Need for
Dialogue with
the Haqqani Militants
Sajjad Shaukat
It is of particular attention that on September 17, 2012, in a rare
interview by telephone from an undisclosed location, leader of the Haqqani
militant network
In the past few years, a number of regional and international
conferences held with a view to bringing stability and peace in Afghanistan
before the foreign troops complete withdrawal from that country in 2014.
Another major purpose of these forums was also to conclude a peace deal with the
Afghan militants.
After the Tokyo conference on Afghanistan, held in earlier July, this
year, efforts to convince Taliban for talks with the Kabul government have been
expedited and Pakistan has been requested to play an important task in this
regard. During the tripartite meeting in Kabul on July 19, this year, British
Prime Minister David Cameron and Afghan President Hamid Karzai met Pakistan’s
Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf, and reiterated Islamabad’s assistance for
durable peace and stability in Afghanistan. They fully backed Pakistan to help
arrange meetings between Afghan and Taliban representatives.
Rangin Spanta, the national security adviser to Afghan President Karzai
disclosed on August 12 that two months ago, an Afghan delegation had held secret
talks with Taliban former second in command Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar who is
under detention in Pakistan, but Islamabad denied the statement.
However, in a bid to win Taliban’s support for reconciliation,
President Karzai called upon their leader Mullah Omer to take part in the
coming elections. On the other side, the Taliban were willing to resume talks
with the US, but had refused dialogue with Karzai whom they consider colonial
puppet.
But at the end of June, in Kyoto, Japan, an active member of the Taliban
Shura (council) held talks with Masoom Stanakzai, a leading member of the
Afghan High Peace Council and adviser to President Karzai.
Earlier, the Qatar-based talks with America were suspended because US
President Barack Obama did not release five Taliban detainees to participate in
peace negotiations as a pre-condition by the Afghan militants.
Meanwhile, BBC reported on August 1 that despite the positive Taliban
statements, Obama administration did not want to say anything conciliatory
towards the Taliban because US presidential elections are near.
Otherwise, US along with other western countries is fully supporting
Karzai-led regime to commence peace deal with the Afghan Taliban with the help
of Pakistan.
In fact, exclusion of the Haqqani militants from the dialogue will
prove fruitless, further increasing the intractable issues of Afghanistan. In
this context, American top officials have continuously blamed Pakistan Army and
country’s intelligence agency, ISI for supporting North Waziristan-based Haqqani
network for killing Americans in Afghanistan. In June, this year, US Defence
Secretary of State, Leon Panetta repeatedly stated that drone attacks would
continue on safe havens of terrorists in Pakistan, while accusing the Haqqani
insurgents for some of the deadliest attacks in Afghanistan. In this respect,
US high officials seek to set aside the fact that US-led NATO forces have
failed in coping with the resistance of Afghan Taliban who are fighting a war
of liberation against the occupying forces. In fact, America and other NATO
countries want to make Pakistan a scapegoat of their defeat in Afghanistan.
It is of particular attention that on September 17, 2012, in a rare
interview by telephone from an undisclosed location, leader of the Haqqani
militant network, Sirajuddin Haqqani revealed that the group has become so
confident after battlefield gains in Afghanistan that “it no longer has
sanctuaries in Pakistan, and instead, felt secure inside Afghanistan.”
Particularly, Pakistan’s Federal Interior Minister Rehman Malik
remarked on July 12 that Haqqani network was an Afghan entity and Pakistan had
nothing to do with it.
It is mentionable that during her trip to Pakistan on October 20, 2011,
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had emphasised Islamabad to help and
“encourage Taliban militants to enter negotiations in good faith,” adding that
“Pakistan has a critical role to play in supporting Afghan reconciliation and
ending the conflict.”
Viewing Hillary Clinton’s efforts with skepticism, a senior Haqqani
commander told Reuters on October 25, 2011 that the Afghan Haqqani group would
not take part in any peace negotiations with the United States. He disclosed,
“Americans have made several attempts for talks which we rejected because we
are united to liberate our homeland.”
Notably, US President Barack Obama signed on August 10, the Haqqani
network Terrorist Designation Act of 2012 into law to determine the designation
of the group as a foreign terrorist organisation.
Nevertheless, America must grasp ground realties, in case; it is
serious in establishing stability and peace in Afghanistan with the assistance
of Pakistan. In this connection, first of all, it should end blame game against
Islamabad in relation to safe havens of Haqqani militants in Pak tribal areas.
America should also take notice that since April 2011, heavily-armed insurgents
from Afghanistan’s side have been entering Pakistan’s region intermittently,
targeting the security check posts and other infrastructure. Despite
Islamabad’s strong protest, this intrusion continues. So, question arises as to
why ISAF/ NATO failed in stopping this cross-border terrorism.
US should also know that Pak-Afghan border is porous with heavy
terrain. Thus, it is much difficult to halt infiltration of militants from both
the sides. So, appropriate coordination between NATO and Pakistan forces is
essential to prevent cross-border incursions.
Nonetheless, US wants that before any deal, violence against Afghan
people must stop and the Taliban must cut ties to Al Qaeda and other terrorist
groups. America seeks to distinguish between Al-Qaeda-related fighters and
Afghan insurgents—good and bad Taliban, but it is much obscured matter as there
is no scale to differentiate between them because all of them including Haqqani
militants are fighting against the US-led NATO forces in Afghanistan with the
same motto.
It is pertinent to mention, Afghan government is handing over the
security of some areas to the Afghan forces, while full security control of
Afghanistan to the Afghan army by the end of 2014. Now, question also arises
that if well-trained US-led NATO troops, equipped with sophisticated weaponry
could not succeed in defeating the Afghan Taliban as to how Afghan forces would
cope especially with the Haqqani insurgents which are now battle-hardened
guerrilla group and stronger than other warring factions as perennial suicide
attacks, bomb blasts, roadside explosion and assaults on the US and NATO forces
prove.
Besides, after the withdrawal of NATO troops in 2014, the US seeks to
keep its six military bases in Afghanistan permanently to fulfill its multiple
strategic interests in the region. Even if, US succeeds in reaching a peace
agreement with other Afghan Taliban which is not so easy, Haqqani group’s
perennial attacks on the US troops and Afghan forces would not allow the Kabul
government to achieve stability in Afghanistan in the post-2014 scenario as
also desired by other NATO and western countries. In such a drastic situation,
Pakistan will not succeed in its role of facilitator in the reconciliation
process with the other Afghan Taliban, and to help the US-led western nations
in bringing peace and stability in Afghanistan. In this backdrop, western
countries will not sustain their economic aid in that lawless country.
Following realistic approach, US and Afghan President Hamid Karzai must
also include the Haqqani militant groups in initiating peace dialogue with the
other Afghan militants.
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