Afghanistan: US Exit Is With Caveats
Written by M. K.
BHADRAKUMAR on 24/04/2021
More in Afghanistan:
·
US Has To Accept The Obscurity In Afganistan22/04/2021
Final US-Troops Withdrawal From Afghanistan17/04/2021
·
Exiting Afghanistan: Biden Sets The Date16/04/2021
The United States and NATO are yet to begin the withdrawal of their forces
from Afghanistan but the eyes are cast over the horizon at what lies after the
‘forever war’ formally ends. The US exit strategy in Afghanistan assumes the
look of that random arbitrariness of a lottery that was the case with its Iraq
war ending inconclusively in 2011.
Evidence is piling that the US president Joe Biden’s declaration of April
14 on total troop withdrawal by September 11 may not be the last
word on that topic. The Pentagon commanders and the CIA seem to be “tweaking”
the decision.
On the day after Biden spoke, the New York Times reported under
the byline of two of the paper’s noted senior correspondents that “the
Pentagon, American spy agencies and Western allies are refining plans to deploy
a less visible but still potent force in the region to prevent the country
(Afghanistan) from again becoming a terrorist base… Pentagon is discussing with
allies where to reposition forces.”
The report mentioned that although NATO forces would formally withdraw,
Turkey, a member of the alliance, “is leaving troops behind who could help the
C.I.A. collect intelligence.” Besides, some of the Pentagon contractors
(mercenaries) who include 6000 American personnel could also be redeployed.
The Times report also disclosed that “Pentagon actually has about 1000 more
troops on the ground there than it has publicly acknowledged. The murky
accounting results from some Special Operations forces having been put “off the
books” … to include some elite Army Rangers, who work under both the Pentagon and
the C.I.A.” Pentagon might even slip these undisclosed troops into Afghanistan
after the departure deadline of September 11.
On the same day as the Times report appeared, Secretary of State Antony
Blinken, speaking from Kabul, confirmed to the media after talks with Afghan
government officials that “even when our troops come home, our partnership with
Afghanistan will continue. Our security partnership will endure. There’s strong
bipartisan support (in Washington) for that commitment to the Afghan Security
Forces.”
Blinken sidestepped the scale of future CIA presence in Afghanistan — the
tricky part. But Moscow solved the riddle when the Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson
Maria Zakharova alleged on April 17 that “there are persistent reports that the
US is itself giving support to terrorist groups, including ISIS, in
Afghanistan, and that Washington plans to build up the presence of its
intelligence service in the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan as it withdraws its
troops from that country.”
US to withdraw troops from Afghanistan by Sept 11, 2021
Zakharova said, “these circumstances are giving rise to serious concern not
only in Russia but in other countries of the region as well. We are looking
forward to receiving explanations from the American side.” Indeed, this is not
the first time that Russia has alleged a nexus between the US intelligence and
ISIS to destabilise the Central Asian region.
In fact, on April 19, Russia conducted a major air strike at
a remote region near Palmyra in Syria against camps for terrorists in which 200
terrorists were killed. The Russian statement alleged that terrorists were
being trained in the US-controlled al-Tanf zone in the border region in
southeast Syria straddling the Baghdad-Damascus highway.
Earlier, in January, Shanghai Cooperation Organization officials were also
quoted as voicing concern over
“growing” numbers of ISIS fighters being transferred from Syria and Iraq to
Afghanistan.
Suffice to say, even as the US and NATO are preparing to formally withdraw
forces from Afghanistan, Pentagon and CIA are calibrating their future
operations in the country, notionally to assist Afghan security forces but in
reality, in pursuit of the larger regional interests of Washington, which today
narrow down principally to the containment of Russia and China. The Afghan
state structure is in meltdown and the US special forces and CIA operatives
would have operational freedom to do they want.
Interestingly, after his return from Kabul, Blinken announced on
Tuesday an “additional civilian assistance” of $300 million to the Kabul set-up
“as part of our commitment to invest in and support the Afghan people.” This is
laughable, coming as it does at a juncture when, as Washington Post reported from Kabul recently,
“The scramble for peace in Afghanistan is fracturing Kabul’s political
leadership and undermining the U.S.-backed government.” Is Blinken so
hopelessly out of touch with the situation in Kabul? In reality, this appears
to be Washington’s gift to the power brokers in the Afghan security
establishment.
The bottom line is that the CIA is pushing ahead with its blueprint to use
Afghanistan as a staging post to destabilise Russia, Iran and China. On the
other hand, the postponement of
the high-level conference in Istanbul from 24th April to 4th May means that the
peace process has been derailed and the Doha Pact’s May 1 deadline for US troop
withdrawal stands erased. Put differently, Washington has shifted the goal post
and has also in the bargain granted a fresh lease of life to the Ashraf Ghani
regime.
Perhaps, India is the only friend Washington genuinely has in the region today
to lean on. Blinken telephoned External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar on
Monday “to reaffirm the importance of the US-India relationship and cooperation
on regional security issues.” The White House readout claimed
that the two ministers “agreed to close and frequent coordination” over the
Afghanistan situation.
Indeed, at a hearing at the House Armed
Services Committee in Washington on Tuesday, the commander
of the US Central Command Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr. has said that for
conducting future operations in Afghanistan, the US will “firstly require heavy
intelligence support” and American diplomats are working now “to find new
places in the region” to base the intelligence assets.
Surely, Pakistan cannot be one of those “new places”. Against this
complicated backdrop, Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi arrived
in Tehran on Wednesday for talks with the Iranian leaders. The press reports
from Tehran speak of Iran’s willingness to cooperate with Pakistan (here and here). But it is
no secret that the two countries have different outlooks, interests and
priorities in Afghanistan.
Having said that, both countries might also sense today a certain
congruence of interests in the emergent situation, with the Afghan peace
process in suspended animation, the Doha Pact in cold storage and the Taliban
resentful, and the US finessing its future options. The extent to which Tehran
and Islamabad can reconcile their approaches and coordinate will no doubt
impact the future course of events. Conceivably, that is also what Moscow
and Beijing would expect.
As things stand, the continuing instability in Afghanistan and the
derailment of the peace process can only work to Washington’s advantage to
reset the clock and rearrange its pawns and proxies on the chessboard for a
fresh game to begin. The prospect for an inclusive interim government in Kabul
has receded lately. Certainly, Pakistan has been under pressure to restrain the
Taliban.
Can it be mere coincidence that terrorists chose this moment to stage
a well-planned, professionally executed attack in Quetta,
shattering the country’s internal situation? Who stands to gain? There are no
easy answers. A sense of déjà vu would only be natural.
Source: The Indian Punchline
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