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Afghan diplomacy? What terror attacks mean for West, Taliban.

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Andrew Kelly/Reuters
U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield addresses the United Nations Security Council regarding the situation in Afghanistan, at the United Nations in New York, Aug. 16, 2021.

Thursday鈥檚 terrorist bombings outside Kabul鈥檚 international airport were a humanitarian tragedy 鈥 and may greatly complicate the way forward for both the United States and the Taliban, which have been warily cooperating during the largest evacuation airlift since the Vietnam War.

The attacks Thursday 鈥 which killed at least 12 American servicemen and dozens of Afghan civilians 鈥 have the potential to alter the calculus on everything from the Taliban鈥檚 stated promise to keep Afghanistan from becoming a hotbed of terrorist activity to their attempt to present a more moderate face to the world than they showed the last time they were in power.

At the same time, the attacks may make it more difficult for the U.S. to develop their current relationship with the Taliban into something more than a narrow working effort to manage the evacuation鈥檚 chaos. For President Joe Biden, the political pressure of this foreign crisis will only increase.

Why We Wrote This

Before today鈥檚 horrific attacks in Kabul, potential diplomatic engagement with the Taliban had its own logic. Now, terror concerns already high on the global agenda threaten to overshadow all else.

The Islamic State, which claimed responsibility for the explosions, may want a future Afghanistan in which the Taliban and the U.S. have as narrow a relationship as possible.

Nevertheless, an impetus remains for the Taliban and the international community to engage diplomatically. The Taliban are taking the reins from a government in Kabul that relied on U.S. and Western funding for 80% of its budget. At the same time, about half of Afghanistan鈥檚 38 million people have been dependent on international food assistance to survive.

As the Taliban transition from waging an insurgency to governing the country, those factors might seem to suggest that the Western-led international community will have significant leverage to press the conservative Islamist movement to modify its past behavior.

At the same time, the U.S. and other countries have a range of interests, from preventing terrorism and controlling the illicit drug trade to avoiding a new humanitarian disaster marked by rising hunger and an overpowering refugee exodus. And these international concerns will play to the Taliban鈥檚 favor.

What this means, experts in Afghanistan and global politics say, is that both sides have cards to play in an emerging diplomatic game between the Taliban government and the international community.

What does the Taliban want from the world?

Much will depend, they add, on perhaps the biggest unknown of the new reality: what kind of governance the Taliban intend to impose, and what kind of relations they want with the world. The Taliban鈥檚 actions in the days immediately following Thursday鈥檚 devastating attacks will likely influence whether the international community sees them as a credible governing body.

鈥淭he leverage the U.S. and the broader international community have is squarely on the financial side, when you remember to what degree Afghanistan has been dependent on international support,鈥 says Earl Anthony Wayne, a former deputy U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan.

鈥淏ut of course how聽much聽leverage that is depends on what the government that emerges on the Taliban side really wants to do,鈥 he adds. 鈥淚f they want to be a government that provides services and can help people get jobs that allow for stable and productive lives, then they鈥檙e going to require international assistance.鈥

Wali Sabawoon/AP
Smoke rises from deadly explosions outside the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, Aug. 26, 2021. Suicide bombers and gunmen targeted crowds massing near the airport gate in the waning days of an airlift that has drawn thousands of people seeking to flee the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.

There are a few conditions the international community as a whole, led by the five powers of the United Nations Security Council 鈥 the U.S., China, Russia, France, and the United Kingdom 鈥 will want to set with the Taliban government in order for international sanctions on the group to be lifted and foreign assistance to resume.

At the top of the list is terrorism.

鈥淚t鈥檚 actually helpful to the Taliban to have terrorist attacks like today to tell the U.S., 鈥業f you don鈥檛 leave Afghanistan, there will be more like this,'鈥 says Bradley Bowman, senior director at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracy鈥檚 Center on Military and Political Power in Washington.

Today鈥檚 attacks may deepen Russia鈥檚 worries that the Taliban victory could prove to be a boon to Islamist extremists in some former republics of the Soviet Union, while China has similar concerns about the influence Afghanistan鈥檚 triumphant Islamists could have among its minority Muslim Uyghur population.

Moreover, Russia in particular will be focused on another common interest of the international community 鈥 stemming the flow of opium and other drugs out of Afghanistan.

鈥淭he key to controlling the Taliban鈥檚 behavior has to be the region,鈥 says Anatol Lieven, a British South Asia analyst who is now聽a聽senior fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft in Washington. 鈥淎ll the countries in the region are deeply opposed to Afghanistan again becoming a terrorist haven,鈥 he says.

Not far behind, he adds, are regional concerns about illicit drugs.

The Taliban聽have聽assured regional powers that they will 鈥渟uppress heroin 鈥 they鈥檝e made that promise in Moscow and Tehran, as well as to the U.S.,鈥 Mr. Lieven says.聽

But beyond such primarily security concerns, interests are likely to diverge. The U.S. and its Western allies could soon find themselves alone in pressuring a new government on human rights, women鈥檚 and girls鈥 rights, an independent press, and inclusive governance, some say.

鈥淭he challenge for the U.S. in seeking to preserve the gains made by Afghan society is going to be, can you get tough conditions for the Taliban to hold?鈥 says Ambassador Wayne, now a public policy fellow at the Wilson Center in Washington.

Rahmat Gul/AP
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, center, leaves after his first news conference, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Aug. 17, 2021.

G7 leaders met Tuesday for a virtual summit on Afghanistan, but the focus remained on the chaotic evacuation out of Kabul airport 鈥 and on disagreement among G7 partners with President Joe Biden鈥檚 decision to keep to the Aug. 31 deadline agreed with the Taliban for ending the formal evacuation process.

鈥淭he G7 [group of wealthy Western economies] will be the easiest forum to bring along,鈥 Mr. Wayne adds, 鈥渂ut will others join? The Security Council 鈥 which is the forum that counts in terms of international sanctions 鈥 is going to be a key testing point of the pressure the international community is willing to keep on the Taliban.鈥

Much has been made over the past two weeks of what some are calling the 鈥渘ew Taliban鈥 鈥 allowing some women journalists to continue working, proclaiming that women鈥檚 rights will be respected, assuring (with an eye to neighboring Iran) that the country鈥檚 Shia minority will not be repressed.

But many experts caution that the Taliban could simply be 鈥減laying nice鈥 in this early period聽in which聽no powers have yet recognized the new government, international sanctions on the Taliban聽are聽still in force, IMF funding for the country聽is聽on hold, and national assets聽are聽frozen, mostly in U.S. banks.

Already the Afghan economy is in free fall, with Afghans reporting empty ATMs and food shortages in markets 鈥 and skyrocketing prices on the supplies that remain. The World Food Program warned Wednesday that 14 million Afghans could face starvation if massive food aid does not come soon.

Faced with such a catastrophic scenario, some analysts say, the international community could very well shift priorities like human rights and inclusive governance to the back burner. Mr. Wayne says for example that he would expect the U.S. Treasury to move quickly to create 鈥渃ut-outs鈥 from sanctions on the Taliban to allow for humanitarian assistance.

Parwiz/Reuters/File
An Afghan man works on a poppy field in Jalalabad province, April 17, 2014. Afghanistan is the world's top cultivator of the poppy, from which opium and heroin are produced. After terrorism, concerns about illicit drugs top regional concerns. The Taliban have promised to curb the trade.

Humanitarian concerns

Certainly no one wants to see a grave humanitarian crisis take hold of Afghanistan. But some international analysts say the U.S. 鈥 its image already severely damaged by a tumultuous withdrawal and a widespread conclusion that聽it聽abandoned friends and allies in the process 鈥 can ill afford to see its international standing tarnished further by forsaking the young leaders, rights advocates, and Western-style journalists it fostered.

鈥淓veryone right now is talking about the pressure the U.S. and the rest of the world can bring to bear on the Taliban through sanctions, [withholding] formal recognition, and international funding, but they are not the only three elements at our disposal,鈥 says Rina Amiri, who served in the Obama administration as a senior adviser to the U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan.

鈥淭he fourth, in my view even more crucial element 鈥 is the soft power 鈥 the ideals and values that have been such an important part of American power and influence,鈥 says Ms. Amiri, now a senior fellow at New York University鈥檚 Center for Global Affairs. 鈥淲hat worries me now,鈥 she adds, 鈥渋s that the United States is acting like it鈥檚 on its back heel and withdrawing from those ideals.鈥

At a press conference Wednesday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the Taliban will 鈥渉ave a very strong interest in acting with a modicum of responsibility鈥 if they don鈥檛 want to return to 鈥減ariah state鈥 status. And he insisted that the U.S. 鈥渨ill use every tool at our disposal 鈥 to do everything possible to uphold [Afghans鈥橾 basic rights.鈥

Ms. Amiri, who has maintained her work with human rights defenders and women鈥檚 groups in Afghanistan, says she remains hopeful the U.S. will return to emphasizing its moral authority in dealing with a Taliban government.

But she cites a statement she received from a group of Afghan women leaders Tuesday to illustrate just how low America鈥檚 stature has fallen.

鈥淭here is no political will to rescue Afghan women,鈥 the statement posted on social media said. 鈥淎merica is going to do what it did the entire way. They will raise our hopes, then abandon us at the last minute and wash their hands of us.鈥

If indeed the U.S. intends to use its moral authority as leverage with the Taliban, Ms. Amiri says, it has a deep hole to dig out of first.

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