|
Last
month's peace accord in North Waziristan is the latest point of
discord between Islamabad and Kabul. Their uneasy relations have
entered a new phase of uncertainty on account of Kabul's strong
belief that the agreement between pro-Taliban tribal militants and
the Pakistan government would strengthen the Afghan Taliban fighters
resisting US-led coalition forces across the border in Afghanistan
and further destabilise the war-ravaged country.
A
two-day visit by President General Pervez Musharraf to Afghanistan
produced a friendly worded joint communiqué, but it failed
to break the ice and overcome the trust deficit that characterises
the relations between the two neighbouring Islamic countries. Pleasant
words were exchanged at receptions and press conferences by President
Musharraf and President Hamid Karzai, and it was felt they would
henceforth be able to work jointly to tackle challenges facing their
respective countries.
It
didn't happen, and a worried US President, George W. Bush, concerned
that the deteriorating ties between the Afghan and Pakistan governments
would undermine America's war on terror, intervened to bring the
two presidents together over a dinner meeting in the White House.
Prior to that encounter in Washington, presidents Musharraf and
Karzai had indulged in verbal sparring with the Pakistani leader
criticising Mr Karzai for his "ostrich-like" attitude
for ignoring the ground realities in Afghanistan and the Afghan
president warning General Musharraf that by backing the Taliban
he was nourishing snakes that would eventually harm his own country.
It seems President Bush was able to convince the Afghan and Pakistani
leaders to put an end to their war of words and instead discuss
contentious issues at the diplomatic level, away from the glare
of the media.
An
important decision taken at the White House dinner-cum-summit was
to hold jirgas on the Afghan and Pakistani sides of the Durand Line
border, in a bid to strengthen the traditionally powerful tribal
elders weakened by the rise of pro-Taliban elements and wean the
tribes and borderlands away from the militants. Both General Musharraf
and Mr Karzai would address the tribal jirgas. However, a timetable
of these events is yet to be announced. The jirgas would require
heavy security in view of the fact that both the leaders have survived
attempts on their lives and are still on the hit-list of the militants
linked to Al-Qaeda and Taliban. In fact, security concerns would
compromise the representative status of the jirgas and could end
up making them restricted affairs. It is also debatable how much
these jirgas would achieve in countering the Taliban influence on
both sides of the Pak-Afghan border and win back the Pashtun-inhabited
areas from the control of the tribal militants.
The
proposal for holding the joint jirgas was made by Mr Karzai, who
apparently believes it would help in turning the tide against the
resurgent Taliban. In a way, the suggestion neutralises the proposal
often made by President Musharraf and his ministers that the border
between the two countries should be fenced to prevent cross-border
infiltration by Taliban fighters, criminals and smugglers. The proposal
was made in frustration due to repeated allegations by the Afghan
government and its western sponsors that Taliban and other anti-west
fighters were infiltrating Afghanistan from Pakistan to attack the
US-led coalition forces. Kabul has rejected the proposal by arguing
that fencing was not the proper solution to check infiltration.
Instead, it has been asking Islamabad to capture Al-Qaeda and Taliban
figures hiding in Pakistan, destroy their sanctuaries and "do
more" to curb their movement across the Durand Line. Both Islamabad
and Kabul are aware that fencing their long and porous border, which
is about 2,500 kilometres long and sited in formidable terrain,
is impractical. Moreover, the fencing proposal doesn't have the
support of most Afghans and Pakistanis living in the border areas.
They often belong to the same Pashtun tribe and have been enjoying
unhindered rights to travel across the shared border without visas
since Pakistan's creation in 1947.
The Taliban are aware of the plans being drawn up in western
capitals and in Kabul and Islamabad to tackle their growing resistance.
If one were to believe their commanders and spokesmen, they are
enjoying the spectacle of major world powers becoming unnerved due
to their ability to survive against heavy odds and yet make life
difficult for some of the most high-tech and powerful armies on
our planet. Top Taliban military commander Mulla Dadullah, who uses
an artificial leg after having lost the real one in fighting the
Northern Alliance in Afghanistan's earlier civil war, greeted NATO's
recent decision to send more troops to the Taliban-infested southern
provinces by remarking that his fighters would now have even more
targets to attack. He and other Taliban commanders have often pointed
out that foreign soldiers become vulnerable to their attacks when
they move in convoys or carry out patrols away from their heavily
defended airbases. It is when the troops are on the move that Taliban
fighters are able to carry out suicide attacks by ramming explosives-filled
vehicles into military convoys and undertake roadside bombings triggered
by remote-controlled improvised explosive devices (IEDs).
The
Taliban know for sure the difficulties facing NATO in getting member
states to contribute 2,500 extra troops for the six southern provinces
where it took command from US forces in August 2006. In fact, they
increased the intensity and number of their attacks when British,
Canadian and Dutch troops were stationed in Helmand, Kandahar and
Urozgan provinces as part of NATO's deployment in the area in a
bid to scare away the new arrivals and cause maximum casualties
to influence public opinion in these countries against sending more
soldiers to Afghanistan. The strategy has worked to certain extent
as opposition in Britain, Canada and the Netherlands to their troops'
deployment in southern Afghanistan is growing. Already sections
of the media in all three countries and influential politicians
in Canada and the Netherlands are demanding return of their soldiers
from the six dangerous southern Afghan provinces. Though NATO may
eventually get the required number of troops, it remains to be seen
how much of an impact the new deployment and arrival of more aircraft
and weapons would make on the Taliban ability to fight an effective
guerilla war. The NATO has also tried to raise confidence in its
capacity to successfully execute its first military mission outside
Europe by deciding to operate all over Afghanistan, including the
eastern provinces where 12,000 US soldiers would come under its
command. Its performance would be keenly watched not only by Islamic
militants, who appear determined to wage a long war against the
US and its western allies, but also by China and Russia, both increasingly
wary of NATO's intrusion into regions close to their borders.
In such perilous circumstances, the strategies to be adopted to
defeat Al-Qaeda and Taliban in Afghanistan and the region assume
added significance. Pakistan has finally taken the peaceful and
less risky route by negotiating armistice with homegrown Islamic
militants in North Waziristan and is now advising Afghanistan to
try it as well. The Pakistan military, for the last three years,
used a combination of force and peaceful means to tackle militancy
first in South Waziristan and later in North Waziristan. As military
operations became the preferred method to solve the problems, it
alienated most of the tribal populations and contributed to the
level of support for Al-Qaeda and Taliban. In the process, the Pakistan
Army and the paramilitary Frontier Corps lost about 600 soldiers,
more than those suffered by US and NATO troops in Afghanistan. The
government, with the military's backing, had earlier signed three
peace agreements in South Waziristan, but the one in North Waziristan
is getting greater media coverage and is being subjected to closer
international scrutiny due to the rapidly spreading insurgency in
Afghanistan and the rising death toll of western and Afghan troops
in Taliban attacks.
The
peace deals in both South Waziristan and North Waziristan have brought
relative peace to the two tribal agencies and halted attacks against
the military and government installations. But they have also empowered
the militants, enhancing their status in the tribal society and
prompting the common people to approach the pro-Taliban ulema and
military commanders instead of the government to settle local disputes
and solve their problems. The government accepted every demand of
the militants including releasing their men, returning their weapons
and vehicles, pulling troops back to their forts and bases, dismantling
checkpoints and agreeing to compensating all tribesmen for human
and material losses suffered by them in military operations. In
return, the government has got mere promises from militants not
to harbour foreign fighters, stop attacks in Pakistani territory
and across the border in Afghanistan, and refrain from setting up
a parallel administration in North Waziristan and exporting Talibanisation
to the adjacent settled districts. The 10-member joint commission
of government officials and tribal elders would have a tough job
ensuring that these promises are fulfilled and monitoring the faithful
implementation of the accord. It made its first move recently by
taking into its custody 10 men from the Lowara Mandi border village
in North Waziristan following a Taliban attack against US-led coalition
troops in the neighboring Khost province in southern Afghanistan
and investigating their involvement in the incident. Most of them
were subsequently freed when no evidence against them was found.
The
accord has also come under strain due to the continued targetted
killings in North Waziristan in violation of an important clause
in the deal. Four targetted killings have been reported in the past
three weeks after signing of the accord and all were blamed for
spying for the US. As such, accusing fingers are being pointed to
the militants because they have been eliminating all those deemed
to be working for the US military. Another contentious issue was
the opening of a Taliban office in Miramshah by local militants
to curb crimes and settle disputes. It was closed a few days later
when the government realised this could develop into a sort of parallel
administration in North Waziristan. Another issue that would continue
to haunt the government is the impression that the peace deal in
North Waziristan became possible when the Afghan Taliban advised
their Pakistani counterparts to sign the accord and stop fighting
the Pakistan Army. The influence that Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad
Omar is able to exercise in Waziristan and other Pashtun-populated
areas in NWFP and Balochistan must remain a source of concern for
the Pakistan government.
The
Afghan government, apparently on being prodded by the US, conditionally
accepted the North Waziristan peace agreement. However, Karzai has
made it clear he would "wait-and-see" if the accord is
able to check cross-border infiltrations. There is every reason
to believe that both Kabul and Washington would eventually turn
against the peace deal. Already, an unnamed US military official
in Afghanistan has claimed that American troops in the southern
provinces adjoining Waziristan have seen a threefold increase in
attacks since the signing of the accord on September 5. Though Pakistan
has dismissed this claim and denied any cross-border infiltrations
from North Waziristan, it seems the US, NATO and Afghan military
would increasingly level such charges to put pressure on Islamabad
either to scrap the accord or ensure its strict implementation.
None of those options would guarantee an end to attacks against
the Americans and their allies in Afghanistan. It is obvious that
this region would remain destabilised for a long time on account
of the ongoing battle between the alliance of Al-Qaeda and Taliban
and the US-led coalition forces.
|