Some of the points made in the series (remarks in parentheses have been added) were:
Unless there is a considerable injection of foreign assistance, more Afghans, particularly from the South and the East will become economic refugees in Pakistan … It would be in Pakistan’s interest to canvass vigorously for the maintenance of foreign assistance to Afghanistan. Pakistan has to understand that Afghanistan will enter into this agreement (Bilateral Security Agreement). Opposing it will only add another layer of distrust to the Pakistan-Afghanistan relations, particularly when there is no viable alternative on offer. A measure of hostility will be on display from whatever government is in power in Kabul (Durand Line) … The best safeguard against a hostile Afghanistan is, however, to create a measure of economic interdependence. Today, Afghanistan as a landlocked country conducts its foreign trade largely through Pakistan. Pakistan in turn can use Afghanistan for its trade with Central Asia and, more importantly, for bringing fossil fuel from Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, and electricity from Tajikistan into South Asia.
For no other country is the restoration of stability in Afghanistan more important than it is for Pakistan. Pakistan has been the external sanctuary and conduit of support without which no insurgency has survived in recent times. It has paid a heavy price. While it is for the insurgents to work out solutions with their Afghan partners, they cannot expect indefinite sanctuary. If we support an Afghan-led and Afghan-owned process of reconciliation and if we are part of the solution and not part of the problem, then it is logical for the Afghans to expect us to use our influence with the Taliban to persuade them not only to negotiate, but also to adopt a stance in the negotiations that would lead to peace and stability in Afghanistan.
Who should we talk to? To date we have denied, or at least been ambivalent about, the existence of a Taliban shura on our soil but the fact remains that the Taliban presence in Balochistan — be it in the refugee camps along the border, in Chaman or the Kharotabad and Pashtunabad areas of Quetta — is well-established … These are the people we have to address.
We cannot and must not maintain that we have a right to determine the nature or composition of the government or administrative structure that emerges from the reconciliation process. We may suggest an interest in seeing an ethnically-balanced structure, because all parties are aware that it was the exclusion of the Pashtuns from the Bonn Conference that fuelled the insurgency and the resurrection of the Taliban.
We must counsel the Taliban that demanding more than this would be detrimental to the goal we support — a stable and united Afghanistan at peace with itself and its neighbours. We must convince the Taliban that Pakistan, as it fights extremism within its own borders, would not want al Qaeda to have a safe haven in a reconciled Afghanistan. The situation is complex and our pressure on the Taliban to enter into negotiations with the American-backed Karzai administration and to keep their demands moderate may not be a panacea for Afghanistan’s ills. Poor administration and corruption partly engendered by the security will not disappear overnight.
In the last three years, what has changed? One can say that the new national unity government in Kabul and our resolve to take action against terrorists of all hues and complexion has changed the paradigm.
In the next article, I will offer my views on what the new relationship with Kabul can mean for reconciliation and for Afghanistan-Pakistan relations.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 1st, 2014.
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COMMENTS (7)
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For once the author should recognise that Pakistan has no productive role to play in the neighbouring countries until it has a genuine independent posture in its foreign policy. The role of collaborators is out of mode in modern times.
Rex Minor
What Pakistan "should do" and what Pakistan "will do" are two entirely opposite things
I enjoyed reading your last set of articles on Afghanistan and look forward to your next piece(s) on the subject. But you still have to reckon with observers like "Realpolitik", and I am sure there are many of the same view in Pakistan, who still think in terms of strategic assets. So far Ashraf Ghani and Gen. Raheel have said the right things, we will have to wait to see how amenable is Taliban to new arrangements.
"We cannot and must not maintain that we have a right to determine the nature or composition of the government or administrative structure that emerges from the reconciliation process. " Very true just do whatever it takes to have a peaceful Afghanistan .
You're confused old man. You're boring and Pakistan is irrelevant even to Afghanistan.
Worry about your own pathetic state of affairs.
“The situation is complex andour pressure on the Taliban to enter into negotiations with the American-backed Karzai administration and to keep their demands moderate may not be a panacea for Afghanistan’s ills.”
Contradiction: “We must counsel the Taliban that demanding more than this would be detrimental to the goal we support — a stable and united Afghanistan at peace with itself and its neighbours.”
We can give it a try to see if the new Afghan President shall really cooperate with us and our changed policy, which for now is to encourage an all-inclusive political integration in Afghanistan. However, if Afghanistan’s Ashraf Ghani plays the same old game of pressuring Pakistan on the Durand Line, with or without the assistance of India, and with or without the backing of Abdullah Abdullah and the Northern Alliance, we would be left with no counterweight if we forsake the Afghan Taliban and leave them out in the cold. The Ambassador should be a better practitioner of realpolitik.
Somebody wake Shaikh Sahib up. It is not Karzai's Afghanistan anymore.
"The situation is complex and our pressure on the Taliban to enter into negotiations with the American-backed Karzai administration and to keep their demands moderate may not be a panacea for Afghanistan’s ills. "