As Chaos Engulfs Kabul Russia Says Its Ready to Work With the Taliban
In the day since a Taliban offensive swept away the U.S.-backed Afghan government, Russian officials are taking satisfaction from their principle global adversaryâs humiliation as they prepare to work with the Islamist militia, Russian Afghanistan experts told The Moscow Times on Monday.
âYou canât blame Russia for feeling a little smug about what is happening in Kabul,â said Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of the Russia in Global Affairs journal and an adviser to Russian President Vladimir Putin on foreign policy.
âThis is a PR disaster of enormous proportions for America. The desperate images from Kabul airport will go into the history books.â
Though Moscow had been preparing for an expected Taliban takeover, satisfaction at an American defeat is only one side of a complex reaction to the Talibanâs victory, as there is also some trepidation about what the militantsâ success might mean for Russia and its allies in Central Asia.
news Moscow Watches Kabulâs Fall With Some Satisfaction, Much Concern Read moreFor Russians, some of whom fought in the Soviet Unionâs bloody, unsuccessful war in Afghanistan in the 1980s, the American retreat has been taken as a vindication of their own experience there.
Veterans point out that the pro-Soviet Afghan communist government was able to fight on alone for three-and-a-half years after the Soviets withdrew in 1989, while U.S.-backed President Ashraf Ghaniâs administration imploded even before the U.S. withdrawal was complete.
âThe Americans should have learned from our experience,â said Vasily Kravtsov, a Russian Afghanistan expert who was a political adviser to the Afghan communist authorities in the 1980s, before serving at the Russian Embassy in Kabul in the Ghani era.
For Kravtsov, the Soviet war in Afghanistan â" which killed around 15,000 Soviet personnel and as many as two million Afghans â" was more successful than the American effort decades later.
âBy the end, we had basically stabilized things. If the Soviet Union hadnât collapsed then the Afghan government could have survived indefinitely. But the Americans never understood Afghanistan or Afghans.â
âDefeat was inevitable from day one.â
news Afghanistan Has Never Been Moscow or Washingtonâs to Win or Lose Read moreWhile Russia has kept its distance from Afghanistan since the 1989 withdrawal, with the war being widely seen as an pointless adventure that hastened the collapse of the Soviet Union, Moscow has adopted a pragmatic approach to the Taliban â" themselves heirs to the Mujahideen irregulars who drove out the Soviet army.
Though the Taliban are formally proscribed as a terrorist organization under Russian law, the Russian capital has become a regular venue for peace talks between the two sides in Afghanistanâs civil war, with a delegation visiting Moscow for talks with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in July.
According to Lukyanov, this history of contact between the two sides means Russia is unusually well placed for the transition to a Taliban-led Afghanistan.
âJudging by the calmness of Russian officials, agreements guaranteeing security of Russian citizens in the country were likely made when the Taliban visited Moscow in July,â he said, referring to the summit with Lavrov, when the Taliban pledged to combat the Islamic State in Afghanistan and refrain from threatening ex-Soviet Central Asian states.
âOf course, the Russian Foreign Ministry has good contacts with the Taliban that go way back.â
In the hours after Kabul fell, these contacts appear to have come into good use, as Taliban units moved quickly to secure the Russian Embassy when Afghan government security forces melted away.
âThe Taliban are starting to take control of the city â" in the positive sense of the word,â Russian ambassador Dmitry Zhirnov told state television Sunday evening.
âTheyâre upholding law and order.â
And on Monday, Putinâs special envoy to Afghanistan Zamir Kabulov said Russia prefered communicating with the Taliban over âthe former puppet government of Afghanistan.â
news Russia-Led Drills Begin on Afghanistan Border Read moreHowever, Russia maintains that formal diplomatic recognition of the Taliban â" and the Islamic Emirate they have proclaimed â" is not a done deal.
Kabulov told the Ekho Moskvy radio station on Monday that diplomatic recognition of the Taliban will depend on the new authoritiesâ âconductâ in the coming days.
Above all, say experts, Russia is waiting to see if the Taliban keeps promises made last month in Moscow now they are in power.
For Russia, the fate of the former Soviet Central Asian republics that border Afghanistan is of paramount importance.
During their previous stint in power from 1996 to 2001, the Taliban were accused of supporting Islamist opposition movements in their neighbors, undermining the regionâs broadly pro-Russian governments.
Moreover, Afghan-produced heroin is transported into Europe via smuggling routes that run through Central Asia and Russia.
But this time around, Russia has been eager to prevent any instability from spilling over to its region of interest.
Earlier in August, after the Taliban overran Afghanistanâs northern borders, Russia â" which has an army division based in Tajikistan â" held joint drills with the Uzbek and Tajik militaries.
Though experts agree that the Taliban are likely to abide by their promises and refrain from launching cross-border attacks, questions remain about foreign Islamist groups operating alongside them.
In the 1990s, Taliban-ruled Afghanistan became a hub for international jihadis, most famously for Osama bin Laden, but also for Central Asian extremists.
Jihadi emigres from Tajikistan and Uzbekistan are known to have fought alongside the Taliban during this summerâs offensive. Whether they will feel bound by promises made in Moscow remains unknown.
In Afghanistanâs northeastern Badakhshan province, Tajik militants fighting alongside the Taliban have been placed in command of the Afghan border with Tajikistan, an ominous sign for the Russian ally.
âThe Taliban themselves are reasonably pragmatic and present no threat to Russia or to Central Asia,â said Afghanistan veteran Kravtsov.
âBut the foreign terrorist groups that are allied with the Taliban will now receive freedom of movement, bases and training in Afghanistan. Naturally, thatâs going to cause problems in Central Asia.â
Russia will be eager to take advantage of the unstable security situation in the region by shoring up its influence in Central Asia, said Temur Umarov, an expert on Central Asia at the Carnegie Moscow Center think tank.
âCentral Asia was slipping away a little bit from Russiaâs orbit of influence toward China but Russia is the only country that will actually guarantee military support to countries like Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. It has deep rooted military connections with Central Asiaâ
But for the moment, with Moscowâs relations with the Taliban remaining relatively warm, Russia is likely to take a pragmatic approach as the United States comes to terms with the collapse of its 20-year mission in Afghanistan.
âThis isn't a Russian issue, and itâs not Russiaâs responsibility,â said foreign policy expert Lukyanov.
âThe blame does not lie with us.â
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