World
Afghan defeat smashes US image – analyst

BEIJING: The Afghan Taliban have successfully returned to Kabul and are ready to set up a new government while the hasty US retreat, which had caused deaths to locals, makes the end of the 20-year-long war look increasingly embarrassing to the United States.

The UN Security Council held an emergency meeting to discuss the situation in Afghanistan on Monday.

Before the Security Council meeting, key US allies, including the United Kingdom and France, who fought the war with the United States in the past two decades, had expressed their disappointment and concerns but China and Russia remain calm, and cautious in observing the situation.

Chinese analysts said to what extent the Taliban could win worldwide recognition depends on how it could implement its commitments and the failure in Afghanistan could deeply damage the US image as a hegemon. But the pullout from Afghanistan would make the US bolster its presence in other regions.

Washington is still able to export chaos to other countries and regions with the excuse of 'values, international orders or human rights' and people worldwide should learn from the current situation in Afghanistan, experts noted.

'China has noticed that the Afghan Taliban said yesterday the war was over and they vowed to establish through negotiations an open and inclusive Islamic government and to take responsible actions to ensure the safety of Afghan people and foreign diplomatic personnel,' Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Hua Chunying said at a Monday news conference.

Jin Canrong, associate dean of the School of International Studies at the Renmin University of China, told the Global Times on Monday that 'China needs to stay calm to observe the current situation because the Taliban have gained an unexpected victory. This does not mean the Taliban have had overwhelming military power to ensure control, but the [Afghan] government's force has lost morale and given up.'

The Taliban need to take political responsibility, but considering there are different forces within the Taliban, how to prevent the struggle for power and keep an internal balance, as well as satisfy local tribal forces, would be the new challenges for the Taliban and the risk of chaos still exists, Jin said.

Pan Guang, a senior expert on counterterrorism and Afghan studies at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, said the possibility of a humanitarian crisis is there and if the Taliban failed to restore peace and order, the UN Security Council would have to consider sending UN peacekeeping troops into the region, not just to prevent the country becoming a breeding ground for terrorism, but also to conduct anti-drug missions and other humanitarian work.

'But this needs all five permanent members of the Security Council to be united,' Pan noted.

Zhu Yongbiao, director of the Center for Afghanistan Studies in Lanzhou University, said the Afghan Taliban's success in Afghanistan is difficult to duplicate elsewhere but some terrorist and extremist militia forces in the region, such as the Taliban Movement in Pakistan, as well as the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and even ISIS in the Middle East, might believe that they would have the similar chance, too.

'China and Russia, as well as other partners in the region and under the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, are paying attention to the situation to prevent the potential spillover and to strengthen border controls,' he noted.

Russia was in contact with Taliban officials through its embassy in Kabul, President Vladimir Putin's special representative on Afghanistan said on Monday, a day after the Afghan government collapsed and the capital fell to the Taliban, Reuters reported.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Maria Zakharova also pointed out that there has been no reaction from Washington to human rights violations in Kabul and the appeals of Afghan citizens for evacuation help at Kabul airport, TASS reported on Monday.

Hundreds of people run alongside a US Air Force C-17 transport plane as it moves down a runway of the international airport, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, Aug.16. 2021. VERIFIED UGC VIA AP