| Taliban Upsurge Brings Big Powers Together! |
| Op_ed | |||||||||||||||||
| By kgajendra singh | |||||||||||||||||
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Taliban Upsurge Brings Big Powers Together! The world seems rightly preoccupied with ongoing events in Pakistan, but this is only part of a larger drama unfolding in north-west of Pakistan, an ingress through which the whole of Hindustan awaits Asani Sanket (imminent danger!).
The Arabian Desert peninsula with little resources then, was not the objective of the wars between the two empires. The unwashed Arab tribes along the borders and in the two empires were looked upon with contempt, the kind of contempt most Arabs and Muslims face now from the West and others after the Muslim Ottoman empire was rolled back from the gates of Vienna beginning 16th century, Muslim lands colonized and exploited, and Turkic lands in Central Asia conquered by the Russians. The situation in central south Asia in the 21st century is somewhat similar. By the end of the 20th century, USSR collapsed having been forced by the Cold War to spend beyond its means to defend itself against the US-led West after losing a proxy war in Afghanistan in 1980s. Now with the US military overreach, defense outlay it cannot afford but which continues to mount, a lost war in Iraq, a likely quagmire in Afghanistan, Washington stares a fate similar to Moscow in the 1990s, made more acute by the rushing financial collapse. It is not that Americans have become peace-loving, but the ground realities despite noises by neo-conservatives and professional war-mongers, have forced Washington to change its policies in the region. With a virtual tacit truce with Iran in Iraq, US and NATO forces’ supplies being constricted by Taliban militias, US-led West has been forced to stall NATO’s onward march into Russia’s near abroad, i.e., Ukraine and Georgia (where a last throw of dice last year was rebuffed), and would coordinate with Shanghai Cooperation Organization to jointly cope with the resurgent Sunni Taliban bursting out from mountain sanctuaries along the Pak-Afghan borders towards Kabul and Islamabad. China, whose Turkic Uighurs in Xinjian could not follow in the footsteps of kinsmen Kyrgyz and Kazakhs and others coming adrift from Moscow’ s yoke in the 1990s, is very much worried. Moscow and Afghanistan With the Obama administration facing a deteriorating situation in Afghanistan, Russia is on way to becoming an important player in the region. Moscow has agreed to the transit of non-lethal NATO supplies for Afghanistan through its territory. (But at its behest Kyrgyzstan is closing the US base at Manas). Moscow must be chuckling at Washington’s quandary in Afghanistan, remembering how US and others were responsible for creating a quagmire for the Soviet Union in the 1980s. Iran, part of the US declared ‘axis of evil’ and regularly threatened since 2003, could be another supply route. Shia Tehran, which suffered from Taliban and Al Qaeda depredations, and helped US operations against Al Qaeda and Taliban in 2001, would be willing to join but under some conditions. Dmitry Rogozin, Russia’s representative at NATO, said in a recent interview that US defeat in Afghanistan would be “a great catastrophe for Russia” as Islamists would immediately spread across Central Asia and the Caucasus. He added that the US presence in Afghanistan was in Russia’s best interests!! However, Rogozin doubted if the US would stay long enough to stabilize the situation. What now could emerge is a military force comprising of mostly Central Asian and other states, to help keep the Islamists at bay. Moscow perhaps has a B plan drawn from the template adopted successfully in Chechnya. It involves establishing a sphere of influence in northern Afghanistan, where the major ethnic groups are Uzbeks and Tajiks, unlike the Pashtuns that dominate other parts of the country and support Taliban. Under the Northern Alliance led by the legendary Ahmad Shah Massoud, a pocket in the north held out against the Taliban during its years in power from 1996-2001. Since the breakup of the Russian and British empires, the buffer kingdom of Afghanistan has been splintered since 1980s. China, Uighurs and Taliban Because of its abiding strategic and economic relationship with Pakistan, the paramount of Chinese interests is largely accepted by all the major political players inside Pakistan and its sphere of influence in Afghanistan. Peter Lee wrote recently in Asia Times: “However, in a development that Beijing undoubtedly finds very disturbing, China is getting sucked into the security crisis in the Pashtun border areas of Pakistan. China regards security issues in the Muslim lands of Central and South Asia through the lens of its fraught relations with the Uyghur Muslim population of its northwestern province of Xinjiang. Chinese rule over Xinjiang is not popular, there is a Xinjiang independence movement, and Uyghur militants have claimed responsibility for several bloody actions, both in the province and in the Han areas of China. “China is very concerned that Xinjiang separatism enjoys a favorable regional environment thanks to the collapse of political order in Afghanistan and western Pakistan - a collapse that China accelerated by pouring arms, training and some fighters into the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan in the 1980s. “After September 11, 2001, China aggressively played the Islamic terrorism card in stigmatizing the Uyghur self-determination movement and conflating it with the activities of the violently militant East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM). In 2002, the George W Bush administration acceded in listing ETIM as a terrorist organization, thus largely foreclosing to Uyghur activists the international affection and supports that has accrued to the Tibetan independence movement. “However, with the retreat of the central government from Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) bordering NWFP and the resurgence of militancy throughout the Pashtun homeland from the opium fields of Helmand in Afghanistan’s west all the way to the Swat Valley, 160 kilometers from Pakistan’s capital of Islamabad, an enormous haven for Islamic militants is coming into being. And the local allies, especially Pakistan, that China has traditionally relied on to police Uyghur militants on its behalf, are in danger of being marginalized by a powerful and assertive Taliban movement apparently less willing to defer to China.” In 2000, Stratford reported: [T]he Afghan ambassador to Pakistan guaranteed a Chinese delegation that no groups would be allowed to operate against China from Afghanistan. When the Taliban became international pariahs after 9/11, their opportunities for engagement with China decreased. However, on the occasion of one of the bloodier attacks against foreign interests - the massacre of 11 Chinese workers working on a World Bank road project in Afghanistan in 2004 - the traditional deference toward China required of clients of Pakistan and ISI was on full display. The Taliban, who had no qualms about claiming responsibility for the brutal massacre of five Medicine Sans Frontiers staff, quickly disclaimed responsibility and made their pro-Chinese sympathies known with alacrity. The Taliban militia denied responsibility for the killings. “We deny the accusation of killing the Chinese workers in Kunduz province of Afghanistan,” said Abdul Latif Hakimi, a Taliban representative. The Taliban even organized a demonstration of 3,000 people “to show their support for the Chinese.” Still, Taliban and Pakistani relations with China have always been complicated by the presence of a few hundred Uyghur militants who trained and fought with some combination of the Taliban, al-Qaeda and the ISI. As early as 1992, almost two dozen Uyghurs died in an armed clash near Kashgar in Xinjiang and the Chinese government shut down its road links with Pakistan, including the Karakoram Highway, for several months to ostensibly stop the destabilizing flow of fighters, drugs, and AIDS but to express its annoyance. Before 9/11, there was a special training camp for Uyghurs at Tora Bora under al-Qaeda and Taliban auspices near the Pakistan border, and a safe house maintained in the Afghan provincial town of Jalalabad. According to one report, the Chinese claimed that 1,000 Uyghur militants had trained in al-Qaeda camps.
The Uyghur detainees’ advocates exploited the fact that the prosecution was unable to establish unambiguous links between ETIM and al-Qaeda or the Taliban, and argued that the young men be released as they had never shown any intention of committing terrorist attacks against the United States, the implication being that they sought military training solely for the purpose of the freedom struggle against the Chinese in Xinjiang. The Chinese were appalled that the Uyghur struggle might receive legitimacy and explicit or implicit international recognition, or those independent militants or their sympathizers might find a political haven somewhere. Beijing has exerted considerable political pressure on the United States not to release 17 of the detainees into the custody of avowedly non-violent pro-independence Uyghur émigrés in the Washington DC area; it was also able to prevail on the Australian government in January 2009 to refuse to take any Guantanamo Uyghur detainees. The Chinese government has always been extremely aggressive in its efforts to ensure that Uyghur militants seeking independence do not find welcome anywhere, certainly not in Pakistan. B. Raman, an Indian security expert wrote on the South Asia Analysis Group blog: “Talking to a group of senior Pakistani newspaper editors after a visit to China in 2003, [President General Pervez Musharraf was reported to have stated that he was shocked by the strong language used by the Chinese leaders while talking of the activities of the Uyghur jihadi terrorists from Pakistani territory. However, except for the killing of ETIM head Hassan Mahsum in FATA in 2003 by Pakistani forces, Chinese efforts to get Pakistan to hand over East Turkestan fighters have been unsuccessful.” To be fair, Pakistan’s dilatory response to Chinese demands only reflect the fact that attempts to repatriate Uyghur militants to China for imprisonment or worse would probably provoke a bigger headache for Sino-Pakistan relations: retaliation against Chinese interests and personnel in Pakistan. However, in 2007, the issues of Islamic radicalism, Uyghur separatists and Chinese interests collided catastrophically in the matter of the fundamentalist Lal Masjid (Red Mosque) in Islamabad. The mosque, avowedly pro-Taliban and linked to al-Qaeda, was a large and provocative bastion of fundamentalist Islamist power inside Pakistan’s capital and committed to the imposition of Sharia. Lal Masjid’s attempts to spread its reach through Islamic vigilantism met with the same ambiguous response from the Pakistan government as was later displayed in the inapt handling of the evolving crisis in FATA and NWFP. Abduction of Chinese managers and employees of a massage parlor by the female members of a madrassa associated with the mosque as punishment for allegedly immoral activities, provoked the anger of the Chinese government and prompted a cautious, protracted siege of the mosque by the Pakistani army. Later, when declaring a state of emergency, Musharraf highlighted the Lal Masjid situation as the primary example of Pakistan’s problems with Islamist extremism: “Now. We saw the event of Lal Masjid in Islamabad where extremists took law into their own hands ... The Chinese, who are such great friends of ours - they took the Chinese hostage and tortured them. Because of this, I was personally embarrassed. I had to go apologize to the Chinese leaders, “I am ashamed that you are such great friends and this happened to you.”
The mosque’s leaders openly expressed their friendship towards China. Dawn reported: “We released [the hostages] in view of Pakistan-China friendship and after an assurance by the local administration that all such health clinics and massage centers, where “objectionable activities” are carried out, would be closed in Islamabad,” said Maulana Abdul Rashid Ghazi, the deputy chief of Lal Masjid. It should be noted that Chinese President Hu Jintao’s recent overseas trip included a high-profile visit to Saudi Arabia, which is mediating a deal that the Taliban repudiate al-Qaeda and enter the Kabul government. Closer home, the Chinese Communist Party hosted a delegation from Pakistan’s leading Islamic political party, the Jamaati-i-Islami (JI) in Beijing, Xi’an and Shanghai in February. China was certainly pleased with JI’s unambiguous endorsement of China’s Xinjiang policy and the two parties signed a memorandum of understanding. The JI announced: “Both parties have agreed upon four principles including independence, equality, and mutual respect and not to interfere in the internal matters of each country ... Both sides assured full support to China’s national and geographical unity, and fully backed China’s stance on Taiwan, Tibet and Xin Jiang issues.” The Pakistan Taliban are withdrawing traditional immunity to attack Chinese interests, the JI - whose brief from ISI excludes the Taliban, and whose modernist Islamic is far removed from the Taliban’s theological obscurantism - is not the right party for China for redressing the matter. The significance of the agreement - and the involvement of “one senior intelligence official” - probably indicates that China anticipates a festering crisis in the Taliban-controlled Pashtun areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan and doesn’t expect the Zardari administration to be responsive or effective in helping China with its security issues. Therefore, instead of relying on Islamabad, Beijing is upgrading its direct contacts with the non-Taliban sections of Pakistan’s civilian polity, i.e. Islamist political parties, and intelligence apparatus. NATO-SCO cooperation Due to their geographical proximity to Afghanistan and the threats of conflict spillover, the SCO members are naturally concerned about the security chaos in Afghanistan. Therefore, it is not far-fetched to anticipate a breakthrough over SCO-NATO cooperation in Afghanistan. This could begin despite lingering SCO suspicions of the Alliance’s operations much beyond the Atlantic Ocean in SCO’s backyard. But NATO's decision to put on hold the accession of Georgia and Ukraine is a positive sign. K. Gajendra Singh, IFS (retd.) served as Indian ambassador to Turkey, Azerbaijan, Jordan, Romania and Senegal, and is currently chairman of the Foundation for Indo-Turkic Studies Quote this article on your site | Views: 1235
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