What starts in Afghanistan does not stay in Afghanistan: China, India, and Iran grapple with the fallout
By James M. Dorsey
Taliban advances in Afghanistan shift the Central
Asian playing field on which China, India and the United States compete with rival
infrastructure-driven approaches. At first glance, a Taliban takeover of Kabul
would give China a 2:0 advantage against the US and India, but that could prove
to be a shaky head start.
The potential fall of the US-backed Afghan government
of President Ashraf Ghani will shelve if not kill Indian support for the
Iranian port of Chabahar that was intended to facilitate Indian trade with
Afghanistan and Central Asia.
Chabahar was also viewed by India as a counterweight
to the Chinese-supported Pakistani port of Gwadar, a crown jewel of the
People’s Republic’s transportation, telecommunications and energy-driven Belt
and Road Initiative (BRI).
The United States facilitated Indian investment in
Chabahar by exempting the port from harsh US
sanctions against Iran. The exemption was intended to “support
the reconstruction and development of Afghanistan.”
However, with negotiations with Iran about a revival
of the 2015 international nuclear agreement stalled, the United States announced in July
together with Afghanistan, Pakistan and Uzbekistan plans to create a platform
that would foster regional trade, business ties and connectivity.
The connectivity end of the plan resembled an effort
to cut off one's nose to spite one's face. It would have circumvented Iran and
weakened Chabahar but potentially strengthened China’s Gwadar alongside the
port of Karachi.
That has become a moot point with the plans certain to
be shelved as the Taliban move to take over Kabul and form a government that
would be denied recognition by at least the democratic parts of the
international community.
Like other Afghan neighbors, neither Pakistan nor
Uzbekistan or for that matter China are likely to join a boycott of the
Taliban. On the contrary, China last month made a point of giving a visiting Taliban delegation
a warm welcome.
Recognition by Iran, Central Asian states and China of
a Taliban government is however unlikely to be enough to salvage the Chabahar
project. “Changed circumstances and alternative connectivity routes are being
conjured up by other countries to make Chabahar irrelevant,” an Iranian source
told Hard News and
The Wire.
The Taliban have sought to reassure China, Iran,
Uzbekistan and other Afghan neighbors that they will not allow Afghanistan to
become an operational base for jihadist groups, including Al Qaeda and Uighur militants of the Turkestan
Islamic Party (TIP).
The Taliban have positioned themselves as solely
concerned with creating an Islamic emirate in Afghanistan and having no
inclination to operate beyond the borders of the Central Asian state, but have
been consistent in their refusal to expel
Al Qaeda, even if the group is a shadow of what it was
when it launched the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington 20 years ago.
The TIP has occasionally issued videos
documenting its presence in Afghanistan but has, by and large, kept a low
profile in the country and refrained from attacking Chinese targets in
Afghanistan or across the border in Xinjiang, the north-western Chinese
province in which authorities have brutally cracked down on ethnic Turkic Uighurs.
As a result, the Taliban reassurance was insufficient
to stop China from repeatedly advising its citizens to
leave Afghanistan as soon as possible.
“Currently, the security situation in Afghanistan has
further deteriorated … If Chinese citizens insist on staying in Afghanistan,
they will face extremely high-security risks, and all the consequences will be
borne by themselves,” the Chinese foreign ministry said.
The fallout of the Taliban’s sweep across Afghanistan,
despite the group’s assurances, is likely to affect China beyond Afghan borders,
perhaps no more so than in Pakistan, a major focus of the People’s Republic’s
single largest Belt-and Road-related investment.
The investment has made China a target for attacks by
militants primarily Baloch nationalists. However, the killing in July of nine
Chinese nationals in an explosion on a bus transporting Chinese workers to the
construction site of a dam in the northern mountains of Pakistan, a region more
prone to attacks by religious militants, raises the specter of jihadists also
targeting China. It was the highest loss of life of Chinese citizens in recent
years in Pakistan.
The attack occurred amid fears that the Taliban will
bolster ultra-conservative religious sentiment in Pakistan that celebrates the
group as heroes whose success enhances the chances for austere religious rule
in the world’s second-most populous Muslim-majority state.
“Our jihadis will be emboldened.
They will say that ‘if America can be beaten, what is the Pakistan army to
stand in our way?’” said a senior Pakistani official.
Indicating Chinese concern, China has delayed the signing of a framework agreement
on industrial cooperation that would have accelerated the implementation of
projects that are part of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).
Said scholar Kamran Bokhari: “Regime change is a
terribly messy process. Weak regimes can be toppled; replacing them is the hard
part. It is only a matter of time before the Afghan state collapses, unleashing
chaos that will spill beyond its borders. All of Afghanistan's neighbors will
be affected to varying degrees, but Pakistan and China have the most to
lose.”
The demise of Chabahar and/or the targeting by the
Taliban of Hazara Shiites in Afghanistan could potentially turn Iran into a significant
loser too.
A podcast
version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon and Castbox.
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar and a senior fellow at the
National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute
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