Numerous reports from the US government and international organisations over the past decade have highlighted rampant corruption across all levels of Afghan state and society. Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan, left, in talks with Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani in Kabul, November 2020 (Anadolu Agency via Getty Images) The Ghani government had resisted dialogue with the Taliban, only to see the United States change its approach out of frustration with the Afghan leadership for its deep-rooted corruption and mismanagement, squandering the chance to govern and develop Afghanistan, which allowed the Taliban to maintain support. Moreover, it was the United States by negotiating directly with the Taliban that provided the group with legitimacy as an important player in the future of Afghanistan. Not only is this tactic disingenuous, dismissing all opposition as “Pakistani backed Taliban” and skating over the reasons why the Taliban continues to win support from the Afghan people themselves, it ignores support Pakistan has provided for Afghans, either as refugees or the hundreds of thousands that have studied and worked in Pakistan. It strips the Taliban of legitimacy as a local Afghan-led movement that aspires to share in governing Afghanistan, and shifts the burden of responsibility away from the Afghan government to its neighbour Pakistan as a reason for the US failures. It has severely damaged both the US war effort in Afghanistan and also Washington’s relations with Islamabad.įor the Ghani government, blaming Pakistan as the force behind the Taliban achieves twin political goals. Claims that Pakistan supports the Taliban in a “double game” is one such fiction that has persisted despite evidence to the contrary. In each instance, Pakistan has provided haven to the Afghan soldiers and returned them to Afghan authorities with respect and dignity.īut it is hard to separate fact from fiction at a time when information amounts to heavy artillery in a broader political battle for support.
Dozens of Afghan soldiers have crossed the border into Pakistan to escape Taliban attacks. In fact, contrary to the claims of the Afghan government, Pakistan has been helping the Afghan National Army. It was the United States by negotiating directly with the Taliban that provided the group with legitimacy as an important player in the future of Afghanistan.
Rather than solely relying on brute force, which would require financial or covert military support from Pakistan, instead the Taliban is by and large seizing territory swiftly and regularly via local political deals over which Pakistan has no possible control. Oft neglected is the role of rampant corruption that delegitimised the Afghan government in the districts, allowing for an easy takeover by the Taliban. Afghan President Ashraf Ghani chose to spark a war of words between Kabul and Islamabad in recent weeks after declaring Pakistan has played a “negative role in the Afghan conflict”.īut this effort to continually blame Pakistan is not only contrary to the evidence available on the ground but also presents a misleading narrative that masks the failures of the Afghan government itself. This is because the Afghan officials believe that without help from Pakistan, the Taliban could not possibly takeover Afghanistan. As districts fall to the Taliban one after another without resistance, the government in Afghanistan has squarely put the blame on Pakistan for the mayhem in the country.