Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

Does this mean no more interference by ISI in Afghan affairs?

Exclusive: Pakistan’s army chief makes Afghan peace top priority | Reuters

By Mehreen Zahra-Malik and Matthew Green

WANA, Pakistan/ISLAMABAD | Sun Dec 23, 2012 1:53am EST

(Reuters) - Pakistan’s powerful army chief has made reconciling warring factions in Afghanistan a top priority, military officials and Western diplomats say, the newest and clearest sign yet that Islamabad means business in promoting peace with the Taliban.

General Ashfaq Kayani is backing dialogue partly due to fears that the end of the U.S. combat mission in Afghanistan in 2014 could energize a resilient insurgency straddling the shared frontier, according to commanders deployed in the region.

“There was a time when we used to think we were the masters of Afghanistan. Now we just want them to be masters of themselves so we can concentrate on our own problems,” said a senior Pakistani military officer stationed in South Waziristan, part of the tribal belt that hugs the Afghan border.

“Pakistan has the power to create the environment in which a grand reconciliation in Afghanistan can take place,” he said, speaking in the gritty town of Wana, about 30 km (20 miles) from Afghanistan. “We have to rise to the challenge. And we are doing it, at the highest level possible.”

On December 7, Kayani hammered home his determination to support a negotiated end to the war in Afghanistan at a meeting of top commanders at the army headquarters in Rawalpindi.

“He (Kayani) said Afghan reconciliation is our top priority,” said a Pakistani intelligence official, who was briefed about the meeting.

Major progress with Kayani’s help could enable U.S. President Barack Obama to say his administration managed to sway Pakistan - often seen as an unreliable ally - to help achieve a top U.S. foreign policy goal.

Afghan officials, who have long suspected Pakistan of funding and arming the Taliban, question whether Kayani genuinely supports dialogue or is merely making token moves to deflect Western criticism of Pakistan’s record in Afghanistan.

Pakistan backed the Taliban’s rise to power in Afghanistan in the mid-1990s and is seen as a crucial gatekeeper in attempts by the U.S. and Afghan governments to reach out to insurgent leaders who fled to Pakistan after their 2001 ouster.

Relations between Taliban commanders and Pakistan’s security establishment have increasingly been poisoned by mistrust, however, raising questions over whether Kayani’s spymasters wield enough influence to nudge them towards the table.

Nevertheless, diplomats in Islamabad argue that Pakistan has begun to show markedly greater enthusiasm for Western-backed attempts to engage with Taliban leaders. Western diplomats, who for years were skeptical about Pakistani promises, say Islamabad is serious about promoting stability in Afghanistan.

“They seem to genuinely want to move towards a political solution,” said an official from an EU country. “We’ve seen a real shift in their game-plan at every level. Everyone involved seems to want to get something going.”

“PAST MISTAKES”

The army has ruled Pakistan for more than half its history and critics say generals have jealously guarded the right to dictate policy on Afghanistan, seeing friendly guerrilla groups as “assets” to blunt the influence of arch-rival India.

But army attitudes towards former Islamist proxies have also begun to evolve due to the rise of Pakistan’s own Taliban movement, which has fought fierce battles in the tribal areas and launched suicide attacks in major cities.

Kayani seemed to signal that the army’s conception of its role in Pakistan and the region was changing in a speech to officers in Rawalpindi last month.

“As a nation we are passing through a defining phase,” Kayani said. “We are critically looking at the mistakes made in the past and trying to set the course for a better future.”

Kayani ordered Pakistan’s biggest offensive against the militants in 2009, pouring 40,000 troops into South Waziristan in a bid to decisively tip the balance against the growing challenge they posed to the state.

Outsiders are largely barred from the tribal belt, but Reuters was able to arrange a rare three-day trip with Pakistan’s military last month.

Security appeared to have improved markedly in South Waziristan since the offensive, but the visit also underscored the huge task Pakistan’s army still faces to gain control over other parts of the border region.

Haji Taj, who runs an Islamic seminary for boys and girls in Wana, said militants were still at large in surrounding mountains. “Outside the army camp, it’s Taliban rule,” he said.

“CHANGE IN MINDSET”

Kayani, a career soldier who assumed command of the army in 2007, has been a key interlocutor with Washington during one of the most turbulent chapters in U.S.-Pakistan relations.

Arguably Pakistan’s most powerful man, he has earned a reputation as a thoughtful commander who has curbed the military’s tendency to meddle overtly in politics.

With Kayani’s support, Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar has held repeated rounds of discussions with Afghan counterparts, and in November Pakistan released more than a dozen Taliban prisoners.

The move aimed to reassure the Afghan government and Pakistan’s allies of Islamabad’s good faith and telegraph to the Taliban that Pakistan is serious about facilitating talks.

“There is a change in political mindset and will on the Pakistani side,” Salahuddin Rabbani, the chairman of Afghanistan’s High Peace Council, told Reuters. “We have reason to be cautiously optimistic.”

Seeking to overcome a bitter legacy of mistrust, Pakistan has also built bridges with Afghan politicians close to the Northern Alliance, a constellation of anti-Taliban warlords who have traditionally been implacable critics of Islamabad.

Kayani flew to Kabul last month for talks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and accompanied Khar on a visit to Brussels to meet top NATO and U.S. officials in early December.

Skeptics in Kabul wonder, however, whether Pakistan is still hedging its bets. Afghan officials are particularly irked by Pakistan’s refusal to release Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban’s captured second-in-command, who is seen as a potentially significant go-between with insurgents.

Even with Pakistan’s unambiguous support, diplomats warn that there are unanswered questions over what form any peace process might take, and whether Taliban hardliners will engage.

“THERE IS NO OTHER WAY”

Kayani’s growing support for dialogue is driven to a large extent by a realization that the United States is intent on sticking to its Afghan withdrawal plans, diplomats say.

A series of high-profile attacks in Pakistan in recent months, including a December 15 raid on the airport in the north-western city of Peshawar, has sharpened concerns that instability in Afghanistan could invigorate Pakistani militants.

Hawks in Pakistan’s security bureaucracy may balk at the idea of supporting dialogue unless they can be certain that any future settlement will limit India’s influence in Kabul.

But officers deployed in outposts clinging to the saw-toothed peaks of the frontier fear they may soon face an even fiercer fight unless the leaders of the insurgency in Afghanistan can be persuaded to talk.

“After 2014, when the U.S. leaves, what will these guys do? You think they’ll suddenly become traders and responsible citizens of society?” said another officer serving in South Waziristan. “We have to make sure of a post-2014 framework that can accommodate these elements. There is no other way.”

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

tied by history and geography, the peace in Afghanistan will guarantee peace in Pakistan. Its good if the Pakistani security establishment has realized this.

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

I hope that would mean fencing the border, and repatriating all afghanis. Afghanistan relies more on Pakistan than any other country. America is just there for the ride, and other countries are merely looking for economical benefits, whereas Pakistan and Afghanistan are unfortunately enough, mutually tied up via the pashtun race. The afghans have never been favorable to Pakistan, right from their attack on Pakistan in the early 60s, till today, where all we see are drugs, guns, terrorism and beggary from the afghans.
Pakistan needs to fence the durand line, and relocate all afghan refugees back to Afghanistan, and let them sort their problems out. Iran has done that effectively, and Pakistan should do the same, if it is to rid itself of the problems that came with the refugees.

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

I think military establishment is scared, and rightly so, that if the US leaves it would be hard to control combined forces of jihadi terrorists across the border. Also, I think we have wasted time, and should've proactively worked to stabilized Afghanistan instead of providing sanctuaries to terrorists from across the globe...this problem is going to get lot worse before it gets better, IMO.

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

I dont think it will get worse, there's war wariness every where now...

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

Only if wishes were horses (or dronez)...

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

That maybe true for society at large, but what do you think will happen to all the jihadis from this conflict? Do you think they will give up guns and pickup farming?

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

^ that wouldn't be the case for all (the hardcore will keep on fighting) but there are people among them who are fed up with all this.

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

KarooN ga kya jo ho gaya mohabbat meiN na'kaam
mujhey to aur koi kaam bhi nahi aata

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

How did you come to know of the official policy of our military establishment?

By the way, battle is all they are born for, they live for and they die for. Never discount their stamina. They may be slow at times and intense at other times, but they will never be out. That's they way they thrive and survive.

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan’s army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

While its important for Pakistan to have the Afghan war resolved appropriately, but on the other side I personally wouldnt want them to be seen as interfering in their internal matters. The blow back after US withdrawal could be very devastating if not handled properly.

Pakistan’s military plays Afghan peacemaker - Features - Al Jazeera English

Hundreds of Pakistani Taliban stormed checkpoints near Peshawar with rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles blazing in coordinated strikes on Thursday, capturing 23 outgunned tribal security men in the rugged northwest near the border with Afghanistan.

After holding and terrorising them for three days, 21 officers were taken to a cricket pitch, blindfolded, and shot dead, one-by-one, against a wall. The bodies were left where they fell on Saturday as a grisly message for ethnic Pashtuns contemplating joining paramilitary forces opposing the Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters.

The killings came a day after Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud, in a rare on-camera interview, offered to negotiate with the government of Pakistan. His offer was conditional, “we will not lay down our guns”, he said.

A week earlier a suicide bomber strolled into a political rally in Pakistan’s northwest and blew himself up alongside nine other people - including his target, veteran politician Bashir Bilour.

**A vocal critic of violent hardliners, Bilour consistently challenged them - as well as Pakistan’s military - for its backing of the Taliban movement in Afghanistan since the 1990s. He also denounced world powers for playing the “Great Game” in Central Asia.
**

**“Unless there is peace in Afghanistan, there will be no peace in Pakistan,” Bilour told reporters in November 2010. “Superpowers are engaged in an unannounced Third World War in Afghanistan, and unfortunately Pakistan is in the eye of the storm.”
**

After his assassination that Saturday, Bilour’s words have gained new significance in the corridors of power in Pakistan, amid growing anxiety over the forthcoming United States military withdrawal from Afghanistan, and as a struggle for power over tribal areas along the porous border intensifies.

**Both Pakistan’s military and civilian leadership are fearful of violence spilling over the border as the more than 100,000 foreign troops leave in 2014.
**

**Military officials and Western diplomats say Pakistan’s powerful military commander, General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, has made finding a political solution to the war in Afghanistan his “top priority”.
**

Pakistan’s military has agreedto release Taliban commanders and fighters as part of an agreement with the Afghan government intended to bring all parties to the negotiating table. The end goal is to transform the Afghan Taliban into a political force.

Ahmed Rashid, author of “Taliban: Islam, Oil and the New Great Game in Central Asia”, said the situation is a major turning point for Pakistan’s military, which has for years been accused of aiding and abetting some of the most violent Taliban elements.

**“The army, which has endured heavy casualties fighting the Pakistani Taliban, is deeply reluctant to get involved in more fighting,” Rashid told Al Jazeera from Lahore. “General Kayani is now banking on the hope that reconciliation among the Afghans will have a trickle-down positive effect on the Pakistani Taliban - depriving them of legitimacy and recruits.”
**

**Ayesha Siddiqa, author of “Military, Inc: Inside Pakistan’s Military Economy”, told Al Jazeera that the country’s military is banking on its long-standing relationship with the Afghan Taliban to achieve peace in the war-torn country.
**

**“For military commanders it’s about an old partnership. Pakistan’s army is not known to abandon its friends. It doesn’t leave those who’ve helped it in the past,” Siddiqa said.
**

**Strategic alliances

**
It has taken more than a decade for Pakistani generals to figure out their strategy for Afghanistan. The military has tried previously to broker peace agreements with various armed groups following the US invasion in 2001.

**But the contradictory policy of supporting some insurgents and not others has largely failed, said professor Hassan Abbas from National Defense University in Washington, DC.
**

**“The purpose of these deals was to limit the conflict zone from expanding, and avoid a head-on collision with the militants … [However] these deals proved to be counterproductive,” Abbas wrotein a 2010 research paper.
**

**While the US-led fight has neutralised many armed groups and individuals, the offensive has also resulted in the creation of one of the most deadly organisations in the world - the Pakistani Taliban.
**

Many Arab al-Qaeda fighters fled the United States’ “war on terror” in Afghanistan, seeking refuge in Pakistan’s tribal areas in 2002, and five-years later the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan was officially born.
“That was the turning point when the Arabs were given shelter by these tribes, they became mentors to young, impressionable [tribal] leaders,” said Rashid. “With their arrival began a much deeper process of radicalisation for Pakistan’s fiercely independent tribes. This made them more radical and vicious than the Afghan fighters.”

**The Taliban movement in Pakistan quickly gained notoriety for using suicide bombers as a weapon of choice. Former Prime Minister of Pakistan Benazir Bhutto was among more than 5,300 Pakistanis killed in suicide attacks since 2002.
**

“In North Waziristan, you can buy a suicide bomber from anywhere between $5,000 to $11,000,” says Syed Irfan Ashraf, who has studied Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan. The money most often goes to the attackers’ impoverished families.

But monetary benefits are only part of the lure of the Pakistani Taliban. The movement’s rise can also be attributed to an expansionist interpretation of Islam, Rashid said.

**“In Afghanistan, the Taliban is still a peasant army. In Pakistan, its different - they’re ideologically primed, they have studied at madrasas,” he said. “A few religious political parties have also nurtured its leaders, [and] as a result they have a lot more political acumen and vision.”
**

**Expansion plans

**This vision - of a “global Islam” based on the al-Qaeda model in which Arabs, Chechens, Pakistanis and others can network and pool resources - is an important reason why Pakistan’s military establishment is eager for a settlement in Afghanistan.

In the past, it was easy for the Pakistani military to control different groups because of tribal and ideological divisions, but now these differences are proving to be a disadvantage because the groups often fight each other over influence and tribal allegiances.

Taliban commander Mullah Muhamad Nazir survived but was wounded in a suicide attack in Wana, capital of the South Waziristan tribal area, which killed eight others.

Nazir is part of the Haqqani network and has a deal in place with Pakistan’s army. Hours after the attack, Nazir ordered the expulsion of all fighters who belong to the Mehsud tribe - the core group behind Pakistan’s Taliban movement.

**Azaz Syed, a correspondent for Pakistan’s GEO television network, said it would be harder for the Afghan Taliban to influence Pakistan’s Taliban if violence continues to escalate.
**

**“The Americans have given the [Pakistani] army a free hand in Afghanistan, and the Afghan Taliban have given an assurance to resolve the Pakistani Taliban issue. But there’s a big question mark on whether these promises will be fulfilled,” said Syed.

**
**Enforcing any peace deals with a fragmented Taliban movement may become impossible once US troops leave, said Rashid, adding after a decade of fighting the Afghan Taliban wants to consolidate its gains without diktats from the Pakistanis.
**

**“The Afghan Taliban faces an awkward perpetual situation,” said Rashid. “They are tired. They want to return back to Afghanistan. Their leaders do not want to be under the thumb of the Pakistan military any longer.”
**

Follow Ali Mustafa on Twitter: @Ali_Mustafa](https://twitter.com/Ali_Mustafa)

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan’s army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

Pak releases high profile Taliban prisoners | Saach.TV

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

Acting on His master's voice , Nothing more

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

^ I dont think so! The military is really worried now, any missteps now and we are in for a big disaster come US withdrawal from Afghanistan. If civil war erupts in Afghanistan that could quickly engulf Pakistan too, besides if Afghan Taleban feel that Pakistan are selling them cheaply to the US/Afghan Government again they could team up with Pakistani Taleban and target Pakistan.

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

how come Pakistan has 'arrested' so many high profile Afghan Taleban and no one from our enemies (Pakistani taleban)?

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

There will be no peace in A-Stan, it will be the rapist/Drug pushers form the North vs Taliban. There will be no peace in Pak and at Pak/Afghan border so long the grand daddy of all terrorist aka USA is in A-Stan..

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

When they left in 1986, the result was an unstable Afghanistan. When they will leave now they will leave an unstable Afghanistan plus Pakistan. The situation has changed a lot during the past 10 years, most of KP and all of FATA is in turmoil. There is a real danger of civil war between Taleban and Northern warlords, which could spill over into Pakistan. I frankly dont expect anything from the military high command, but they should try to take the decisions in our interest for a change.

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

They can not leave them alive , There are many secret things

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

How can Pakistan have supported Northern Alliance after US arrival considering we supported Mulla Omer for so long to batter Northern Alliance, do you think NA would've trusted Pakistan enough after all that? And Taliban would've accepted that and moved on peacefully? We, the drawing room analysts are far away from the ground.

Re: Exclusive: Pakistan's army chief makes Afghan peace top priority

Exactly. Just seal the Af-Pak border. This folks is the only way there will ever be peace in the af-pak theatre. Unless free the movement of the militants is checked at this border you can expect to have any peace. And if you think US is going to leave Afghanistan, you are mistaken. They are just going to reduce their strength.