Moscow ready for talks with Taliban
Persuaded by Pakistan that Afghanistan's radical Taliban militia
are eager to talk, Russia has agreed to open a second front in its efforts
to contain the extremist forces south of its border.
Islamabad has offered to facilitate the first-time discussions
between Moscow and the Taliban which controls two thirds of
Afghanistan, say senior foreign office officials in Islamabad.
Till now the Russians had been following a policy of military
engagement with the Taliban by supporting its rivals, Uzbek
warlord general Rashid Dostum and Ahmed Shah Massoud, whose
forces were pushed out of Kabul by the Taliban last year.
Pakistan is taking the credit for the shift in Moscow's policy
on Afghanistan, with diplomats in Islamabad saying it is they who
have got Moscow to see the logic of ''dealing with (Taliban)
extremists by engaging with them.''
Until a few months ago, Pakistan and Russia, two important
players in the proxy war for control of Afghanistan and Central
Asia, were not even on speaking terms on Afghanistan.
But late last year, Iftikhar Murshid, Pakistan's new
additional secretary in charge of Afghanistan, took the first step
to clear the distrust, and met the Russian ambassador in
Islamabad for a discussion on Afghanistan. Both sides aired
complaints, but most importantly they laid the ground for
confidence-building.
Two months ago, Moscow responded substantively to Pakistan's
overtures. Choverlov, the head of the South Asia
desk in the Russian foreign office,
arrived in Islamabad for talks with his
Pakistani counterparts on bilateral issues including Afghanistan.
Despite being, or at least being seen as patrons of different
Afghan factions in the war for control of Kabul, the diplomats
from the two countries agreed that they shared a common goal: a
peaceful Afghanistan in their neighbourhood.
Choverlov's visit was followed up with a visit to Moscow by
Iftikhar Murshid on April 1, where he reiterated Islamabad's
commitment to working towards a ''broad-based government'' in
Afghanistan. Russia responded by expressing a willingness to talk
to the Taliban militia
A senior foreign policy official in Islamabad insists that the
differences in Pakistan and Russia's Afghan policy are only in
the nuances, like is the case with Pakistan and Iran.
The two men leading the talks will be Russian Deputy
Foreign Minister Victor Pasuvaluk and
Iftikhar Murshid. The next round of talks is likely to take place
in May.
Pakistan's foreign minister Gohar Ayub is likely to visit
Moscow in May. The two countries have decided to meet regularly
every quarter to talk about Afghanistan.
An Islamabad-based political commentator believes Moscow's
recent shift on Afghanistan and its willingness to deal
diplomatically with the Taliban is ''born from realism''.
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