09/10/2021 strategic-culture.org  6 min 🇬🇧 #196260

Watching Taliban-Tajikistan Relations

Both sides are using the current tension for their own ends, writes Vijay Prashad.

By Vijay PRASHAD

Afghanistan and Tajikistan share a 1,400-kilometer border. Recently, a war of words has erupted between Tajikistan's President Emomali Rahmon and the Taliban government in Kabul.

Rahmon censures the Taliban for the destabilization of Central Asia by the export of militant groups, while the Taliban leadership has  accused Tajikistan's government of interference.

Earlier this summer, Rahmon  mobilized 20,000 troops to the border, and held military exercises and  discussions with Russia and other members of the Collective Security Treaty Organization.

Meanwhile, the spokesperson for the Afghan government - Zabihullah Mujahid -  tweeted pictures of Afghan troops deployed to Takhar Province on the border of the two countries. The escalation of harsh language continues. Prospects of war between these two countries should not be discounted, but - given the role Russia plays in Tajikistan - it is unlikely.

Russian President Vladimir Putin awarding Tajik President Emomali Rahmon the Order of Alexander Nevsky in February 2017. (Kremlin.ru, CC BY 4.0, Wikimedia Commons)

Panjshir Exiles

On Sept. 3, Afghanistan's former Vice President Amrullah Saleh  tweeted, "The RESISTANCE is continuing and will continue. I am here with my soil, for my soil & defending its dignity." A few days later, the Taliban took the Panjshir Valley, where Saleh had taken refuge for the past fortnight, and Saleh slipped across the border into Tajikistan. The resistance inside Afghanistan died down.

From 2001, Saleh had worked closely with the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States and then had become the head of Afghanistan's National Directorate of Security (2004-2010). He had previously worked closely with Ahmad Shah Massoud of the right-wing Jamiat-e Islami and of the Northern Alliance.

Saleh  fled by helicopter to Tajikistan with Massoud's son Ahmad. They were later joined in Tajikistan's capital of Dushanbe by Abdul Latif Pedram, leader of the National Congress Party of Afghanistan.

The RESISTANCE is continuing and will continue. I am here with my soil, for my soil & defending its dignity.

These men followed the lead of the Northern Alliance, which had taken refuge in Tajikistan's Kulob region after the Taliban victory in 1996.

The personal ties between Ahmad Shah Massoud and Tajikistan's President Rahmon go back to the early 1990s.

In March, Afghanistan's Ambassador to Tajikistan Mohammad Zahir Aghbar  remembered that in the early 1990s Massoud told a group of Tajik fighters in Kabul, "I do not want the war in Afghanistan to be transferred to Tajikistan under the banner of Islam. It is enough that our country has been fraudulently destroyed. Go and make peace in your country."

That Massoud had backed the anti-government United Tajik Opposition, led by the Islamic Renaissance Party, is conveniently forgotten.

Map of Afghanistan with Tajikistan to the north. (CIA, University of Texas at Austin, Wikimedia Commons)

After the Taliban took Kabul on Aug. 15, and just before Saleh and Massoud escaped to Dushanbe, on Sept. 2, Rahmon  conferred upon the late Ahmad Shah Massoud the highest civilian award of Tajikistan, the Order of Ismoili Somoni.

This protection afforded to the Saleh-led resistance movement, and Tajikistan's refusal to recognize the Taliban government in Kabul sent a clear signal to the Taliban from Rahmon's government.

Rahmon says that the main reason is that he is dismayed by the Taliban's anti-Tajik stance. But this is not entirely the case. One in four Afghans are Tajiks, while half of Kabul claims Tajik ancestry. The economy minister -  Qari Din Mohammad Hanif - is not only Tajik, but comes from the Badakhshan province that borders Tajikistan. The real reason is Rahmon's concerns about regional destabilization.

Tajik Taliban

On Sept. 11, Saidmukarram Abdulqodirzoda, the head of Tajikistan's Islamic Council of Ulema,  condemned the Taliban as being anti-Islamic in its treatment of women and in its promotion of terrorism. Abdulqodirzoda, the lead imam in Tajikistan, has led a decade-long process to purge "extremists" from the ranks of the mosque leaders. Many foreign-trained imams have been replaced (Abdulqodirzoda had been trained in Islamabad, Pakistan), and foreign funding of mosques has been closely monitored.

Abdulqodirzoda frequently talks about the bloody civil war that tore Tajikistan apart between 1992 and 1997.

Between 1990, when the U.S.S.R. began to collapse, and 1992, when the civil war began, a thousand mosques - more than one a day - opened across the country.

Saudi Arabia's money and influence rushed into the country, as did the influence of the right-wing Afghan leaders Massoud and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.

Rahmon - as chair of the Supreme Assembly of Tajikistan (1992-1994) and then as president, beginning in 1994 - led the fight against the Islamic Renaissance Party (IRP), which was eventually crushed by 1997.

The ghost of the civil war reappeared in 2010, when Mullah Amriddin Tabarov, a commander in the IRP, founded Jamaat Ansarullah.

Great Mosque in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, in 2013. (Soman, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia Cocons)

In 1997, Tabarov fled to join the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), one of the fiercest of the extremist groups in that era. The IMU and Tabarov developed close ties with Al Qaeda, fleeing Afghanistan and Uzbekistan after the U.S. invasion of 2001 for Iraq, later Syria. Tabarov was caught by the Afghan government of Ashraf Ghani in July 2015 and  killed.

As the Taliban began to make gains in Afghanistan late last year, a thousand Ansarullah fighters arrived from their sojourn with the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq. When Darwaz fell to the Taliban in November 2020, it was these Ansarullah fighters who took the lead.

Tajikistan's Rahmon has made it clear that he fears a spillover of Ansarullah into his country, dragging it back into the war of the 1990s. The fear of that war has allowed Rahmon to remain in power, using every means to squash any democratic opening in Tajikistan.

In mid-September, Dushanbe hosted the 21st meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Council of the Heads of State. Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan had several talks with Rahmon about the situation in Afghanistan. As the war of words escalated, Khan  called Rahmon on Oct. 3 to ask that the tension be reduced. Russia and China have also called for restraint.

It is unlikely that guns will be fired across the border; neither Dushanbe nor Kabul would like to see that outcome. But both sides are using the tension for their own ends - for Rahmon, to ensure that the Taliban will keep Ansarullah in check, and for the Taliban, for Rahmon to recognize their government.

Globetrotter via  consortiumnews.com

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