Asim,
"Its not that Pakistan doesn't want you to reconcile with the Taliban."
I'm not convinced that the American government is involved in any meaningful discussions or even wants to be at this point. I've left enough links and contravening quotes to make it clear that's very much up in the air.
"It just wants to ensure that the new setup will not include India or will not be used by India to wage war with Pakistan."
Afghanistan will be the final determinant with whom it maintains formal relations. As usual, Pakistan might very well have either lost sight of that or, more likely, be trying to marginalize such. That won't wash as the whole point of U.N./ISAF involvement is to ultimately raise forth an INDEPENDANT Afghanistan with control over its foreign policy.
This drives home once again the importance of the trust deficit that exists between the Afghan and Pakistani governments. Karzai, a pashtun, is president now (however much you and others hate him). What happens the day a tajik, hazara,turkomen, uzbek, or baloch is elected President?
The best assurance that Pakistan may have in mollifying Indian influence or amplifying its own lies in properly mobilizing the pashtun vote.
Properly is key as Pakistan has no more right to meddle in Afghan affairs than Afghanistan does WRT Pakistani affairs. The best key to that is to suppress the taliban revolt sufficient to allow pashtuns the space to participate politically in Afghan politics. Simultaneously, it's my personal recommendation that Pakistan begin seriously mending fences with the tajik, uzbek, turkomen, hazara, and baloch communities in Afghanistan.
"If Biradar is such a key player to the reconciliation process, then all the negotiations would have to happen under Pakistani eyes and ears."
Assuming, that is, Baradar has a direct role in such. Were I him, regardless of personal desires one way or another, I'd likely be far removed from direct involvement only to avoid the taint that comes with such from every direction. There's a purpose in life for underlings. That is one of them.
"It could also be the other way round. If we knew we were being circumvented we went in for the kill and the jointness is being overplayed."
Pakistan's past involvement with the taliban is now crystalline. Minimally, there's no longer any doubt that their leadership is on your lands. Maximum, you've provided for such. Either is damning to all who've endured the pain caused by sanctuary. It's a REAL thing to the families of dead afghans and soldiers.
Pakistan's best hope is to be a GOOD FAITH partner in getting Afghanistan on its feet successfully and doing everything it can upfront and visibly so that all know it. As Zraver said here, the blowback from more disingenuity will be catastrophic because there's no hiding the past now. Something tells me that Kiyani is VERY, VERY smart and has factored that into this and-make no mistake, this has Kiyani's hand all over it.
"As long the other non-reconciliatory Taliban know that Biradar has been "handled" they are less likely to listen to him.
Depends on how big a fish Biradar is."
With all the speculation, let's assume the most obvious at this point and that seems to be also the simplest- negotiations aren't crap as the taliban are still run by Omar and Baradar. Baradar is a GOOD lieutenant and concurs with Omar's non-negotiating stance as well as prosecuting the fight as he believes they are WINNING and have no reason to negotiate a part of pie that he believe will fall
en toto to the afghan taliban.
A (the) key operational commander has been removed.
NOW look at matters and consider all before you-while a whole bunch of nobodies are gabbing and going nowhere there's a war to be fought on both sides. Suddenly a Pakistani government that was cozy with the enemy has turned on them and taken THE MAN off the street. Ignoring all the other triple current speculation, that simple fact says sanctuary isn't so sanctified any longer.
Red teaming the war (that's what S-2s do and google if unfamiliar) means that the taliban must now account for the liklihood that their rear area has gone to sh!t overnight. You don't move on Baradar without realizing its a game-changer for all involved. The afghan taliban reaction is to immediately assume that P.A./ISI/FC/state police are no longer friendly/neutral but enemies. Taliban operations inside Pakistan go DEEP undercover and into a highly protective mode while they figure out their next move. If smart, they've long anticipated such a possibility, know where their cover lies, and have their contingency plans dusted off. Those plans may include opening new fronts in their rear (i.e. YOU) to test your resolve. Frankly, they've little choice if ol' S-2 is correct in his long-bandied assumption here that the afghan insurgency holds no traction without sanctuary.
It's either that or game over and cut the best deal with all concerned possible.
Thanks.