Protracted Afghan war Pakistan’s worst nightmare: Moeed

ISLAMABAD: A protracted war in Afghanistan is Pakistan’s “nightmare scenario,” the national security advisor said, slamming the relentless blaming of Islamabad for the rapidly deteriorating security situation in the war-battered neighbour.

The US needs to take the lead to get the Afghanistan government and the Taliban back to the negotiation table, Dr Moeed Yusuf told foreign journalists in Islamabad late on Monday.

He said Pakistan is pushing the Taliban to return to negotiations but its leverage is waning as the insurgent group gains more ground in Afghanistan.

Pakistan hasn’t even been able to convince the Taliban to reopen the border crossing at Spin Boldak in southeastern Afghanistan, which the insurgent force captured last month, Yusuf said.

In their sweep through Afghanistan, which began with the late April start of the final withdrawal of US and NATO troops, the Taliban have gained control of strategic and lucrative border crossings, including the Spin Boldak crossing with Pakistan.

Last weekend the Taliban closed the crossing in southeast Afghanistan after Islamabad demanded that Afghans crossing to the Pakistani side have a passport and a Pakistani visa, something that had not previously been required.

The Taliban accused Pakistan of imposing the new rules to please Kabul and President Ashraf Ghani.

They shuttered the border, insisting Pakistan reinstate an earlier lax policy under which the thousands who cross daily were rarely required to show even local identity cards.

As a result, thousands in Afghanistan and Pakistani are stuck at the border and hundreds of trucks loaded with perishable goods have been waiting to cross.

As the August 31 deadline for the final withdrawal of US and NATO troops from Afghanistan approaches, Yusuf called for “a reinvigorated, re-emphasised, rejuvenated effort to try and get Afghan political actors […] in one room […] to get to a settlement of how to move forward.”

“Anything but an inclusive political settlement means a protracted conflict, through which instability will likely spill over into Pakistan,” he said. “So our nightmare scenario is a protracted conflict.”

Yusuf said Pakistan, which already hosts about two million Afghan refugees, hasn’t got the resources to absorb a fresh wave of refugees. The government fears that will happen if fighting continues and the sides don’t return to the negotiating table.

The Taliban’s onslaught defies statements by their political leadership in the Middle Eastern country Qatar advocating for talks. The insurgent force has shown no sign of wanting to negotiate, instead pressing ahead on the battlefield, sweeping through five provincial capitals in less than a week.

Yusuf accused Afghanistan of scapegoating Pakistan, blaming it for the Taliban advances and demanded evidence of claims by Kabul at a recent UN Security Council meeting that 10,000 fighters were crossing from Pakistan to Afghanistan.

Instead, he pointed to the performance of Afghanistan’s National Defense and Security Forces in those areas where they abandoned districts, occasionally crossing into Tajikistan or Iran or Pakistan to escape the advancing Taliban.

“We are told that over a trillion dollars were put into Afghanistan and much of that into the ANDSF to prepare the army and the security forces. […] What is going on with this well-equipped and trained force?”

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