WASHINGTON (Pajhwok): A group of eminent South Asian experts from top US think tanks on Monday urged the White House to restart talks with Taliban and send a strong signal to Islamabad that it would not be business as usual.
“Washington should remain open to attempts to restart Taliban talks with the Afghan government, but should not plan its strategy around this long-shot scenario. It is likely the Taliban will try to convince the international community they are willing to negotiate in order to influence decision-making on troop levels in Afghanistan by the Trump administration,” said the report.
Prepared by experts from top American think tanks, the document says although Prime Minister Sharif’s government has helped bring Taliban leaders to the negotiating table, Pakistan’s intelligence services have played spoiler when it feared that Afghan Taliban interlocutors could not be trusted to represent Pakistan’s interests.
There should be consequences for Pakistan if it blocks realistic efforts to begin peace talks, the report says, adding the US must convey its expectation that Pakistan will end support to the Taliban, prevent rebel leaders from living and meeting on its soil and curtailing export of arms, explosives, and ammunition to the militants in Afghanistan.
“The US must also demand deportation of all Afghan Taliban leaders in accordance with Pakistan’s declared policy of returning all Afghan refugees,” says the report, authored by Lisa Curtis (The Heritage Foundation), Christine Fair (Georgetown University) Col (retd) John Gill (National Defense University), Anish Goel (New America), and Husain Haqqani (Hudson Institute).
Other authors of the repot are Polly Nayak (Independent Consultant), Aparna Pande Hudson Institute), Bruce Riedel (Brookings Institution), David S. Sedney (Center for Strategic and International Studies) and Dr. Marvin Weinbaum (Middle East Institute).
“In addition, Pakistan must invalidate all Pakistani ID cards, passports and special passes for the Taliban to prevent them from easily passing through military checkpoints. Lastly, Islamabad must seize the financial assets and real estate holdings of all Afghan Taliban and Pakistani terrorist groups that support them,” said the report which would be formally released here on Friday.
The report says that it would be foolish to keep giving the Pakistanis a pass when it comes to taking action against terrorist groups that are directly undermining US regional interests, not to mention killing U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan.
Whereas US government agencies were divided seven years ago over the nature and extent of Pakistan’s support to the Afghan Taliban and other terrorist and extremist groups, today no one in the U.S. government disputes that Pakistan provides such support, it noted.
The report says that as a first step, the US must warn Pakistan that its status as a Major Non-NATO Ally (MNNA) is in serious jeopardy. Unless Pakistan takes immediate steps to demonstrate that it fully shares US counterterrorism objectives, Washington will revoke its MNNA status within six months.
"Present to Pakistan a list of calibrated actions for ending its support to the Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani Network, and make clear that failure to make substantial progress on these steps could eventually result in Pakistan’s designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism," the report recommends.
"If Pakistan does not make progress on the above steps, the US should consider compiling a list of Pakistani military and Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) officials, current and former, who are known to have facilitated acts of terrorism, including supporting the Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani network, and barring them from travel to the US,"
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