Not an enemy' any more: Why Russia is courting the Taliban
While many countries are scrambling
to empty their embassies and remove their staff from Afghanistan, Russia is
staying put -- it has long prepared for the arrival of the Taliban in Kabul.
Despite the hardline Islamist group
tracing its origins back to the war against the Soviets in the 1980s, Russia's
view on the group now is pragmatic.
Analysts say the Kremlin wants to
protect its interests in Central Asia, where it has several military bases, and
is keen to avoid instability and potential terrorism spreading through a region
on its doorstep.
A Russian foreign ministry
statement Monday said the situation in Kabul "is stabilising" and
claimed that the Taliban had started to "restore public order".
And ambassador Dmitry Zhirnov
said the Taliban -- who he was due to meet Tuesday -- was already guarding his
embassy and had given Moscow guarantees that the building would be safe.
The militants had assured the
Russians that "not a single hair will fall from the heads" of their
diplomats, he said.
This is a stark contrast to the
last time hardliners came to power in Afghanistan in 1992, when Moscow
struggled to evacuate its embassy under fire after a disastrous decade-long
war.
Three decades later, the Kremlin
has boosted the Taliban's international credibility by hosting it several times
for talks in Moscow -- despite the movement being a banned terrorist
organisation in Russia.
- Sovereignty vs security -
The aim of these talks, say
analysts, is to stop the conflict from spilling into neighbouring countries and
a terrorism spike in its Central Asian neighbours, where Russia maintains
military bases.
"If we want there to be
peace in Central Asia, we need to talk to the Taliban," said Nikolai Bordyuzha,
the former secretary general of the Moscow-led Collective Security Treaty
Organisation (CSTO). He commended the Russian embassy for staying
open.
The Taliban has moved to reassure
its northern neighbours that it has no designs on them, despite several Central
Asian countries having offered logistical support to Washington's war
effort.
Ambassador Zhirnov suggested the
Taliban had also given Moscow assurances.
He said Russia wanted Afghanistan
to have peaceful relations with "all the countries in the world" and
that "the Taliban had already promised us" this.
But Russia's foreign ministry has
suggested it will not rush into a close relationship with a Taliban government,
saying it would monitor the group's conduct before deciding on recognition.
And as the Taliban advanced
through Afghanistan this summer, Russia staged war games with allies Uzbekistan
and Tajikistan on the Afghan border in a show of force.
Central Asia expert Arkady Dubnov
said Moscow would now look to strengthen its military presence in the region.
"To different extents, these
countries will be obliged to accept Moscow's help, but none will want to
exchange their sovereignty for their security," he said.
He stressed that Afghanistan's
three Central Asian neighbours -- Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan --
have different approaches to the conflict.
Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan held
high-level talks with the Taliban and are likely to recognise Taliban rule,
while Tajikistan has not engaged with the militants.
- Years of courting -
Russia's dialogue with the
Taliban is the fruit of several years of courting.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in
July described the Taliban as a "powerful force", and blamed the
Afghan government for faltering progress in talks.
"It is not for nothing that
we have been establishing contacts with the Taliban movement for the last seven
years," the Kremlin's Afghanistan envoy, Zamir Kabulov, told the Ekho
Moskvy radio station on Monday.
This relationship has raised many
eyebrows, given that the Taliban has its roots in the anti-Soviet Mujahideen
movement from the 1980s.
But Alexander Baunov of the
Carnegie Moscow Center said Russia now believed the Taliban have changed since
the last time it was in power in the 1990s when it gave shelter to Al-Qaeda.
"Moscow does not see this
version of the Mujahideen as its enemy," he told AFP.