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Implications of U.S.'s Withdrawal from Afghanistan

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January 26, 2019

What is the issue?

  • America is in the process of quitting Afghanistan as its soldiers are too expensive to send abroad.
  • The SAARC countries, India and Pakistan especially, are required to assess the situation and respond appropriately.

What does the withdrawal mean for the countries?

  • Pakistan is scared of what will happen if America really quits and Afghanistan returns to its heroin-sustained warlordism.
  • The Afghan Taliban are winning on a daily basis and control half of the country.
  • They even eye the 250,000-strong Afghan army as future Taliban.
  • India has presence in Afghanistan after the construction of the Chabahar Port in Iran and the highway that links it to Kabul.
  • China is the next economic presence in Afghanistan after India.
  • Turkey is also eying an opportunity to play its role to safeguard the interests of Afghanistan’s Turkmen-Turkic community.
  • Three South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation (SAARC) members - Afghanistan, Pakistan, India - could have cooperated.
  • But the countries are only moving to end up in a conflict.

What is Pakistan's stance?

  • When the Taliban ruled in Afghanistan, Pakistan’s own jihadi underground in the madrasa-dominated regions was vulnerable to their influence.
  • Rebellious Pakistani Taliban, safely located in northwestern Afghanistan, has hurt Pakistan as no one else in Afghanistan.
  • In 2014, six of its gunmen attacked the Army Public School in Peshawar, killing more than 100 children.
  • This changed the thinking of the Pakistan army.
  • Pakistan no longer viewed Afghanistan as its “strategic depth” against India as it posed challenges to it in return.

How does Afghanistan's future look?

  • The Taliban have warriors in their hordes who have come from the Middle East and Central Asia.
  • Also, there are ISIS-Daesh and Al Qaeda still operational in Afghanistan, threatening all the three SAARC members.
  • It is true that most Afghans will accept the return of the Taliban.
  • They would welcome the destruction of the liberal order now being held up by an America-overseen constitution and American money.
  • But they would like to leave the country, if they could, before a Taliban takeover.
  • This is because Afghanistan is already on the brink of a food and water crisis.
  • The “small landlocked country recovering from decades of war” is among the water-stressed nations and whose people lack sufficient dietary diversity.
  • The Ashraf Ghani government will not survive after the American-funded Afghan army disintegrates and joins up with the Taliban.
  • That’s why the Taliban are refusing to even recognise the Kabul government.
  • For them, the Afghan army is the low-hanging fruit that will enlarge their capacity to challenge both Pakistan and India.

Image result for afghanistan taliban map

What lies ahead?

  • It is difficult to diagnose the state of the mind of decision-makers in Pakistan.
  • But their decision to turn to India and offer talks and trade points to the possibility of the kind of normalisation needed for handling the crisis in Afghanistan.
  • A dead SAARC must now be revived to decide what its three members are going to do after the Americans leave Afghanistan.

 

Source: Indian Express

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