By New Age Islam Edit
Bureau
26
September 2020
• The Doha-Kabul Journey As A Road To Nowhere
By D. Suba Chandran
• It Is Silly to Link the Anti-CAA Protests To
the Subsequent Riots of February
By Salman Khurshid
• The Issues That Matter To Indian-Americans
By Yashwant Raj
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The Doha-Kabul Journey As A Road To Nowhere
By D. Suba Chandran
September
26, 2020
There is an
element of naiveté among those who feel the Taliban will find middle ground
with the Afghan government
Finally,
after numerous false starts, the representatives of the Afghan government and
the Taliban could meet in Doha recently. It was a tough road from Kabul to Doha
for all three actors involved — the Afghan government, the Taliban, and, most
importantly, the United States. Now, that they have met in Doha, the road back
to Kabul will be more challenging, given the inherent differences on the Afghan
endgame among these three actors.
Some Red Flags
First, as
one could observe from the statements made by Abdullah Abdullah (chairperson of
Afghanistan’s High Council for National Reconciliation and overseeing the
government’s peace efforts) and Mullah Ghani Baradar (the Taliban’s deputy
leader), their endgame in Afghanistan appears substantially different, and even
contradictory. Consider the following. Abdullah Abdullah was referring to an
Afghanistan with democracy as the basis, with liberal values and equal rights
for everyone, including the minorities and women. Mullah Baradar’s position is
more straightforward: an Islamic emirate in Afghanistan. Keeping the
theological and theoretical assumptions of a democracy and an emirate away, do
these two representatives refer to something that means the same Afghan endgame?
Are there at least complementarities in what each wants to achieve, and how
they see the future of Afghanistan? Unfortunately, given history, the Taliban’s
version of an Islamic emirate will be in direct contradiction to what the
Afghan government wants in terms of democracy, human rights and equal rights
for women and minorities. Striking a middle ground may be difficult, even
impossible. Furthermore, this would be a deal-breaker.img
Exit America
Second, how
involved will the U.S. be once intra-Afghan talks take shape? The U.S. endgame
in Afghanistan is not aimed at a political settlement in and for Kabul.
Instead, the U.S. looks at an exit from Afghanistan, as early as possible,
preferably before the forthcoming U.S. presidential elections. The U.S. should
remain committed to the intra-Afghan process and ensure both sides, especially
the Taliban, sticks to the political plot.
Unfortunately,
the U.S. will not. U.S. President Donald Trump will declare an American victory
in Afghanistan in the next few weeks. He would state the following as the
American achievements: The al-Qaeda in Afghanistan is neutralised, the Taliban
has severed its relationship with all external actors, the killing of Osama bin
Laden, elections and democracy in Afghanistan, and, finally, an intra-Afghan
dialogue. Topmost on his achievement list would be the job done in Afghanistan,
announcing the withdrawal of all American troops, before Christmas or the New
Year. After West Asia, Afghanistan would be Mr. Trump’s major achievement.
Third, the
American exit from Afghanistan – physically and politically, would rupture the
intra-Afghan dialogue process. The Afghan government has not only been
reluctant from the beginning to engage with the Taliban but is also divided
within in terms of how it sees the Taliban. While leaders like Abdullah
Abdullah and Amrullah Saleh (Afghanistan Vice-President) are on the extreme
side in terms of how they would loathe sharing power with the Taliban, others
including President Ashraf Ghani would have reservations. The Afghan leadership
was pressurised by the U.S. and even threatened with an aid cut, to get on to
the road to Doha. The Loya Jirga that the Afghan government organised recently
on the subject was under American pressure, to create a consensus in starting a
dialogue with the Taliban. This is what the Afghan Peace Council has been
tasked to and has been grappling with — to find an answer and a middle ground.
Outside the
Afghan government, there reservations among multiple sections – the minorities and
women. The last few years and elections have created certain institutions of
democracy and liberal notions that make many Afghans look at their future
beyond the tribal and religious orders. For them, negotiating with the Taliban
and reaching a middle ground will be a tough assignment.
The Taliban Spells Violence
Fourth,
what does the Taliban want? Is it looking forward to sharing power in Kabul and
taking part in an electoral process? Is it looking forward to working with the
Afghan institutions and abiding by the legislation and parliamentary norms? Is
it looking at creating an equal and egalitarian society in Afghanistan?
There is an
element of naiveté among those who believe that the Taliban is transformed and
will find middle ground with the Afghan government. For the Taliban, it would
be nothing short of an Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. Period.
Fifth, the
Taliban has been waiting for the last two decades for international troops to
leave. It would wait for a few more months to see the last American soldier
exit Afghanistan. Then, it would return to what it knows the best — violence.
Aimed at three actors (the international troops, the Afghan government and the
Afghan people), the Taliban has been employing violence as the primary strategy
to achieve what it has wanted.
Despite the
February 2020 agreement with the U.S. in Doha, the Taliban never stopped from
using violence. Available data would suggest that there has been no let-up in
violence since February 2020, and in the process, the Taliban has got what it
has wanted: the release of all Taliban prisoners. Once the Americans leave, it
would go back to the strategy that has yielded maximum dividends — violence. As
one could observe during the last week, violence continues today, even during
the post-Doha meeting between the two actors. Also, until now, it has not
agreed to a ceasefire; it will not in the near future.
The Regional Game
Sixth, the
return of the regional great game. Pakistan, Iran, China, Russia and India all
have stakes in Afghanistan, and have made it clear through the multiple
dialogues on Afghanistan (bilateral, trilateral and quadrilateral). As long as
American troops and interests remain in Afghanistan, their role would remain
limited. Now, one should wait and watch on how the regional great game in
Afghanistan is played, and how it has shaped the Afghan endgame.
The last
point would be how history would judge the American intervention in Afghanistan
in the last two decades. Is the U.S. leaving Afghanistan in 2020 any better
than how it saw it when it invaded the country in 2001? Or has it made the
situation worse?
To
conclude, if the road from Kabul to Doha was tough, the return would be even
tougher and more complicated. It is also possible that the Doha-Kabul journey
could be a road to nowhere.
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D. Suba Chandran is Professor and Dean, School
of Conflict and Security Studies, and Head, Conflict Resolution and Peace
Research Programme and Science Diplomacy Programme, National Institute of
Advanced Studies, Bengaluru
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/the-doha-kabul-journey-as-a-road-to-nowhere/article32699257.ece?homepage=true
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It Is Silly to Link the Anti-CAA Protests To
the Subsequent Riots of February
By Salman Khurshid
September
26, 2020
The
protests at Shaheen Bagh and Jamia Millia Islamia, not to mention the protests
inspired by them across the country against the CAA-NRC-NPR, were a remarkable
break from the past and a repudiation of stereotypes. Virtually leaderless
masses of students and women took to the streets to register their presence and
participation in Indian democracy.
Of course,
the usual suspects, activists and would-be leaders from fringe movements, tried
to muscle in whilst others put up barriers for the leaders and parties, with
whom they had real or imagined scores to settle.
The crowds
had Jamaat-e-Islami supporters who kept secularists away, ultra-left Marxists
who queried the invites to former ministers of the Congress, new-age Dalit
cause converts who did not wish to cede space to established parties, local
musclemen and land grabbers who wanted to use the movement to create safe
havens, genteel social activists constantly wary of the potential for
confrontation and local politicians trying to elbow each other out. With the
filing of the charge-sheets, there is apprehension that fifth columnists had
infiltrated the unique movement from the beginning. With friends like these,
who needs enemies? When I tried to persuade the organisers at Jamia to invite
some former ministers, I was told that it had been difficult enough to accept
my presence.
It was
COVID-19 and the responsible response to the administration’s requests that
brought the protests to a pause, hopefully not to an end. It certainly was not
the police and government’s strong-arm tactics that made the 24×7 protests fold
up. It is silly to link the protests to the subsequent riots of February, which
cannot be de-linked from the divisive politics pursued by the ruling
establishment at the Centre. What might be made of the ambivalent and slippery
politics of the AAP, who gathered the reluctant vote of the protesters, is a
million-dollar question.
Interestingly,
the 17,500-page charge-sheet filed in FIR 59/2020 has S161 (not admissible) and
S164 statements mentioning the names of several speakers, including mine. The
statements indicate that the speakers used “provocative language and motivated
people to join the protests”. Putting diverse people together in a statement as
though they had a collective or corporate personality and to bind all with one
statement is an interesting sleight of hand. Or perhaps it is just plain
laziness in an investigation. But the larger issue is that the protests are
sought to be perceived as the precursors of the unfortunate riots.
We know
that riots happen for a variety of local reasons and the prevailing atmosphere
has a great deal to do with it. The riots that took place in northeast Delhi
have left many questions unanswered. It is not surprising that former Supreme
Court judges and a celebrated former police chief have expressed their disquiet
about the investigation.
The Mumbai
Police blotted its copybook during the 1992-93 riots in the city and the Delhi
Police has followed suit in 2020. Assiduously built relationships between the
local police and the populace, without which policing is impossible, have been
fed to the vultures who feed upon the carcass of a divided society. The damage
that will be done to a generation of young Indians will be bad enough, but the
police will not escape the damage that could take generations to repair.
There is
much history to take lessons from. When the curtains come down on this era of
discontent, the downstream perpetrators of injustice will not even be
remembered as villains — a sobriquet reserved for the high and mighty who fall
from grace.
The right
to protest peacefully will be illusory if every such gathering is declared
unlawful as a matter of routine. Harsh words against a government that more
than deserves them being labelled as sedition will virtually negate Article 19
and free speech. Curiously, many persons who support the action against CAA
protestors are lining up to bemoan the Supreme Court showing prima facie
concern about the content of the Sudarshan TV tapes on the UPSC selection of
candidates coached by Jamia and other organisations. One man’s meat is another
man’s poison.
While the
government may be congratulating itself for destroying the spontaneous voice of
the people (according to them, only some people), there are two explanations
for its position: It is either fear of vox populi or a perverse ideological
posture on equality. Perhaps it is a bit of both. But from the point of view of
democracy, one wonders what happens to spontaneous movements like the outburst
of young people in the heart of Delhi after the December 2012 rape and murder
and then the Shaheen Baghs across India? Are they destined to plant the flag of
protest, leave their footprints on the sands of time, and move on for another
generation to consolidate? The government will soon discover if the CAA
protests were designed and executed by the conspirators mentioned in the
charge-sheets, in which case the streets and barricades will not be occupied
again. On the other hand, if they were organic and spontaneous, they will
spring up again. The movement would have learnt costly lessons, but one wonders
if the government did so too. From the contents of the charge-sheet, it appears
that far from learning, the government continues to celebrate ignorance,
persecution and falsehood.
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Salman Khurshid is a senior Congress leader and
a former Union minister.
https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/delhi-riots-shaheen-bagh-anti-caa-nrc-6611865/
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The Issues That Matter To Indian-Americans
By Yashwant Raj
Sep 25,
2020
United
States (US) President Donald Trump and Democratic contender Joe Biden’s
campaigns have pitched their candidates as the best bet for US-India relations
to court Indian-Americans, who are expected to play an outsized role in what
promises to be a close presidential election. Bilateral relations with India
have become an issue in the US elections for the first time.
Biden has
promised that relations with India will get “high priority” and has bashed
India’s regional adversaries — China and Pakistan — to burnish his credentials
as the better custodian of ties with New Delhi.
The Trump
campaign has released a video of clips spliced together from the “Howdy Modi”
and “Namaste Trump” events touting close ties between the two leaders. And it
has also cited the administration’s position on the Kashmir status change and
the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA) as internal matters in sharp contrast to
the Biden campaign’s criticism of India on these issues.
A group of
Indian-Americans pressed Biden at a fund-raiser to moderate his position on these
issues and dial up the campaign’s pitch to Hindus in a bid to staunch the flow
of the community’s support towards Trump. They had the candidate’s attention
they believed, and came away with a distinct impression that one of them would
get a follow-up call from the campaign.
Certifiably
reliable election data for the community doesn’t go far back enough to evaluate
its voting behaviour relative to the highs and lows in the relationship. But
did Bill Clinton, a Democrat, drive them towards the Republican Party when he
slapped multiple sanctions on India for the Pokhran-II nuclear tests in 1998,
clearly the lowest point in bilateral ties in recent decades?
Or, did
George W Bush, a Republican, trigger a rush of Indian-Americans to the party
with the civil nuclear deal in 2008, which remains an unparalleled high-point
of the relationship? Not really. In a 2008 pre-poll survey by AAPI Data, which
has consistently polled the community since then with other Asian-Americans,
Barack Obama, the Democratic nominee, led his Republican rival John McCain 53%
to 13%, among Indian-Americans; 33% were undecided.
Its latest
poll tells a most consequential story, but one that has received little
attention: Indian-Americans don’t actually care much about US policy for South
Asia.
Education
was listed by 94% of Indian-American voters as extremely important or very
important, followed by jobs and the economy (92% ), health care (92%),
environment (88%), racial discrimination (84%), policing reforms (84%),
national security (84%), and immigration (80%).
US foreign
policy in Asia was marked way, way down in comparison (66%).
It is
unclear if “US foreign policy in Asia” meant and covered US relations with
India specifically. But as Milan Vaishnav, an Indian-American expert on India-US
relations at Carnegie, said, “India and US-India ties might matter on the
margins, but we don’t have evidence it is a determining factor yet.”
https://www.hindustantimes.com/columns/the-issues-that-matter-to-indian-americans/story-4IznD07tRtHKto9v9n5mTP.html
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