What's new

Russian envoy: US invasion of Afghanistan was aimed at spying on Pakistan, China, Russia

Khanate

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Sep 16, 2016
Messages
2,926
Reaction score
7
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
Russian envoy: US invasion of Afghanistan was aimed at spying on Pakistan, China, Russia
Dawood Rehman | January 3, 2017
XrgYbpP.jpg


KABUL – The United States, wary of Pakistan’s nuclear program, invaded Afghanistan to keep an eye on Pakistan, China and Russia, a senior Russian diplomat has said.

Zamir Kabulov, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s special envoy to Afghanistan and director of the Foreign Ministry’s Second Asian Department, said in an interview that the number of U.S military bases in Afghanistan and the United States’ continued presence was a matter of concern to Russia.

WDH6ImC.jpg


Speaking to Turkey’s Anadolu Agency, he said: “In Turkey, the U.S. has only one military base but, in Afghanistan, they have the right to use nine big military bases plus almost 10 more.” “Why?” he asked.

In response to his own question, he said this was a matter of concern for Russia adding that if Russia was to do the same in Mexico, “it would be disturbing for America.” “Why are they doing that after all this 15-year-old anti-terror rhetoric in Afghanistan? They stupidly try to say that “it is for training.”

“Come on! You are not talking to stupid or foolish people. We know the reasons [for the ongoing U.S. military presence in Afghanistan]. Russia will never tolerate this,” he said.

On October 7, 2001, the United States, supported by some NATO countries including the United Kingdom and Australia, as well as other allies, began an invasion of Afghanistan under Operation Enduring Freedom. The invasion was launched to capture Osama bin Laden, who was accused of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

q1bgpIF.jpg


Mr. Kabulov inferred that after being kicked out of Iran in 1979, the U.S needed a central Asian base, hence Afghanistan being an available option. Having bases in Afghanistan, the U.S was close to Russia, China, Iran and Pakistan among others, hence keeping an eye on the neighboring countries.

“Having this infrastructure as [a] basis, America will need two to four weeks to redeploy up to 100,000 soldiers on the same bases.

“Such a [move] would not be an invasion in terms of a U.S.-Afghanistan bilateral security agreement.

“We warned Afghans from the very beginning it [the bilateral agreement] may have implications for our bilateral relations if Americans use this infrastructure against our national interest. They said the Americans had promised. Well, we know the value of American promises” the Russian added.


FZnakC7.jpg


On the subject of incoming US president Donald Trump, he said: “We expect that Donald Trump will tailor a new American approach to Afghanistan and he should address several issues which are a matter of concern not only to Russia, but important to regional actors, like China, Iran, Pakistan, and others.”


K9qRwwg.jpg


Speaking on past relations with Afghanistan, Kabulov said that destabilization in the country following the 1979 Soviet invasion might have led to the emergence of radical groups such as al-Qaeda and Daesh.

“One of the main slogans of support for Afghanistan [during the invasion] was that the Soviet Union came to eliminate Islam. So it was a good enough slogan,” said Kabulov.

Kabulov said such slogans encouraged many people to go to fight in Afghanistan and do their jihad there.

“Osama bin Laden, a Yemeni-origin Saudi citizen, and many others who were unhappy with things going on in the Muslim world wanted to meet the challenges, including the ones that they saw as a threat to Islam.”

“Afghanistan became a convenient place for like-minded people to meet,” he said, adding that those people “added even more destabilization” to the country.


xTJ6nN8.jpg


About the Taliban today being a local entity or an internationally managed group, Kabulov said it is predominately a local force.

“First of all, the Taliban is not homogenous. Within the Taliban, there are different wings with almost different ideological backgrounds.”

He said the Taliban was speaking “the same language that Daesh speaks today.”

“The same scenario, same ideology, different people,” he says, recalling seeing an “Islamic caliphate” map in Afghanistan which he said included Afghanistan, some countries in The Middle East, parts of India, Central Asia, and reached “almost up to our suburbs of Moscow.”

“Within today’s Taliban there are very influential groups whose ideology is more radical, closer to Daesh.”

Last month, Russia’s ambassador to Afghanistan, Alexander Mantyskiy, announced that the Russian government had made a diplomatic outreach to the Taliban’s leaders. In a press conference, Mantyskiy countered international criticism of Russia’s Taliban links by insisting that Moscow’s contacts with the extremist group were limited and aimed at ensuring the safety of Russian civilians.

In December, Russia also snubbed India, which poses as a regional bully after building closer ties with US-backed government in Afghanistan, during the ‘Heart of Asia’ conference in Amritsar.

Zamir Kabulov, in his address at the conference, said the allegations made against Pakistan by India and Afghanistan were totally baseless.

“Let it be known that the allegations’ game needs to be stopped and that criticizing Pakistan is wrong,” the Russian envoy said while terming Sartaj’s speech as constructive and friendly.

He also revealed that Russia is working on building cordial relationships with the countries within the region.

Source: Daily Pakistan,
Andolu Agency (Full Interview), Tolo News
 
Last edited:
. . . .
Yeah just for the sake of keeping an eye the US spent hundreds of billions of dollars and several thousands solider lives. Typical Russian mindset.


America plunging "hundreds of billions of dollars" at the cost of "several thousands solider lives" to protect mountains in Afghanistan from little more than goat herders is a very sound thesis.
 
Last edited:
. .
The Russian envoy and others conveniently forget or pretend to forget one simple question.

What is the Taliban regime, accepted U.S request, arrested and handed over OBL and other top leadership of Al-Qaeda to them. Then will the U.S and NATO ever get an excuse to invade the country ?? NO

As far as I know Mr. Bush already told the same thing to "Taliban" and "Pakistan", Either you are with us or against us.

One behaved like an emotional fool and the other was logical enough to get rid of U.S warth. :p:

Zamir Kabulov has recently made some very bold statements. US, India & NUG Of Kabul must understand that the world is no longer uni polar.

And Mr. Zamir Kabulov must also under the fact that not matter if the world is bipolar or multi-polar, all of them will have enough stake in India, so much so that no pole can undermine India. :)
 
. . . .
America plunging "hundreds of billions of dollars" at the cost of "several thousands solider lives" to protect the mountains of Afghanistan from little more than goat herders is a very sound thesis.

Perhaps if you assume so.
 
.
Yeah just for the sake of keeping an eye the US spent hundreds of billions of dollars and several thousands solider lives. Typical Russian mindset.

What is your point? It is not that American havnt kiled their own in the past for sake of bigger games. US has no further reason to stay in afghanistan. They are only there to destablise regional countries via their pet warlords in kabul. On one hand US has bombed the shit out of Iraq, libya, syria to destroy ISIS whereas on the other hand they tolerate them in afghanistan. It very clear what is the end game of americans.
 
.
Russia looks like hell bent on taking the "great game" to a completely new level. I don't know how the US policymakers can counter that. Even the British, with full Indian resources, had to compromise. With 20t loan and counting up, options are exponentiallly going down. Maybe time has come to repeat after Churchill - we're fighting against God..
 
.
What is your point? It is not that American havnt kiled their own in the past for sake of bigger games. US has no further reason to stay in afghanistan. They are only there to destablise regional countries via their pet warlords in kabul. On one hand US has bombed the shit out of Iraq, libya, syria to destroy ISIS whereas on the other hand they tolerate them in afghanistan. It very clear what is the end game of americans.

Lets elaborate that game further, Americans were killed by Taliban and those Taliban are supported by Pakistan despite acknowledgement of that by the US, the US never took action against elements residing in Pakistan which are a direct threat to their soldiers lives. Now if it's really a game then it's played by both Americans and Pakistanis.
 
.
The Russian envoy and others conveniently forget or pretend to forget one simple question.

What is the Taliban regime, accepted U.S request, arrested and handed over OBL and other top leadership of Al-Qaeda to them. Then will the U.S and NATO ever get an excuse to invade the country ?? NO

As far as I know Mr. Bush already told the same thing to "Taliban" and "Pakistan", Either you are with us or against us.

One behaved like an emotional fool and the other was logical enough to get rid of U.S warth. :p:

In 1999 a Taliban ambassador to the United States in an interview told Charlie Ross that the Taliban and Afghanistan are a sovereign nation, they will not behave like a colony, if the US thinks that OBL was involved in terror activities then first they recognize the sovereignty of Afghanistan and provide evidences for such crimes and the Taliban would personally hang him and hand over his body to the west, the US instead ignored this proposition and it was repeated again by the Taliban after 9/11, the US again ignored it and instead went to war.

OBL and war on terror was nothing more than an excuse, the invasion of Afghanistan, later Iraq's invasion on a lie and invasion of other middle east countries was all together a completely different ulterior motive.




 
Last edited:
.
Back
Top Bottom