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India being left out of Afghan matrix
Gets Kudos For Massive Civilian Assistance, But May Have Little Role In Future
Indrani Bagchi | TNN
New Delhi: The US and UK want out of Afghanistan so they are looking for friendly Taliban to do deals with. Pakistan, Taliban and al-Qaida too want the US out of Afghanistan so they can go back to doing what they were doing before the Americans invaded.
Increasingly, Hamid Karzai, sullen and soured with the US, too wants to do a deal with the Taliban. That leaves India with the biggest civilian assistance presence in Afghanistan which doesnt want the Taliban back in the saddle. But while everybody waxes eloquent about Indias assistance, nobody gives it the time of day when it comes to Afghanistans future.
At the London conference for Afghanistan starting on Thursday, the focus will be on re-energising a programme of reconciliation and reintegration of the Taliban within the establishment. Karzai supports this, while the Pakistani ISI is ready with its list of Taliban contacts to become the honest mediator between the west and Taliban, increasing their cache and their nuisance value. The new development has sparked off a debate within the MEA and PMO about Indias role and aim in Afghanistan.
In a sign of how serious the west has become, on Wednesday, the UN removed five top Taliban commanders from its sanctions list to make a reconciliation easier. They include former foreign minister Abdul Wakil Muttawakil, former deputy foreign affairs minister Abdul Hakim, former deputy commerce minister Faiz Mohammad Faizan, a former official under the Taliban Shams-us-Safa and Mohammad Musa. They were under travel bans and assets freeze under UNSCR 1267.
In a recent interview, Mullah Omars former trainer, retired brigadier from the Pakistan army Sultan Tarar, who goes by the name Colonel Imam, clearly said Omar was open to talks with the west. If a sincere message comes from the Americans, these people (the Taliban) are very bighearted. They will listen. But if you try to divide the Taliban, youll fail. Anyone who leaves Mullah Omar is no more Taliban. Such people are just trying to deceive, said Tarar.
The conference will announce the setting up of a big international fund possibly $500 million managed by the UK and Japan to pay lower level Taliban fighters to switch sides.