Monday 8 April 2013

Afghan relations with Pakistan at new low

KABUL: Afghanistan accused Pakistan on Thursday of placing unacceptable conditions on efforts to bring peace to the country after nearly 12 years of war, the latest in a series of barbed exchanges that has sunk relations between the two neighbors to a new low.

A breakdown in ties threatens to hinder, or even paralyze, attempts to lure the Taliban to the negotiating table. That’s a key goal of the United States and its allies as they work for a peaceful solution in Afghanistan ahead of the final pullout of foreign combat forces in 20 months.

Afghanistan and its international backers consider Pakistan a critical player in bringing the Taliban and other militant groups into peace talks.

Pakistan holds dozens of Taliban prisoners and has been accused of backing the insurgents in an effort to be able to exert influence in Afghanistan after foreign troops leave.




A senior Pakistan official said, however, that Islamabad remained committed to reconciliation. That’s why Pakistan recently released 26 Afghan Taliban prisoners from its jails, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

Pakistan remains in contact with members of the Taliban who have been empowered to talk about reconciliation, he said.

A failure to bring peace could endanger the stability of Afghanistan and much of the region, including Pakistan, which is fighting its own domestic Taliban insurgency.


”We have told the Pakistanis that they should support peace in Afghanistan not only for the sake of the Afghan people, but for their own sake,” Afghan Foreign Ministry spokesman Janan Mosazai told The Associated Press in an interview on Thursday.

He said Afghanistan wants a close, broad, strategic relationship with Pakistan, ”but one between two equal independent sovereign states, nothing less.”

Pakistan, Mosazai said, is constantly shifting its position. Islamabad should be ”supporting the Afghan peace process in a more meaningful way and having an independent bilateral relationship that is not based on a delusional desire to control Afghanistan.”

So far, Afghanistan has been unsuccessful in getting militants to negotiate peace and needs Pakistan’s help. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has urged the Taliban to work out a political resolution to the war and has backed a plan for the Taliban to open an office in the Gulf state of Qatar.

Publicly, the Taliban have long refused to speak directly with Karzai or his government, which they view as a puppet of foreign powers. Afghanistan thinks Pakistan has the influence to get them to talk so it’s not helpful when the two capitals are feuding.

Relations between the two countries have been hot and cold in recent years.

Afghanistan often blames Pakistan for supporting insurgents who are fighting both NATO troops and government forces. Afghan officials also claim Pakistan has had a role in major attacks and suicide bombings.

They said a suicide bombing that killed a former Afghan president and leader of the government-appointed peace council in September 2011 was planned in Quetta, Pakistan.

”It is not a tempest in a teapot,” said Michael O’Hanlon, a fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institution. ”An increasing number of Afghans have figured out how much of a hand Islamabad has had in all the violence over the years.

”If there is a silver lining, it’s that Islamabad needs to know that the world has figured them out and that they can’t continue their double game indefinitely and get away with it. Some Pakistanis know that already. Many still need to understand it.”

Relations between Islamabad and Kabul had been improving in recent months.

Karzai had lauded Pakistan’s decision to work for peace and help Afghanistan reach out to the Taliban, whose leaders are thought to be based in Pakistan.

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