Afghanistan face chaos?
HAVING kept a steady gaze on
Kabul at least since Noor Mohammad Taraki’s press conference in April 1978 when
Khalq and Parcham, the two Communist parties of Afghanistan, came to power, I
am kicking myself for having missed out on the latest open ended transition
being scripted. I have been shuttling between hospitals and home shuffling out
of a long Covid spelt.
The United
States has conflictual equations with China, Russia, Iran and others either in
the region which are in Chinese or the Russian ambit. All these countries have
borders with Afghanistan. Did the US spend two trillion dollars in 20 years
with the benign intent to provide tranquillity for these countries on their
Afghan borders only to confront these powers elsewhere?
Turkey, or, to be more precise,
president Tayyip Erdogan has been roped in to supervise Kabul airport. Taleban
are pretending to throw a ginger fit should Turkey post troops to protect the
airport. Since the Taleban have to be pleased at all cost, Turkey has decided
to deploy contractors, engineers etcetera. But who will provide them armed
protection? The Americans, of course. The Americans will obviously have plans
to keep an eye on the Bagram air base too. I have vivid recollections of the US
bombing Serbia for 72 days, carve out a state of Kosovo and leave behind what
in those days was globally the largest US base, Bondsteel, abutting Macedonia.
What great
urge did the US have in carving out a Muslim state in what was the holiest real
estate for the southern Slavs of Serbia, ethnic cousins of the Russians? Well,
the first purpose was to hit the Russians where it hurts. The second was to
build bases which radiate power.
Likewise,
Turkey is being given a toehold in Afghanistan which has the potential of
opening vistas across central Asia, an expansive oil rich block of Turkik
speaking people. As in the Balkans, here too the historical, entrenched
interests of Russia will be posed in competition.
When a
vision of the Ottoman Empire being revived was dangled before Erdogan he wasted
no time in turning up for prayers in the main square of Tripoli in November
2011. The ‘Ottoman’ dream which faded in the West Asian theatres may well be
revived in Central Asia where there is greater ethnic continuity. Erdogan is
unlikely to leap for this elusive carrot but he may begin to focus a little
more time on this theatre. This will be welcome to Egypt, Israel, and Saudi
Arabia. The last two will be dreaming of the extreme Islam of the Taleban
blending with the Akhwan ul Muslimeen (Muslim Brotherhood) of which Erdogan is
now an unabashed leader. This will be expected to be a bulwark against Iran.
Binoculars will also be fixed on China’s Uighurs and Russia’s Caucasus.
So long as
imperialism has a central role for Israel in West Asia, Iran will remain the
target. Little wonder US forces are being relocated. Just the other day, the US
announced the closure of its bases in Sayliyah, Qatar. The base being activated
in utmost secrecy happens to be in Jordon, out of the range of Iranian
missiles.
There is
another very good reason to have Erdogan ration some of his time away from West
Asia where the growing influence of the Muslim Brotherhood causes anxiety to
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in Egypt whose suppression of the Brothers cannot last
eternally. Riyadh shaken in the south with the advances made by the Houthis
from Yemen has not forgotten the occupation of the Mecca mosque in November
1979 almost at the same time as the Iranian revolution toppled the Shah in
Tehran. For two weeks the mosque was occupied by anti-Monarchy extreme
Islamists. Eventually, French troops had to help Saudi soldiers. Since then
Saudi Royals have nightmares about a secret anti monarchy cult, not different
from the Brothers. There is a tendency to exaggerate an external danger of Shia
Islam. The truth is that the ‘Akhwan’ or the Brothers, with roots inside the
kingdom are much more of a danger.
Brothers in
Egypt will have a huge morale booster, should Erdogan without other
distractions go full throttle in his Muslim Brotherhood avatar. The revival of
the Brothers in Egypt will be of considerable help to Hamas which is another
name for the Brothers. This will be a thorn in the side of Israel. Notice how
many capitals have an interest in the Turkish role in Kabul.
It is not
fanciful that one chapter of the Afghan saga may be coming to a close. But what
has always puzzled me is the singular lack of interest in the origin of a
catastrophe when the iconic Tajik leader Ahmad Shah Massoud’s exceptional
intelligence gathering on Al Qaeda’s operations in Afghanistan hinted at the
possibility of 9/11.
In August
2001 he alerted the European Union in the course of an address in Brussels that
the anti Taleban Northern Alliance had learnt that Al Qaeda, were planning some
action on the US mainland. On September 9, two days before the attack on the
twin towers in New York, Massoud was assassinated in his hideout on the Tajik
border. The two Tunisians, disguised as journalists detonated their vests as
soon as they began their ‘interview’ with Massoud. The passports of the two
assassins had been forged in Brussels at about the time Massoud alerted the
European Union about the attack on the ‘US mainland’.
Since the
Syrian theatre began to quieten down in 2018, there have been reports of
militants being flown to Northern Afghanistan, exactly the location from where
out-of-work Mujahideen had fanned out to Kashmir, Egypt, Algeria, and Syria.
So, is
Afghanistan headed for chaos or, as a Marxist analyst predicts: ‘A Quad is
taking shape – Iran, China, Russia and Pakistan.’ If correct, has India opted
for the wrong Quad?