Accessibility Help

British Broadcasting Corporation

BBC News Updated every minute of every day
News Front Page Africa Americas Asia-Pacific Europe Middle East South Asia UK Business Health Science & Environment Technology Entertainment Also in the news ----------------- Video and Audio ----------------- Programmes Have Your Say In Pictures Country Profiles Special Reports

Related BBC sites

Languages

Page last updated at 21:51 GMT, Saturday, 7 November 2009
E-mail this to a friend
Printable version

Pakistan's Taliban dilemma



Afghan voters. Photo credit: Hugh Sykes Afghan voters had to face election fraud in the country

Despite being relatively few in number, the Afghan Taliban are thriving in Afghanistan and Pakistan, as they take advantage of Islamabad's apparent ambivalence towards them, the BBC's Hugh Sykes reports from Kabul.

Despite their fierce reputation, Afghans are mostly gentle, thoughtful people - deeply courteous, with warm humanity that radiates from luminous eyes.

They are also tolerant and very patient.

There was clear evidence of barefaced election fraud, implicitly insulting people who went out to vote believing that their ballots would count. But there has been peace on the streets.

One man said to me this week: "This is all so crazy I've just stopped thinking - and most of my friends are now simply depressed."

And Afghanistan struggles on.

Despite eight years of international assistance, many places in Kabul are a mess.

Simple demands

Major road intersections are pitted with pools of filthy water as wide as streams, and nearly all the deep concrete gutters by the roadside, that I have seen, are stagnant with waste water and rubbish.

And all along these unhygienic streets, food vendors sell their wares from rickety wooden carts. Bananas on many carts, grapes and pomegranates on others.

Almost everyone I have spoken to here on three visits in less than a year has said their demands are very simple: employment, an end to the corruption that's endemic in the Afghan system, and - security.

Security should be simple, one man pointed out: "The Taliban are a small force compared to the British and American armies…you could beat them if you really want."

There is a suspicion here that the entire Western presence is Afghanistan is deeply cynical, misguided, and fundamentally confused.


Rubbish in a Kabul ditch Picture credit: Hugh Sykes Rubbish piles up in a stagnant ditch in central Kabul

The Afghan Taliban leadership and sources of supply are not even in Afghanistan, they are in Pakistan - in Quetta, a city just across the mountains from Kandahar where so many British and American troops have died.

The charge of cynicism arises because the Americans and the British support the Pakistan government - and the Pakistan government at the same time provides sanctuary in Quetta for the Afghan Taliban who are killing US and British troops.

It is like fighting off the enemy at the front door of your home, but leaving the back door unlocked.

Or - imagine the Chicago Police in the 1920s fighting Al Capone, but turning a blind eye to the gun shops where he buys his weapons and ammunition, and even paying protection money to the owners of those shops.

Haroun Mir, director of Afghanistan's Centre for Research and Policy Studies, told me he cannot understand why this surreal situation is tolerated.

"Pakistan gets away with impunity. And instead of being punished, they are rewarded with US aid."

"Why is American public opinion silent about this?"



The Afghan Taliban and the Pakistan Taliban are twins and America must now get Pakistan to decide if they are an ally or an enemy
Dawood Sultanzoy

What the American public have been hearing on their TV networks has been Secretary of State Hillary Clinton declaring that the United States stands "shoulder to shoulder" with Pakistan.

They have not heard her complaining that Pakistan provides safe haven for the Afghan Taliban who are killing American and British troops.

This double-dealing has to stop, in the opinion of the independent Afghan MP - Dawood Sultanzoy.

He told me that Pakistan should realise that they are creating a "boomerang effect".

"The Afghan Taliban and the Pakistan Taliban are twins," he said, "and America must now get Pakistan to decide if they are an ally or an enemy."

Supply lines

At the moment, Pakistan is both ally and enemy to the USA - ally in the fight against the Pakistani Taliban, but enemy so long as they continue to protect the Afghan Taliban.

Quetta is the crucial element. An entire suburb of that Pakistani city is effectively occupied by the Afghan Taliban and their "Shura" ruling council - including their leader Mullah Omar.

The Afghan Taliban get many of their basic supplies in Quetta - their motorbikes, for example, and their mobile phone SIM cards.

And their supply lines cross the mountains into Afghanistan to the north.

Afghanistan is caught in the middle. Nothing will really change here until this has been resolved.

Pakistan could deny the Afghan Taliban their safe haven in Quetta just across the border from where British and American troops and Afghan civilians are being killed.

The question here in Afghanistan is - why don't they?


Afghan boy. Picture credit: Hugh Sykes An Afghan child sits quietly while his country faces many troubles

One answer is that Pakistan has to hedge its bets. As more and more British and American troops die, pressure from the public in Britain and America to withdraw their forces could become irresistible.

The future of the Afghan government of President Hamid Karzai, already stained by election fraud, would then be uncertain. And the chance of the Taliban returning to power here would sharply increase.

They are already waiting in the wings.

On Friday, Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) troops from Poland went to a village in Ghazni province south of Kabul. They distributed blankets, and some radios, and they left.

Twenty minutes later, a dozen Taliban arrived on motorcycles and seized the blankets; they set fire to some of them, and took the rest away for themselves.

The Afghan Taliban are well-organised, well-resourced, patient - and they have good sources of intelligence. They should not be under-estimated.

Pakistan needs smooth relations with whoever is in power in Kabul.

Islamabad was one of the very few capitals where the previous Afghan Taliban regime had an embassy. Only two other countries recognised the Taliban government - Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

And after 11 September 2001, the only nation that continued to recognise the Taliban government in Kabul was...Pakistan.



Bookmark with:

What are these?


E-mail this to a friend
Printable version

Print Sponsor



TALIBAN CONFLICT LATEST NEWS Karzai sets Afghan forces target Afghans 'blame poverty for war' Taliban leader 'flees Pakistan' US presses Karzai on corruption THE TALIBAN

Taliban fighter in Torkham 2001 Who are the Taliban?
History of movement in Afghanistan and Pakistan
Mapping the militant nexus Q&A: Causes of regional militancy FEATURES AND ANALYSIS

Mehsud Taliban fighters, pictured in South Waziristan in 2008 Taliban challenge
What Pakistani army is up against in South Waziristan
How Afghan corruption works Pakistan's Taliban problem US troops: Afghan options Pakistanis back assault on Taliban AFGHAN ELECTIONS

Afghan President Hamid Karzai (2nd L) passes an honour guard as he arrives for his swearing in ceremony as the country"s president for another five years at the Presidential Palace in Kabul on November 19, 2009. Fresh start?
West seeks new beginnings from Hamid Karzai, writes Lyse Doucet.
President's in-tray Back in favour - conditionally Q&A: Afghan election Life in Afghanistan IN VIDEO

Hamid Karzai Karzai sets out Afghan vision

A man washing a van First to the scene in Pakistan

Aleem Maqbool on a bomb site in Peshawar How Peshawar copes with bombings

Orla Guerin Pakistan 'captures Taliban bases'

RELATED INTERNET LINKS (External) Afghanistan's Centre for Research and Policy Studies The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
TOP SOUTH ASIA STORIES Refugees riot on Christmas Island
Seven killed in NE India blasts
Sri Lanka camps 'to be opened'

MOST POPULAR STORIES NOW

Most popular now, in detail Most popular now, in detail Most popular now, in detail

FEATURES, VIEWS, ANALYSIS

Aasif Mandvi at the UK premiere of Today's Special, in London 16 October 2009 Hello Hollywood
South Asian stars find success on US silver screens

Property in Kabul Kabul capital
Real estate prices go through the roof in Afghanistan

Sting with Chief Raoni Sting's plea
Rock star urges Brazil to listen to tribal fears
Most Popular Now

Most Popular Now | 17,929 people are reading stories on the site right now.


Skip to top

PRODUCTS & SERVICES

Quantcast

Explore the BBC

Home

Popular links

BBC links A to F

  1. BBC iPlayer
  2. CBBC
  3. CBeebies
  4. Food

BBC links H to L

  1. Health
  2. History
  3. Learning
  4. Local & Nations

BBC links M to Sc

  1. Music
  2. News
  3. Radio
  4. Science & Nature

BBC links Sp to W

  1. Sport
  2. TV
  3. Weather

A whole lot more

To top

Site Links

BBC links

BBC © MMIX

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.
Americas  Africa  Europe  Middle East  South Asia  Asia Pacific 

watch One-Minute World News

Change Text Only Settings

Graphic version of this page