The Regional Implications of The U.S.-Taliban Agreement: March 5, 2020 by Saurav Sarkar
The Regional Implications of The U.S.-Taliban Agreement: March 5, 2020 by Saurav Sarkar
Pakistan’s relationship with the Taliban derives from its own internal ethnic
issues in its regions bordering Afghanistan, which have a sizable Pashtun
population. Pakistan’s support for the Afghan Taliban—an Islamist form of
Pashtun nationalism combining Pashtun tribal customs of Pashtunwali with a
society based on sharia—largely provided a work-around solution to Pashtun
sub-nationalism within Pakistan by depicting Islamabad as sympathetic to
Pashtun political goals. During the U.S-Taliban peace talks Pakistan played a
large role in bringing the Taliban to the negotiating table through
its influence over Taliban leadership—primarily based out of the Pakistan
city of Quetta. Pakistan demonstrated its significance in the negotiations after
it released one of the chief Taliban negotiators, Abdul Ghani Baradar, after
U.S. pressure in 2018, illustrating Pakistan’s power to enable or restrict
attempts at resolution unsupervised by Islamabad.
While Pakistan has offered support for a “responsible withdrawal” of U.S.
troops, the possibility of reemerging militancy in its border areas is a cause
for concern. The majority Pashtun Tehrik-e-Taliban (TTP) militant group
which targets the Pakistani state—also known as the Pakistani Taliban—is a
cause for concern for Pakistan as the U.S. reduces its presence in the region.
The TTP officially formed in 2007 in response to the Pakistan military’s
growing footprint in the Federally Administered Tribal Regions (FATA) as
part of assistance to U.S. operations in Afghanistan. The TTP has since
carried out some of the deadliest attacks in Pakistan. Pakistan has also
alleged that the TTP had received support and sanctuary in Afghanistan
as retaliation from Kabul for Pakistan’s continued support to the Afghan
Taliban. As of September 2019 there are some 3,000-5,000 TTP members in
Afghanistan according to the U.S. Department of Defense.
For India, the signing of the US-Taliban deal may jeopardize its present stake
in Afghanistan if the Afghan government is sidelined moving forward. Since
2002, India has developed significant influence with the Afghan government
through trade, cultural and diplomatic links, and foreign aid. This
had alarmed Pakistan, which saw Afghanistan as part of its “strategic depth”
to maintain a safe zone on its western frontier while it focused its foreign
policy on India.
Conclusion