|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: India
US and India discuss joint strategy against Afghanistan's
Taliban regime
By Keith Jones
14 September 1999
Use
this version to print
Indian and US government officials held high-level talks in
Washington earlier this month focusing on their countries' common
interest in opposing Afghanistan's Taliban regime. Over two days,
India's Joint Secretary for the Americas, Alok Prasad, and Joint
Secretary for Iran, Pakistan, and Afghanistan, Vivek Katju, met
with senior State Department, National Security Council and Pentagon
officials, including President Clinton's Deputy National Security
Advisor, John Steinberg.
These talks represent a new level of US-Indian diplomatic cooperation.
They underscore that Washington and New Delhi intend to use the
recent convergence of their interests in opposing the Pakistani-organized
incursion into the Kargil-Dass-Batalik of Indian-held Kashmir
to kick-start efforts at developing a new strategic partnership.
Indian and US officials have frequently discussed Afghanistan,
but, according to an Indian newspaper account, they have never
before held such long, intensive discussions on Afghan developments
and their implications for the region and beyond.
At the conclusion of the talks, Alok Prasad said he expected
the Indo-US dialog over Afghanistan to continue. We have
not worked out the exact details of how this is going to be done,
but we expect to have continuing consultations on this aspect
[of Indo-US relations].
Just before the Indian delegation left for Washington, Indian
Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh told a media briefing India will
now pursue a pro-active policy vis-à-vis Afghanistan.
Declaring that India has vital interests in Afghanistan, Singh
said the days of India's supine acceptance of developments
in Afghanistan were over.
Both the US and India recently imposed sanctions against Afghanistan,
whose Taliban regime has been officially recognized by just three
states, although it has held power since the end of 1996. Moreover,
US and Indian diplomats are expected to work together at the coming
session of the United Nations to press for further international
action against the Taliban, citing its support for terrorism
and drug trafficking and its human rights record.
The US is demanding that the Taliban hand over Osama bin Laden,
whom it accuses of masterminding last year's bombing of the US
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, and cease its support for Islamic
fundamentalist groups active beyond Afghanistan's borders. Washington
has also protested against the Taliban's treatment of women.
In the past, the US has been more than ready to turn a blind
eye to the repression of women by Afghani religious and tribal
leaders. It armed, financed and provided logistical support to
the Islamic fundamentalist opposition to the 1979 Soviet invasion
of Afghanistan out of which the Taliban ultimately emerged.
Washington's growing opposition to the Taliban is rooted in
the calculation that it and similar Islamic fundamentalist groups
in the region constitute an obstacle to US plans to gain control
of the oil and natural gas reserves of the Central Asian republics
of the former USSR.
That Pakistan enjoys close relations with the current Kabul
regimemany observers see the current Taliban regime as largely
a Pakistani creationis unquestionably a major factor in
the growing chill in Pakistani-US relations. There have been suggestions
that Islamabad's ultimate objective in supporting the Taliban
is to ensure that a Central Asian oil pipeline passes through
Afghanistan to the Pakistani port of Karachi.
India accuses the Taliban of supporting the secessionist agitation
in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir and of supplying many
of the guerrilla fighters who took part in the Kargil-Dass-Batalik
incursion. It is likely that the Taliban regime or at least former
Taliban fighters were involved in the fighting in Kargil.
At the same time, India has every interest in linking its arch-enemy
Pakistan to the Taliban. Speaking September 1, Indian Foreign
Minister Jaswant Singh charged that Afghanistan was the hub of
global terrorism. He claimed India had evidence that Osama bin
Laden was involved in the Kargil incursionevidence we
will reveal at an appropriate time.
The US and India have historically taken radically opposed
stances on events in Afghanistan. India, which was bound to the
USSR through various friendship treaties, publicly
defended the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan and continued
to support Najibullah as Afghani president following the Soviet
pullout in 1989. Explained one Indian journalist, Afghan
developments in the 1980s and 1990s deepened the strategic dissonance
between India and the US. But now for the first time in 20 years,
New Delhi and Washington find themselves singing from the same
sheet of music on Afghanistan.
Opposition to the Taliban and the spread of Islamic fundamentalism
in Central Asia are important examples of what an Indian Foreign
Office spokesman has described as New Delhi's and Washington's
increasing overlapping interests. Another reason the
US is anxious to improve relations with New Delhi is that it views
India, which is only now being fully opened to foreign investment,
as a potentially lucrative market and source of cheap labor. The
US also looks to India as a possible counterweight to China's
growing economic and geopolitical influence in Asia.
A US-Indian strategic partnership has yet to be consummated.
Plans for a visit to India by Clinton, which have repeatedly been
put off, are on again, with the US president now expected to go
to New Delhi early next year. But too warm a US embrace of India
could destabilize the subcontinent, by encouraging the Indians
to court confrontation with Pakistan or contributing to the collapse
of Pakistan's Muslim League regime.
Although Washington is far from pleased by Pakistan's recent
meddling in Afghan affairs, this meddling was actively encouraged
by the US during the Cold War. Moreover, US strategists are keenly
aware that the Pakistani state, which is already all but technically
bankrupt, could collapse under the weight of a myriad of communal
and national-ethnic antagonisms.
Nonetheless, the US tilt toward India in the recent conflict
with Pakistan over Kashmir represents a new era in geopolitical
relations in Asia. Last week, the US State Department joined India
in rejecting a Pakistani call for the United Nations to implement
earlier resolutions urging a popular referendum on Kashmir's status.
Said US State Department spokesman James Rubin, I just urge
you to not get trapped into facile analogies that don't apply.
Kashmir is not East Timor.
The Indian government's new engagement with Afghanistan and
Central Asia has widespread support in the country's political
elite. The Hindu, a liberal daily opposed to India's current
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led coalition, recently applauded
what it termed New Delhi's new pro-active policy towards
Central and South Central Asia. The lead editorial in the
September 10 Hindu declared: The Washington review
should help narrow the gap in the perceptions of India and the
US, bringing the American viewpoint closer to India's for the
first time in decades and laying the ground for coordination in
the effort to stamp out the common menace posed by the rise of
the Taliban.
See Also:
Meeting of the Shanghai Group'
in Bishek: China moves toward Moscow to strengthen its influence
in Central Asia
[2 September 1999]
India-Pakistan
Conflict
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |