afghanistan,
perhaps because it does not see a role for us there – a position reiterated by
their foreign ministry spokesman recently. A number of voices, including
General Bipin Rawat, have recommended of late that we engage with the Taliban.
The Afghan
Taliban are fiercely independent like the other Afghan. They did not recognise
the Durand Line when they were ruling Afghanistan the last time. I heard from
some retired Pakistani diplomats that when the matter was broached with Mullah
Omar, he finessed it by saying that there was no point in discussing it as
people living on both sides were brothers.
But let us
not forget that besides having deep ideological affinities with the religious
extremists in Pakistan, the Taliban depend upon the Pakistanis for sanctuaries
and more. Many of them have their families and business interests there. Such
dependence will continue if, as expected, the American withdrawal leads to
renewed power struggle within Afghanistan.
Therefore,
while we should be willing to engage with all the stakeholders in Afghanistan,
who are prepared to engage with us, we should remain conscious of the fact that
unless the Taliban change radically to live in a genuine power sharing
arrangement, their ability to resist the Pakistani influence or accommodate our
interests will remain severely constrained.
The only way
we can influence the ongoing peace moves is by working with like-minded
countries. In this context, it is good that the government has expressed our
willingness to participate in “all formats of talks which could bring about
peace and security in that region.” There is no point in hitching our wagon to
the peace moves of a particular country, including the US.
If an
inclusive arrangement capable of ensuring peace and stability in Afghanistan
comes about in spite of all the odds, we should be prepared to not only
continue with our development work, but also share in the financial burden that
the international community will have to bear till the stabilised state is able
to stand on its feet.
If, on the
other hand, as is more likely, there is a renewed power struggle, we will have
to be nimble-footed in choosing our partners within and outside Afghanistan in
the light of the changing equations.
Sharat
Sabharwal is a former high commissioner to Pakistan. Views
expressed are personal.
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