2014 will be a turning point in Afghanistan. Power will be handed
over to a new President after elections. The US military will complete
its withdrawal. The Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) will take
over the security responsibility for the country.
The prospects for all these transitions do not look promising. The
new President will have to be a Pashtun in order to ensure broad-based
ethnic support. President Karzai was parachuted to the presidency
without elections in post-war circumstances in which the US and the West
could impose their will. His re-election was mired in controversy,
created primarily by his western supporters. Despite many levers at
their command, the US and the West have not been able to manage Karzai.
This shows how difficult it has been for the US and others to oversee
the political process in Afghanistan even under military occupation.
With the impending withdrawal, their control over politics will become
even less. The larger question is whether a new Pashtun leader can
emerge who can assure cross ethnic support? Will he able to deliver
political stability and a degree of economic development in the very
difficult circumstances that his country will be facing?
The US has signed a Strategic Partnership Agreement with Afghanistan,
but the follow-up agreement- the Bilateral Security Agreement- on the
status of the residual US forces that will remain in military bases has
not been finalized. The US has failed to secure a suitable agreement in
Iraq. If it fails in Afghanistan, it is threatening a “zero option”.
Whether this is pressure tactics or is a veritable option is not clear.
In any case, the fact that this is being considered shows that the US
has no clear answer for the future. “Zero option” has the air of a “zero
answer”!
The ANSF may have numbers and reports that they are performing well
does not guarantee they will be able to operate successfully in a
post-US withdrawal environment, especially if the US leaves in a
scenario that is politically unsatisfactory for all sides. The ANSF
lacks heavy weaponry, air power and sophisticated intelligence
capability. Will they be able to really cope as a cohesive force?
The economic prospects in Afghanistan are not very reassuring despite
the pledges of assistance made at Tokyo and the announced longer-term
commitments made by countries not to abandon Afghanistan. If the US
exercises a zero military option, will that be compatible with a major
economic commitment prolonged in time, especially in a tight economic
situation in the US and the Eurozone? Plans by countries to invest in
Afghanistan not only depend on internal stability but also will take
some years to yield results, enough to make a difference on the ground.
Adding to the problem is the general instability around Afghanistan.
The internal situation in Pakistan is fraught despite recent elections.
Iran has a new President but the nuclear dossier remains problematic and
sanctions on Iran have been further tightened. The Arab world is in
turmoil, with the so-called Arab Spring having withered very rapidly.
Religious extremism is spreading and this gives political oxygen to such
forces battling in Afghanistan.
India has to cope with the situation as it develops. We have faced
the worst when the Taliban took over Afghanistan in the mid-90s. We know
of course what the dangers are ahead and have tried to play our limited
role in preventing untoward conditions from developing through our
political and economic engagement with Afghanistan.
India is pursuing a very responsible policy in Afghanistan. We want a
sovereign, stable, democratic and prosperous Afghanistan, one that is
free from extremism and where human rights, especially those of women
are respected. India is doing nothing contrary to the achievement of
this objective in Afghanistan.
We are maintaining friendly relations with Afghanistan based on
equality and respect for sovereignty. We are not interfering in
Afghanistan’s internal affairs, arming any particular group or providing
safe-havens for terrorists or anti-government political groups to carry
on violent activities against the legitimate government of Afghanistan.
We have legitimate interests in Afghanistan as a neighbouring country
and every right to be present there. The international community cannot
accept the curtailment of Afghan sovereignty by endorsing the principle
that the Afghan government should give precedence to the interests of
any particular country over that of any other. It is for the Afghan
government to take independent decisions in a responsible way. India has
no intention to occupy the legitimate space that other neighbouring
countries of Afghanistan seek there.
India has established a strategic relationship with Afghanistan. This
is anchored in a longer-term bilateral and regional perspective. India
has geo-political, strategic interests in this entire region that forms a
part of our strategic neighbourhood. Afghanistan borders Central Asia
and Iran, apart from China and Pakistan. India has had intimate age-old
ties with Afghanistan, Central Asia and Iran, with the history of our
country linked to this region over centuries.
Central Asia is landlocked and so is Afghanistan. The development of
this region faces a particularly difficult challenge because of this.
This entire region needs the broadest possible choices for its
development. It is natural for it to look for enhanced ties with India
as the biggest economy in Southern Asia that can substantially
contribute to this objective. We are wiling to respond.
Afghanistan has huge mineral resources that await exploitation. India
is ready to invest large sums in this sector, beginning with iron ore
extraction. Afghanistan is ready to offer to India a natural resources
corridor for development. For realizing this objective, India needs
better access to Afghanistan, as Pakistan is not as yet willing to
provide transit facilities through its territory to Afghanistan.
India is looking at the Chabahar port in Iran as an access route to
Afghanistan as well as Central Asia. We have recently committed $100
million to this project. US/EU sanctions on Iran are a complication for
such efforts to give Afghanistan alternative options for its trade and
facilitate foreign investment there. The US government should take a
positive view of Indian investments in Iran that are specifically
directed at easing Afghanistan’s difficult situation, which will be
important for stimulating the Afghan economy, at present too dependent
on foreign assistance and income derived from the presence of foreign
troops on its soil.
In developing trade and energy ties between Central Asia and the
Indian subcontinent, a project that the US favours as part of the New
Silk Road project, Afghanistan is a critical hub. We support the TAPI
pipeline project that will bring Turkmenistan gas to Pakistan and India
through Afghanistan. India can fruitfully participate in projects to
increase electricity grids in the region to alleviate regional
energy-related problems.
India is participating in several international efforts to contribute
to development in Afghanistan, whether it is the Istanbul Process and
the Heart of Asia conferences in Kabul in June 2012 and in Istanbul in
April 2012, or the initiative we took ourselves to organize a Delhi
Investment Summit on Afghanistan, also in June 2012, followed by the
Tokyo Conference on aid to Afghanistan in July 2012.
India’s own bilateral aid to Afghanistan has reached $2 billion. Some
see in this an effort by us to seek undue influence in Afghanistan. If
India’s foreign assistance programme and the billions Indian companies
are investing abroad are considered, this is not a very big sum. There
is full participation of the Afghan authorities in selecting Indian
assistance projects that are infrastructural as well as geared to
meeting the basic requirements of people and localities spread over the
country. A large number of our projects are in the Pashtun areas. India
has earned great popularity because of the manner in which we have
conducted ourselves.
Economic development in Afghanistan and the region is essential to
check-mate the growth of extremist ideologies in the region and
associated terrorist activity. These concerns are uppermost in India’s
mind as we are most exposed as a country to terrorism and supporting
ideologies. As a secular, multi-religious state, we are particularly
sensitive to such threats. Any boost given to these extremist forces,
even unwittingly, should be unacceptable as our security is threatened.
It is with concern therefore that we view the outreach by US, Britain
and others to the Taliban. We are not against any genuine attempt at
reconciliation if all sides want it on a basis that respects the red
lines drawn by the international community for a dialogue with the
Taliban. We find that these red lines are being blurred by NATO’s
anxiety to withdraw from Afghanistan by 2014, whatever the ground
situation.
Such a strategy gives the upper hand to the Taliban groups in Pakistan in negotiations as they know time is on their side.
The rhetoric remains that the reconciliation process should be
Afghan-led and Afghan-owned, but the manner in which the dialogue is
being structured does not suggest that it will be an independent intra-
Afghan process. President Karzai has already distanced himself from the
US initiative. We feel that nothing should be done behind the back of
the Kabul government. Latest statements from persons close to President
Karzai express the deep concern of the Kabul government about
understandings that the US may have reached with Pakistan and the
possibility of south and eastern Afghanistan being handed over to the
Taliban, which could divide the country and trigger an all-out conflict.
The end-game in Afghanistan is being played out in an atmosphere of
great suspicion and bickering amongst the principal parties involved.
The manner in which the Doha office of the Taliban was opened has made
matters worse. The conduct of the Taliban in declaring themselves the
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan made their own end-game clear.
The link between the Taliban and Pakistan is evident. One will have
to wait and watch whether the declared US position that no single
country will be allowed to dominate post-2014 Afghanistan can be
sustained by it when its intention to withdraw from Afghanistan is so
clear.
India has not been kept adequately in the picture about the dialogue
with the Taliban, despite India’s vital concerns being involved. India
suffered when the Taliban came to power in 1996. That was the only time
India had no diplomatic relations with Afghanistan and terrorists were
being trained on its soil for attacks against India. If the Taliban were
to be accommodated again, India has reason to be concerned.
We find that the policies of our western friends in Afghanistan are neither sufficiently steady nor transparent.
The argument that the Taliban has various currents in it and there
are “moderate” Taliban has been exposed as hollow by what has transpired
in Egypt where the same arguments distinguishing between various
strands in the Muslim Brotherhood and welcoming their assumption of
power have proved devoid of worth.
India does not want conditions of ethnic conflict to be created again
in Afghanistan. The international community must safeguard against it.
The post 2014 situation in Afghanistan remains very uncertain as the
country will be faced with a political and military transition even when
the external danger to the country has not been neutralized.
Establishing democracy in Afghanistan by integrating forces into the
polity that are currently threatening the country will be a most
difficult enterprise.
The root of the problem must be dealt with, which is external support
for Afghan extremists and their instrumentalization for achieving the
military ambitions of a third country. So long as there are safe havens
for extremists outside Afghanistan, the problems will not go away. If
the Taliban retain influence in eastern and southern Afghanistan, it is
because their staging grounds are outside.
India’s traditional ties have been with the Pashtuns in Afghanistan. A
large number of our development projects are in Pashtun areas, which
have been very well received by the local people. We support ethnic
harmony in Afghanistan, with the Pashtuns adequately represented in
governance, but this has to emerge through a democratic process, without
the shadow of externally supported violence.
Our strategic partnership with Afghanistan is not directed against
any third country. The primary element in this strategic relationship is
not military. India is willing to contribute to the capacity building
of the Afghan national security forces through training and supply of
non-lethal equipment so that they can better provide security to the
people after the withdrawal of foreign troops from the country. Our
goals are primarily economically oriented. We do not want to supplant
NATO.
In principle, however, India could provide a limited amount of combat
equipment too, as sought by the Afghan government. The concerns of
Pakistan should be irrelevant in this regard. Pakistan is having a
military relationship with Sri Lanka unbothered by our sensitivities.
China is arming Pakistan, providing it even strategic capabilities,
without any one advising Pakistan to defer to Indian sensitivities about
the security threat posed to us. The US is arming Pakistan too,
disregarding our sensitivities.
For elements in the US to caution us against increasing our military
engagement with Afghanistan because of Pakistani sensitivities is
inconsistent with the policy choices they make in our region in their
national interest. India could argue, as the US does, that our arms
assistance to Afghanistan will not change the balance of power between
it and Pakistan. Pakistan is a nuclear capable state with large and
well-equipped armed forces, whereas Afghanistan has a fledgling, ill
equipped force that is no match for the Pakistani military. Our decision
on the question should be based on our judgment on how far we want to
or can go in giving arms assistance to Afghanistan, not what Pakistan or
the US thinks. In our own interest, we should be prudent.
It is a hugely perverse notion that the real problem in Afghanistan
is India-Pakistan rivalry. Those who feel that their intervention in
Afghanistan has not worked to stabilize the situation to the extent that
they may have wanted and now want to cut costs at all costs, should not
seek to transfer the responsibility for their failure on India’s
shoulders.
India was not responsible for the rise of religious extremism in the
region; it was not responsible for the civil war in Afghanistan after
the Soviet departure; it did not put the Taliban in power in Kabul; it
had no hand in the presence of Al Qaida and Osama bin Laden in
Afghanistan; it had no responsibility for US/NATO military intervention
in Afghanistan; the Taliban groups or the Haqqani group are not in
India; NATO soldiers have not been killed by groups operating from
Indian soil. If the US has had to resort to drone attacks against
terrorists in Pakistan, it is not because of India.
We seek a friendly relationship with Afghanistan. We seek no
exclusive relationship. Afghanistan should have friendly relations with
all its neighbours. We are willing to work with all of them. India and
China are already talking to each other on Afghanistan. There should be
no problem in discussing Afghanistan with Pakistan in a constructive way
that opens up the doors for transit facilities eventually. The new
government in Pakistan should think along those lines, rather than
allowing Pakistan’s policies to be guided by the ambitions of its armed
forces.
We have been very constructive in our dealings with the US on the
Afghan issue. We have supported the international military intervention
in Afghanistan and the ouster of the Taliban regime from power. We have
been sensitive to US equities and concerns in Afghanistan despite
serious provocations from Pakistan, including the terrorist attacks
against the Indian Embassy in Kabul and India-related targets there. We
continue to be willing to work with the US in a positive and mutually
beneficial way in Afghanistan.
On June 27, US Special Envoy for Afghanistan Ambassador Dobbins, sent
to India to re-assure us about the US initiative to negotiate with the
Taliban, did not convey the impression that the US was playing a sure
hand, was confident about its strategy and had alternative options in
view.
He said the US hoped for presidential candidates in Afghanistan that
have cross-ethnic appeal. The US was not entering the dialogue with the
Taliban with any certainty that it will start, how it will develop,
whether progress will be made and whether it will result in diminished
violence and peace. The Taliban had to say whether they will accept the
conditions and meet the US and the Afghan High Peace Council. The issue
of terrorism had to be directly addressed and that a pre-condition for
starting talks was a statement that the Taliban will begin to distance
themselves from the Al Qaida, but reaching an agreement will require
concretely severing all ties. Ending violence was not a pre-condition
for talks, but an agreement had to include cessation of hostilities and
respect for the Afghan Constitution. He concluded by stating that it was
not certain that negotiations will end the war but that it was worth
trying.
Such a tentative and uncertain reading of the situation, without a
clear and confident road map, justifies our concerns about the wisdom of
taking a step to politically accommodate such a retrograde and
obscurantist force as the Taliban with the assistance of the Pakistani
military whose disruptive strategic ambitions in Afghanistan are in fact
at the root of the problem.
(Based on a talk recently delivered on the Capitol Hill, Washington)
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