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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ggersh who wrote (174495)7/9/2021 2:19:34 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217820
 
CCP may or may not be working w/ the terrorists that the Taliban might or might not be, even as both the GOP and DNC had worked w/ the same group earlier

Arguably better than, as did the GOP and DNC, to fight the terrorist that the Taliban might or might not be, and losing to the group, that which both had at one or another point sponsored.

It is all very complicated.

In the meantime, bingo, on cue, the Turks showed up, and now we wait for the Russians and Iranians to make appearance, maybe even the Greeks, and Indians, and Japanese

ft.com

Turkey tries to cement role in Afghanistan

Attempt to run airport offers chance to improve relations with US
yesterday
Keeping Hamid Karzai International airport open as a secure gateway is crucial if embassies and humanitarian aid organisations are to remain in Afghanistan © Rahmat Gul/APTurkey is hammering out a deal with the US to take over security operations at Kabul’s civilian airport, offering the Nato partners a rare chance for co-operation after a series of disputes have chilled relations.

The US this week left its main military base in Afghanistan, part of an accelerated withdrawal that has led to a resurgent Taliban gaining ground and concerns that the country could descend into chaos.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told Joe Biden at last month’s Nato summit that Turkey could run security at the airport if the US president provided it with the “diplomatic, logistical and financial support” required for the mission. Erdogan also acknowledged “the reality of the Taliban”, saying Ankara would continue talks with the militants.

Hulusi Akar, the Turkish defence minister, and US defence secretary Lloyd Austin had a “constructive and positive” phone conversation on Wednesday on “the secure operation of the Hamid Karzai International Airport”, the Turkish defence ministry said, adding that they would talk again on Thursday.

Akar said this week that Turkey was determined to make “contributions for the security, peace and welfare of the Afghan people”, according to state broadcaster TRT.

Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan told Joe Biden at last month’s Nato summit that Turkey could run security at the airport if the US president provided ‘diplomatic, logistical and financial support’ © Olivier Matthys/Pool/AFP via Getty ImagesYet far more hinges on Turkey reaching an accord with the Taliban, which is steadily advancing towards the capital and has made clear it will not tolerate any foreign forces on Afghan soil after the US leaves, said Hikmet Cetin, a former Turkish foreign minister who has served as Nato’s senior civilian representative in Afghanistan.

“Afghanistan is now in the midst of a de facto civil war. Turkey needs a ceasefire and a deal with the Taliban, which is now telling it: ‘You came with Nato, and you’ll leave with Nato’,” he said. “Without the Taliban’s approval, Turkey assuming this role is a mistake. It’s too risky.”

Keeping Hamid Karzai International airport open as a secure gateway is crucial if embassies and humanitarian aid organisations are to remain in Afghanistan. “We are aware that the Kabul airport must remain open and operating. If it’s not, embassies will withdraw, turning Afghanistan into an isolated state,” Akar said.

Turkey, Nato’s second-biggest army, already runs military operations at the airport. Akar has ruled out increasing the 500-strong battalion, and Erdogan has said he hopes to recruit both Hungary and Pakistan to the mission. Pakistan has already refused to allow the US to stage air attacks from its soil. Pakistan expects Turkey to seek “logistical support and passage” through the country and “intelligence sharing on Afghanistan”, a senior Pakistani government official told the Financial Times on condition of anonymity.

Rahimullah Yusufzai, a longtime Afghanistan watcher based in Peshawar, the frontier town along the Afghan border, said Pakistan’s involvement will inflame tensions with the current Afghan government, which sees Islamabad as the Taliban’s main backer. “The best Pakistan can do is informally support Turkey. Beyond that I think is not in Pakistan’s interest,” he said.

Turkey, which has backed the US in a non-combat role since the war began in 2001, shares religious and other ties with Afghanistan. Erdogan also sees the initiative as a chance to “recalibrate relations” with the US after years of estrangement over divergent foreign policies, said Hasan Selim Ozertem, an independent security analyst.

“Turkey believes this step can show it remains an indispensable Nato partner, a reminder that it can work with the US, that it is one of the few countries that can take on such a responsibility,” he said.

Since Biden’s election, Erdogan has pledged to mend ties with the US, which has put sanctions on Ankara over its purchase of an advanced Russian missile system designed to shoot down Nato jets. A deal over Afghanistan “puts them [the disputes] in deep freeze and gives the sides a positive agenda to focus on,” said Ozertem. US government officials declined to comment on their progress towards a deal with Turkey.

Additional reporting by Stephanie Findlay in New Delhi and Aime Williams in Washington



To: ggersh who wrote (174495)7/9/2021 2:22:19 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217820
 
Did not take very long, Iranians and Russians

theguardian.com

Iran and Russia move to fill diplomatic vacuum in Afghanistan

Iranian foreign minister meets Taliban negotiators in Tehran, while Turkey offers troops to protect Kabul airport

Patrick Wintour

Iran, Turkey, Pakistan and Russia have moved to fill the military and diplomatic vacuum opening up in Afghanistan as a result of the departure of US forces and military advances by the Taliban.

In Tehran the Iranian foreign minister, Javad Zarif, met Taliban negotiators to discuss their intentions towards the country, and secured a joint statement saying the Taliban do not support attacks on civilians, schools, mosques and hospitals and want a negotiated settlement on Afghanistan’s future.

The Taliban side was led by Abbas Stanekzai, a senior negotiator and head of the group’s political bureau in Qatar, while the Afghan government side was led by the former vice-president Yunus Qanooni.

Three other Afghan delegations were in Tehran at the same time. The value of the joint statement promising further talks is contestable, but Tehran’s diplomatic activism underlined fears in Iran about a spillover created by a prolonged civil war on its long border.

Estimates suggest as many as 1 million Afghans will pour over the border to avoid the fighting or Taliban rule. Iranian social media showed Afghan forces deserting two of three customs offices along the border at Islam-Qata and Farah. With an estimated 700km of its border with Afghanistan now in Taliban hands, Iran does have much choice but to take an active interest.

It is estimated that Iran already hosts 780,000 registered Afghan refugees and that between 2.1 and 2.5 million undocumented Afghans live in Iran.

Russia has sought assurances that the Taliban will not allow Afghanistan’s northern borders to be used as a base for attacks on the former Soviet republics.

In a move designed in part to please the US but also to advance Ankara’s self-interest, Turkey has conditionally offered Turkish troops for a Nato-overseen project to protect Kabul international airport. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has offered to provide Turkish troops in a possible unlikely alliance with Hungary.

Turkey has previously guarded the airport but it fears another wave of migration and may see a military role as a way back into the good books of Washington.

The Taliban delegation who visited Iran on Tuesday and Wednesday at Tehran’s invitation, alongside three other Afghan delegations, were told by Zarif that they may have to take tough decisions. Courage in peace was more important than courage in war, he said, arguing that courage lay in sacrificing maximalist demands and listening to the other side.

Zarif also said a continuation of conflicts between the government and the Taliban would have “unfavourable” consequences for Afghanistan, and a return to the intra-Afghan negotiations was the “best solution”. Iran has not attended the stalled Doha negotiations for over two years.

A lively debate is under way inside Iran on how to approach the Taliban. Some analysts argue mass migration from Afghanistan caused by a Taliban insurgency might help the Iranian economy, and that Iran should not oppose a Taliban takeover.

Saeed Laylaz, a prominent reformist-minded economist and adviser to previous governments, said: “Iran is facing a demographic crisis and I believe that the best, closest and least costly way to overcome this demographic crisis is to accept emigration from Afghanistan. Stability in Afghanistan is important for national security, contributing to the ageing crisis and Iran’s economy.

“The Taliban could not have survived so long without genuine political support and they might now serve Iran’s regional diplomatic interests. The Taliban are no longer the Taliban of the past, they have also realised that we must interact with the world, we must cooperate with the countries of the region.”

The director general of the west Asia office at Iran’s foreign ministry, Rasoul Mousavi, also sounded sympathetic if more reserved. “The Taliban are from the Afghan people,” Mousavi said. “They are not separated from Afghanistan’s traditional society, and they have always been part of it. Moreover, they have military power. The US has lost the war and can no longer carry out a military operation against the Taliban.”

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