Tuesday, August 24, 2021

Biden blunders and Anatomy of Talibanisation ::: Whole of Pakistan was in the service of Taliban, says Vice Prez Saleh

Whole of Pakistan was in the service of Taliban: Vice Prez Saleh


New Delhi: Terming the Taliban takeover as a ‘tragedy’, the Vice President of the ‘ousted regime’ of Afghanistan Amrullah Saleh said on Wednesday that all that happened in his country was due to “one wrong political judgement” by the United States.



He made a blistering attack on Pakistan’s double standards and said the Taliban used Pakistan as a ‘support base’.

“The Taliban were not having sanctuaries there. The whole of Pakistan was in the service of the Taliban,” Amrullah Saleh told CNN-News18 in an interview.

“It was not ever about the American military or about American intelligence. It was the wrong judgement of the politicians and I think they started to pay the price for their wrong decision,” he said.





Sounding candid and confident, he said : “They (Americans) can see on television how the world media is dominated by anti-American headlines. The US is a global power, the mightiest military power on earth and we never wish them bad. But this shows a single wrong political judgement humiliates a superpower like the United States”.


Answering questions, he said – “The bottom line is that NATO is gone, the US military is gone but Afghan people are not gone and the Afghan people cannot be evacuated” 

Saleh, who has declared him to be the new President of Afghanistan after Ghani has fled the country, asserted: "We will fight till the enemy believes and comes to a conclusion that Afghanistan should remain Afghanistan, and it does not become Talibanistan”.


He said, “We have been warning them (US) of this type of consequence for the last two years, but we ignored”.

Saleh, who is stationed in the Panjhir region, said among some major mistakes even the Doha talks were mishandled by the international community and the Americans.

“...Talibans did not remain loyal to their words. They did not honour their commitment. They fooled the whole international community. The purpose of the Doha office (of Taliban) was to keep the international community divided, and keep them hopeful for a peace process, which did not exist”.


He said while the Taliban kept on investing on military prowess, Pakistanis were “helping them whole heartedly”.

“So, it was an unwavered support,” he said.

Mr Saleh also said even the Afghanistan government under Ashraf Ghani was virtually “blackmailed”. “They (US) said either you release the prisoners, or we will decrease our aid”.


“So, they (released prisoners) all ended up on the frontline. It was not prisoner release, it was gifting the Taliban a division of highly radicalised fighters”.


ends 




Slamming Taliban or hailing it - both are patriotic ‘fashion statement’  ?


New Delhi:


In Amitava Kumar’s fictional work, ‘Husband of a Fanatic’; there is a reference to communal violence and also that both sides – the Hindus and the Muslims – are keen on rolling back the clock.


Can we do it today and undo some old pages like the gory Partition?





Unlike India's past, people of divergent views and varying ideas may not be keen any longer to bind together in any artificial thread of unity in this new century when India has just turned 75. 


Some nations are truly born in tears. Some live through violence, arson and tears. For Afghanistan, these tears have not stopped flowing yet.


The date with yet another round of tryst with violent destiny for the war-ravaged nation could not be postponed.

On August 15, 2021, Afghanistan again fell into a terrorist outfit Taliban group.
The cultural heartland of South Asia has been hit for the second time since October 2001, about a month after the kamikaze of 9/11.

The gruesome episode left both short term and long term ramifications for its neighbours and extended neighbourhoods like India.


Taliban is said to have been ‘assisted and supported’ by Pakistan. In India, people are already debating whether their western neighbour (Pakistan) may fall by its own weight and polarised socio-political divisions.


The issue is no longer whether Pakistan as a state helped the Taliban. The Taliban extremists have  immense acceptability these days among Pakistani civil society.


Of course, there are serious security implications on India’s frontiers and perhaps more importantly the socio-political and cultural ramifications in both India and Pakistan. A section of Indian security experts say unless Pakistan changes
how it draws out its future road map, the country will remain unstable and globally suspect.

Pakistan could face a tough time.

On August 19, India's External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar told an UNSC meet that Pak-based groups like Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed "continue to operate with both impunity and encouragement" either against India or in Afghanistan.


Pakistan has sponsored militia as a low-cost strategy to influence things in Afghanistan and bleed India with terror attacks. So, it is relevant that in India, we discuss the Pakistani role in helping the Taliban. 


Pak complexity vis-a-vis Taliban makes Hindus more antagonised against Muslims even in India.


Four Presidents: 20 Years Blunders



These are testing times for the multi religious India which houses 80 percent of 1.35 billion Hindus, 15 percent Muslims and less than three percent Christians. There are also sizable numbers of Sikhs and also Jains and Buddhists.

In terms of social ramifications, of course the rise of radical Islamic ideologies has stirred a communally sensitive debate in the entire region.


Some radical Muslim leaders both in political and religious fields in India have hailed Taliban for their 'victory' against powerful US and other western powers. 


Among others All India Personal Law Board member Maulana Sajjad Nomani and socialist leader Shafiqur Rahman Burq (age 91) have lauded Taliban little realising it is just too premature to say that the Taliban 2.0 is a changed version from the dreaded Islamic extremists were in 1990s when they disallowed women education and would even stone them for real and imaginative crimes.


The BJP or the ruling dispensation has their reasons to give spin that would suit them.


BJP leader and Hindutva mascot of a poll-bound Uttar Pradesh state, Yogi Adityanath, has said -"Some people are shamelessly supporting the Taliban. These people should be exposed."


The rhetoric in one-upmanship has just begun. Some of it – the so-called polarisation – would suit India’s ruling party, BJP. At least the past experiences tell us so.



A Muslim trader in East Delhi says, the rise of rabid Islamic radicalism in Afghanistan 

may threaten social fabric in India, but it suits BJP and Prime Minister Narendra Modi because there are chances that as a reaction to "what’s going around in Afghanistan-Pakistan (Af-Pak) region, the stage will be set in India for greater Hindu polarisation". .


“The Hindu polarisation was already on cards given the ensuing assembly elections in UP. 


But now the Taliban win would put it on a faster track and at a higher scale,” says 
educationist Parul Mukherjee. 

Another political observer in northeast India says, “The history of Muslims in India is hardly distinguishable from the history of his Hindu neighbours, yet a strong division exists between the two. The unfortunate manner US mismanaged Afghanistan can now create further divisions between Hinds and Muslims in India”.



Now given the rise of Islamic fundamentalism in Af-Pak region, one is geared up for the rise of Hindu fundamentalism in India. This would essentially mean a Macho Hindu-nattionalism.


Analyst Vidyarthi Kumar says, “All criticism of the government is taken as a personal attack on the Prime Minister (Modi). And all criticism of Modi is taken as acts of treason or sedition”.



But, there is hardly any mechanism to counteract this dangerous vicious cycle.
It is also being presumed now that the federal government of Modi in Delhi would get a chance to  ‘revive’ the controversial Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) that was put on cold storage following the December 2019 protest. 


A large number of Hindu and Sikh people in Afghanistan would like to take shelter in India.

The CAA has scope for 'quicker granting' of Indian citizenship to Hindus, Christians, Sikhs, Jains and Buddhists coming into India from these countries such as Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan.


But the Muslims for these countries are not eligible for citizenship under this category.


This presumption is not out of place as no less than India’s foreign minister S Jaishankar has tweeted to make it more than crystal clear that Hindus and Sikhs in Afghanistan are in top priority list for ‘evacuation’ by Indian authorities.

Parul Mukherjee joins issue with the minister Jaishankar and says: “What will the government do if  any Afghan Muslim refugee family crosses over or catches a plane to reach India?”

As it is, PM Modi’s detractors say, a highly polarised social atmosphere prevails in India specially since 2014.
Muslims are seen with a jaundiced view.

Therefore as soon as the news about the fall of Kabul went viral on social media and electronic medium, a twitter message poured in and was shared by hundreds that henceforth "Condemning the Taliban will be the new patriotism test for Indian Muslims".
 
There is another vicious thread.

Slamming Taliban is a patriotic ‘fashion statement’ in some quarters. But, in the other camp too, there is undue statements from Muslim clerics and political stars to hail Taliban.


Prime Minister Modi also plays his part and he announced that August 14 would henceforth will be observed as the Partition Horror Remembrance Day

Ends 





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