|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, September 27, 2001 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Science & Tech |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
Opinion
| Next
Encircling the Taliban
THE DIABOLICAL TALIBAN may have now suffered an almost
irreversible isolation except for a singular jarring note of
indirect support from Pakistan. As the notoriously barbaric
`rulers' of Afghanistan, a failed state that borders Pakistan,
the Taliban regime has found itself in the dock since September
11 when America came under a cataclysmic terrorist offensive.
With the United States losing no time to call upon the Taliban to
hand over Osama bin Laden, the prime suspect who is also its
honoured ``guest'', the fanatical `government' in Kabul could not
have asked for more trouble. As on September 11, the Taliban was
recognised by only three Islamic countries. However, with Saudi
Arabia now joining the United Arab Emirates in snapping
diplomatic links with the Taliban, the renegade Afghan regime's
residual lifeline of sorts is the one that Pakistan might choose
to sustain or snuff out in a rapidly changing international
environment. The traditional cross-currents within the Islamic
bloc have had much to do with the Taliban's diplomatic alienation
from 1996 when it captured power in Kabul, the Afghan capital
ravaged by external interventions and internecine wars. Now, it
is plain logic that the UAE and Saudi Arabia have broken ranks
with the Taliban in the specific context of America's newly
internationalised concerns. Moreover, it is doubtful whether the
larger international community will shed any tears over the
Taliban's downfall if that were to happen as a consequence of the
current U.S. efforts to track down Osama bin Laden. Yet, if
Pakistan appears to have sounded a discordant note, the U.S. may
indeed find that it has something to mull over.
Pakistan's Foreign Minister, Mr. Abdul Sattar, is of the view
that any external support for the anti-Taliban factions within
Afghanistan might only prove to be a recipe for disaster in that
impoverished country at this critical juncture. His warning of
this kind is being interpreted in the West as the sign of a
possible rift in the nascent strategic understanding which the
U.S. reached with Pakistan in the context of the terrorist
outrage of September 11 and the American efforts to avenge it. In
one sense, the international community's suspicions regarding
Islamabad's benevolent links with the Taliban have virtually been
confirmed by the circumstances in which Pakistan joined hands
with the U.S. prior to Mr. Sattar's latest warning. Now, it is
obvious that Islamabad, which is increasingly befriended by the
many allies of the U.S., wants to ensure that no regime inimical
to Pakistan's interests comes to power in Kabul in the context of
any U.S.-inspired destabilisation of the Taliban. This certainly
is of much strategic salience to Pakistan which is still not sure
about how a U.S.-India equation might evolve in line with
Washington's pledges of a truly international campaign against
universal terrorism.
In all, Pakistan still draws the distinction between a campaign
to trace the trail of Osama bin Laden as a suspect and an all-out
strike against the Taliban. This may have dismayed large sections
of the international community. But the U.S. seems to keep its
options open at this stage about any move to dislodge the
Taliban. This may not be due to the apparent differences between
Pakistan and the U.S. over the Taliban's culpability. More
important is America's new refrain about an aversion to ``nation-
building'' (the search for an alternative to the Taliban in this
case). This certainly has nothing to do with the dubious claims
of the Afghans about having defeated the Soviet superpower on
their own. Yet, if the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance seems to be
the only relevant existing alternative to the Taliban within the
Afghan spectrum, a note of caution will be in order. The
Alliance, made up mostly of Afghan minorities, should first be
seen to live up to the pan-Afghan credentials of its recently
assassinated leader, Ahmad Shah Masood.
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : Opinion Next : Muddying a quagmire | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Science & Tech |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyright © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|