Back in the decade of the 1990s, it was
the combination of India’s financial crisis in mid-1991, followed by the
dissolution of the Soviet Union (USSR) on December 25, 1991, that was
responsible for the ouster of Afghanistan’s then President Mohammad Najibullah Ahmadzai
(49) on April 15, 1992. Fast forward to today, one is looking at a vastly
different geo-political and geo-economic landscape. India’s foreign exchange reserves
increased by US$889 million to a lifetime high of US$621.464 billion
in the week ended August 6, 2021, while both Russia and Iran along with India
have already outlined their grand ambitions about realising the International
North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), a multi-modal transportation corridor
for the purpose of promoting transportation cooperation among its member-states.
This corridor connects India Ocean and Persian Gulf to the Caspian Sea via Iran,
and is then connected to Saint Petersburg and Northern Europe via Russia. The
INSTC project was originally decided between India, Iran and Russia in the year
2000 in St Petersburg, and subsequently included 11 other Central Asian and West
Asian countries: Azerbaijan Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan,
Turkey, Ukraine, Belarus, Oman and Syria, with Bulgaria as an observer. It
envisions a 7,200km-long multi-mode network of shipping, railway and road routes
for transporting freight, aimed at reducing the carriage cost between India and
Russia by about 30% and bringing down the transit time from 40 days by more
than half. In addition, India wants Iran’s Chabahar Port to
be included in the INSTC, and expand INSTC membership by including Afghanistan
and Uzbekistan (which has welcomed this offer).
Consequently, it stands to reason that
Russia, India, Iran and the Central Asian Republics of Uzbekistan and
Tajikistan not only develop strategic convergence, but also quickly move
towards strategic coherence for the sake of decisively dealing with the
on-going internal turmoil in Afghanistan. The following chain of events in
chronological order explains what has been transpiring over the past two
months.
Mid-July
2021:
The National Resistance Front of Afghanistan (NRFA) is created in the Panjshir river-valley
with the support of Ahmad Massoud, Bismillah Khan
Mohammadi, Abdul Rashid Dostum and Atta Muhammad Nur.
Translation: First firm
indication of the imminent collapse of Afghanistan’s national unity government
led by President Ashraf Ghani.
July
28, 2021:
Speaking in Tajikistan’s capital Dushanbe where he met his counterpart Sherali
Mirzo, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu stated that Russia will bolster Tajikistan’s
military with weapons, equipment and training amid a “deteriorating” situation
in neighbouring Afghanistan. He added that Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan
will hold joint military drills next week near Tajikistan’s border with
Afghanistan.
Translation: Russia did not
buy all the assurances given by both the Taliban and Pakistan about the Taliban’s
non-interference in the affairs of its immediate neighbouring countries.
August
17, 2021:
Tao days after the bloodless takeover of Kabul by the Taliban, Afghan First Vice-President
Amrullah Saleh—citing provisions of Afghanistan’s Constitution—declared himself
the Acting President of Afghanistan from his base of operations in the
Panjshir river-valley, and said that he would continue military operations
against the Taliban from there.
Translation: First
signalling by the NRFA to the international community about respecting and
adhering to international laws and conventions, which clearly dictate that any new
Afghan government that comes into existence through military coercion must not
be internationally recognised.
August
17, 2021:
Indian Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi chaired a meeting of the Cabinet
Committee on National Security (CCNS), which was attended by Union Home
Minister Amit Shah, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, Union Finance Minister
Nirmala Sitharaman, National Security Adviser (NSA) Ajit Doval, Foreign
Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla, and India's Ambassador to Afghanistan Rudrendra
Tandon, who returned to India on the same day.
Translation:
India’s
policy and posture WRT the new ground realities in Afghanistan are still in the
evolutionary stages and hence a ‘wait-n-watch’ posture was adopted for the
time-being.
August
24, 2021:
The Kremlin stated that Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed the
situation in Afghanistan in a phone-call with Indian Prime Minister Narendra
Modi. Both expressed the intention to enhance cooperation to counter the
dissemination of “terrorist ideology” and the drug threat emanating from
Afghanistan, and also agreed to establish a permanent channel for bilateral
consultations on developments in Afghanistan.
Translation: By then,
extensive parleys had been held by New Delhi, Teheran and Moscow regarding the
future courses of action, especially on the need to militarily and financially support
the NRFA, while also standing by for providing humanitarian assistance to an
Afghanistan that had by then undergoing both economic and financial meltdown.
August
30, 2021:
India’s External Affairs Minister (EAM) S Jaishankar welcomes the Diplomatic
Adviser to the President of the United Arab Emirates, Dr. Anwar Gargash, at
Hyderabad House, New Delhi.
Translation: For the first
time, the subject of the UAE Air Force’s A330 MRTTs providing aerial refuelling
support to the Indian Air Force’s C-17A Globemaster-III transport aircraft while
overflying Iraqi airspace (since Iran had refused such overflight permission
for IAF aircraft) and en route to Ayni air base in Tajikistan was broached. The
UAE agreed to provide such support.
September
3, 2021:
China expressed its willingness to extend its Belt & Road Initiative (BRI)
into Afghanistan, saying that the “Taliban believes” that the initiative is
good for development and prosperity in the war-ravaged country and the broader
region.
Translation: Clearly
sniffing a malicious Sino-Pakistan agenda, Moscow, Teheran and New Delhi agreed
that this was clearly a move by China to make the INSTC irrelevant and
consequently, began devising politico-military options aimed at ejecting the
Taliban through military force throughout northeastern and northwestern
Afghanistan.
September
3, 2021:
Director of the British MI-6, Richard Moore, made an official two-day visit to India
to firm up three executive actions with his Indian counterpart Samant Goel, Secretary (Research) in the Union Cabinet
Secretariat (R & AW), in line with the directives of the Prime Ministers of
both India and the UK.
Translation: The first
executive action called for the MI-6 and R & AW to set up a Joint Working
Group (JWG) under which the latter will share with the former data on northern
Afghanistan (this is because the UK had over the past 20 years dealt with only
matters pertaining to southeast and southwest Afghanistan). Under the second
executive action, the UK will tap into the logistics pipeline established
between India and Tajikistan for supporting the NRFA. This will later have the
option of being expanded, i.e. the UK will be able to operate its MALE-UAVs for
ISR missions over northern Afghanistan from air bases approved for such use by
Tajikistan. Lastly, the UK, which had since late 2020 wanted to train its
fully-funded Afghan-manned Units 333 and 444 in high-altitude irregular
warfare, now wants to access the expertise of the R & AW-owned Special
Frontier Force (Establishment-22 or Vikas Regiment) and to this end, wanted to
institutionalise the sharing of such expertise and experiences. Separately, the
UK wants to exfiltrate through Tajikistan the 400 remaining members (and their
families) of Unit 333 that are still in hiding throughout northern Afghanistan.
Northern Afghanistan includes the
provinces of Baghlan, Balkh, Kunduz, Samangan, Sar-e-Pol, Takhar and Badakhshan.
Kunduz province is located north of Kabul and shares an IB with Tajikistan. The
province also borders with Baghlan, Takhar, Balkh, Samangan and Badakhshan provinces
and covers an area of 7827 sq km. In the northeastern part of Afghanistan,
there is the Wakhan Corridor, a narrow panhandle of mountainous territory
in the Hindu Kush mountain range, squeezed between Tajikistan to the north and
Pakistan-occupied Gilgit to the south, which extends to the grassy valley of
the Little Pamir and all the way to Xinjiang. The entire Wakhan
corridor was established as Wakhan National Park in 2014. The
corridor borders the Pamir mountains to the north and the Karakoram mountain
range to the south. In the western part of the strip are some of Afghanistan’s
highest peaks, the Kohe Urgunt, the Kohe Shakhawr and the Noshaq Mountain (Naw
Shakh). The Noshaq, Afghanistan’s highest mountain and the second highest peak
of the Hindu Kush mountain range, is situated on the border between Badakhshan
province in Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) province. The
major ethnic groups living in Kunduz province are Pashtuns and Tajiks, followed
by Uzbeks, Hazaras, and Turkmen. Gilzhai Pashtuns comprise 33% of the
population of Kunduz and are the majority ethnic group in the province. Uzbek
people of Afghanistan are found north of the Hindu Kush in Afghan Turkistan. In
Afghanistan, they number approximately 1.6 million and comprise around 27% of
the population of Kunduz province. Tajiks are a significant minority ethnic
group in the province and represent 22% of the population. 11% of the
population of Kunduz is classified as ethnically Turkmen, who are another Sunni
Turkic-speaking group whose language has close affinities with modern Turkish.
They are of aquiline Mongoloid stock. The Hazara comprise approximately 6%
of the population. The Pashai represent only 1% of the population of
Kunduz province, but are present in small numbers throughout northeastern
Afghanistan. The term ‘Pashai’ refers to the language itself, the people who
speak it, and the area they inhabit. Pashai speakers live in the area north of
the Kabul River, extending about 160km from Gulbahar on the Panjshir River in
the northwest to Chaga Serai in the east. The Pashai were members of the
classic Gandhara culture and were pushed out of their original homeland in the
lowlands into the valleys of the Hindu Kush by an invasion of Pashto-speaking
Afghans from the Sulaiman Mountains. There are 11 named mountains to the
northeast and southwest of Kunduz province: Koh-e-Seh Talah,
Koh-e-Pasrah, Gory Ambarkoh, Koh-e-Chuchal, Koh-e-Qarah Batur, Tash Qutan,
Koh-e-Qurtab, Koh-e-Yakah Badam, Koh-e-Zow-e-Zard, Koh-e-Albur, and Koh-e-Sur
Baytal. It is there that combatants of the Islamic Jihad Union (Uzbek/Turkish),
East Turkestan Independence Movement (ETIM) and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU)
have established themselves and they exercise control over three districts in
Kunduz, namely Chahara Darra, Imam Sahib, and Ali Abad. The local political
parties active within Kunduz province are the Jamiat-e Islami led by Salahuddin
Rabbani, Shuria-e Nazar that was founded by the late Ahmed Shah Masooud, Hezb-e-Wahdat
led by Mohammad Karim Khalili, Hizb-e Wahdat-e Islami-ye Mardum-e Afghanistan led
by Mohammad Mohaqeq, and the Hezb-e Islami Gulbuddin (HiG) led by Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar.
September
4, 2021:
Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Director-General Lt Gen Faiz
Hameed arrived at Kabul’s Serena Hotel.
Translation: He had a
two-fold agenda: 1) Compelling the
Taliban to officially extend support to the BRI and CPEC. 2) As a carrot, offer the Taliban the benefit of offensive airpower
against the NRFA forces holed up throughout the Panjshir river-valley.
September
5, 2021:
Both the Pakistan Army (PA) and Pakistan Air Force (PAF) activated two static
air-defence sites for housing both LY-80E LOMADS and FM-90A SHORADS in Rawalkot
and Kotli near the LoC in PoJK. At the same time, the forward air bases at
Dalbandin and Shamsi were also activated that day.
Translation: These were
pre-emptive precautionary measures aimed at deterring the IAF’s Rafale M-MRCAs and
Su-30MKIs from interfering with the PA’s air-to-ground strikes, which were
planned for execution on the following day. While Dalbandin was used to ferry
members of the Quetta Shura to Kandahar, Shamsi has been/is being used as the
ammunition storage warehouse for the Taliban combatants.
September
6, 2021:
National Resistance Front (NRF) of Afghanistan's leader Ahmad Massoud claimed in
the early hours that Pakistani armed drones were launching precision-guided
munitions in the Panjshir river-valley and helping the Taliban to crush the armed
resistance. Later that day, Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson
Saeed Khatibzadeh stated: "We
would like to inform our friends, and those who might make the strategic error
of entering Afghanistan with different intentions, that Afghanistan is not a
country which accepts the enemy or an aggressor on its soil. I strongly
warn that all red lines and obligations under international law must be observed.
Iran is closely following developments in Afghanistan. Iran considers
inter-Afghan talks as the only solution to Afghanistan problem." In
the afternoon, Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said that the group “desires
to join the CPEC”. Mujahid also confirmed an upcoming meeting between Lt Gen
Faiz Hameed and Taliban senior leader Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar. After sunset,
PM Modi chaired a three-hour meeting of the CCNS in which Union Home Minister
Amit Shah, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman,
EAM S Jaishankar, Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) Gen Bipin Rawat and NSA Ajit Doval.
The agenda for discussion was the ongoing situation in Afghanistan and India's
future course of action in this regard.
Translation: A synchronised
military option involving India and Russia was formally given the go-ahead,
with the Indian Army and IAF being given the green-light for expediting their
respective taskings.
September
7, 2021:
Secretary of the Security Council of Russia Gen Nikolay Patrushev began a
two-day visit to India on September 7, 2021 to hold extensive talks with NSA
Ajit Doval on the situation in Afghanistan, following its military takeover by
the Taliban. India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said that Patrushev is
expected to call on PM Narendra Modi and External Affairs Minister S
Jaishankar. Patrushev is visiting India at the invitation of NSA Doval for
high-level India-Russia inter-governmental consultations on Afghanistan.
Translation: Finishing touches were
given to the joint Russia-India effort to militarily shore up the NRFA while
concurrently finalising details of an announcement regarding the formal
recognition to the Afghan government led by Acting President Amrullah Saleh,
while denying recognition to any Taliban-instituted interim government for as
long as the Taliban’s leaders remain sanctioned by the UNSC.
September
7, 2021: Defence Minister Rajnath Singh approved the expansion of financial
powers to India’s three armed services in order to cut delays in making emergency
procurements of ‘war-like stores’ for operational preparedness and quickly meet
the requirements of the field formations. The delegated financial powers of
Vice Chiefs of the three armed services were increased by 10% subject to an
overall ceiling of Rs.500 crore. New CFAs have
been added, namely the Deputy Chief of Army Staff, Master General Sustenance,
ADG (Procurement)/DG Air Operations/DG Naval Operations, etc in the respective Armed
Services HQs and in the field formations on account of re-organisation/re-structuring/functional
requirements. In addition, a new schedule on the hiring of
aircraft and associated equipment was introduced for the Indian Air Force
(IAF), which included the hiring of air-to-air refuellers (that have been
offered by the UAE Air Force). Also, the financial
powers of Chief of Integrated Defence Staff to the Chairman Chiefs Of Staff
Committee (CISC) as CFA has been enhanced substantially and aligned with that
of the three Vice Chiefs.
Translation: Such funds
will be utilised for procuring weapons from Russia, Serbia and Bulgaria for use
by the NRFA, and for storage at Ayni air base in Tajikistan and possibly Termez
Airport in Uzbekistan. In addition, Russia, India and Iran will financially
contribute towards the MRO requirements of all those Afghan Air Force Mi-17s and Mi-25s that had escaped to Termez Airport in Uzbekistan, and towards the upkeep of the Afghan special operations force personnel
who were trained by the US and the UK for conducting irregular warfare against
the Taliban since 2007 and the bulk of whom have either joined the NRFA or were
evacuated by air by the US and UK between August 16 and 31. It may be recalled
that the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had begun raising and fully
funding four Counter-Terrorist Pursuit Teams, institutionalised with the
acronym CTPT, since 2007. By 2010, this force numbered 3,000. Their mission was
to hunt and kill “terrorists.” In 2015, the CIA helped its Afghan counterpart,
the National Directorate of Security (NDS), to take command and control of
these units for targetting combatants aligned with the Islamic State Wilayat
Khorasan (IS-WK) who were active in the Kunar and Nangarhar provinces of
Afghanistan. The four units numbered NDS-01, NDS-02, NDS-03 and NDS-04, with
each having a regional area of operation: NDS-01 operated in the Central
Region, NDS-02 in the Eastern Region, NDS-03 in the Southern Region, and NDS-04
in the North. All of them existed in a regulative twilight zone and each of the
four units had 1,200 combatants. The UK on the other hand raised two units
since late 2001—Unit 333 and Unit 444. These units comprised 7% of
the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF), but conducted 80% of the fighting.
September 7,
2021:
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Director William Burns was in New Delhi on a
two-day visit to discuss a number of issues arising from Afghanistan.
Translation: Foremost, under
instructions from the Biden Administration, the CIA wants to transfer from
Uzbekistan to Tajikistan all the Afghan Air Force fixed-wing and rotary-wing
aircraft that had defected in mid-August. Next, the CIA will fully finance the
task of restoring the serviceability of all such aircraft. Following that, the
CIA wants India to provide product-support for all the Russia-origin platforms
like Mi-17s and Mi-25s by sourcing their rotables and consumables from Russia, Belarus
and Ukraine, and also providing IAF ground service crew-teams to ensure the
helicopters’ continued serviceability. This is because post-April 2014 (when
Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine), US laws have prevented US-based MRO
contractors from having any business dealings with Russia-based OEMs and since
then the US has been funding the procurement of product-support for all Afghan
Air Force Mi-17s and Mi-25s via India, i.e. the IAF procured the spares from
Russia, Belarus and Ukraine and then handed them over to the Afghan Air Force
and in return got paid by the US under a government-to-government arrangement.
By
any measure, the Afghan Air Force on paper is far more capable than the
deteriorating, 20-aircraft force of 2007. By 2019, about 265 US-trained Afghan
pilots flew 118 aircraft supplied by the US. The fleet was then projected to
double by 2023. In June 2019, Afghan pilots flew their first night-attack
missions and conducted the first combat airdrop. In March 2020, it fired its
first laser-guided bomb in combat, with 600 more fired since. In July, the
United Nations said that the Afghan Air Force had been responsible for 52% of
civilian casualties caused by air-strikes in the first half of 2018. However,
of the 47 Mi-17s assigned to the Afghan Air Force, only 20 were operational in
2018. Mi-17s flew half the fleet’s 28,000 sorties in 2018, but the first S-70 Black
Hawk did not fly until May 2019. The plan to provide 81 Black Hawks will not be
complete until 2030. According to Afghan pilots, the Mi-17s are more powerful,
but the Black Hawks are more manoeuvrable and have performed better in dusty
landing zones. The Mi-17 is “the perfect helicopter” for Afghanistan
because it can carry more troops and supplies than the S-70 Black Hawk and is
less complicated to fly. The Taliban had been on a campaign to assassinate
Afghan Air Force pilots to diminish the air strategic advantage. At least six
have been killed to date.
The US Defense Department had for long
struggled to make the Afghan Air Force self-sufficient, with its pilots
sometimes deserting during training in the US, and private contractor MRO
support being required to achieve the required readiness-levels. By June 2021,
availability dropped from over 90% in March/April for the AC-208 and 77%
for the S-70s to about 30% across the force. A total of 46 aircraft, including
22 fixed-wing and 24 helicopters, and 585 Afghan airmen and soldiers, had fled
to Uzbekistan by air after the fall of Kabul. By September 1, overhead satellite
imagery revealed that Bohktar (Qurghonteppa) International Airport in
Tajikistan was hosting 16 of the utility/transport attack aircraft previously
seen at Uzbekistan’s Termez International Airport. Afghanistan had about
120 S-70 Black Hawk crews before the fall of Kabul. It is not known how many
crews fled across the border or are in hiding.
The CIA also wants India to explore the
possibility of allowing USAF E-11A Battlefield Airborne Communications Node
(BACN) platforms and combatant-elements of the US Special Operations Command
(SOCOM) to operate out of IAF air bases in Ladakh UT, like Leh and Thoise for
conducting the so-called ‘over-the-horizon’ counter-terror operations. Such
platforms, operating from Ladakh, will have to overfly Gilgit-Baltistan (with
Pakistani concurrence) in order to operate over the Badakhshan, Kunduz, Kunar
and Nangarhar provinces for targetting the IS-WK presence in these provinces.
Essentially a modified Bombardier Global Express, the E-11A is an airborne Wi-Fi
battlespace management platform that conducts ISTR missions, SIGINT missions,
and also relays voice communications, ISR and video imagery, and other data
between other ISR platforms (like UAVs) and ground troops that are often using
different types of communications networks. The E-11As were developed in
response to communications shortfalls that led to a 2005 battlefield disaster
for US special operations forces in north-eastern Afghanistan. OP Red Wings—a
joint mission involving US Navy SEALs, US Army ‘Green Berets’ special
operations forces, and US Marines Special Force Recon—was meant to target
Taliban combatants in the Pech district of Kunar province. But the mountainous
terrain prevented a four-man SEAL reconnaissance team from establishing
reliable communications with their ground-based command centre. Within hours of
their arrival, the four-man SEAL team was attacked by the Taliban and three of
them were eventually killed-in-action. Following this, a Taliban RPG-7
rocket-propelled grenade struck a USAF CH-47D Chinook as it attempted to land a
‘Green Berets’ extraction team--killing 16 of them. One E-11A had crash-landed
on January 27, 2020 on a remote plain south of Kabul in Ghazni province, killing
at least two of its crew-members.
September 9,
2021:
CIA Director William Burns travelled to Pakistan for meetings with the PA’s
COAS Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa and ISI-DG Lt Gen Faiz Hamid to explore the
possibility of counter-terrorism cooperation between the two sides.
Translation: In late April,
when William Burns made its first trip to Islamabad and sought the usage of air
bases owned by the PA and PAF for conducting over-the-horizon counter-terror
operations inside Afghanistan, the Pakistanis had demanded a variety of
restrictions in exchange for the use of such bases, and had demanded that they
sign off on any targets that either the CIA or the US military would want to
hit inside Afghanistan. This time, the US is taking a more hard-line approach
by enlisting India’s support—meaning if push comes to shove, the US and India
together will use military coercion (using both countries’ air force assets) to
unilaterally declare no-fly zones over Gilgit-Baltistan for creating the air
corridors required for accessing northern and north-eastern Afghanistan. This
can well be another reason why both the PA and Pakistan Air Force PAF activated
their air-defence sites in PoJK on September 5.
Meanwhile, matters are clearly not going
well at all for China’s PLA Ground Forces (PLAGF) along the LAC. This has
prompted a frustrated President Xi Jinping, 68, to appoint Gen Wang Haijiang,
58, as the new Commander of the PLA’s Western Theatre Command (WTC). He had
earlier served as Commander of the Tibet Military District (TMD) since December
2019. Earlier, he also served in a number of positions, including Deputy
Commander South Xinjiang Military District. Gen Wang is the fourth commander to
head the WTC since the eastern Ladakh standoff began in May 2020. Xi in July
2021 had promoted Gen Xu Qiling, 59, to head the PLA’s WTC. Gen Xu was the third General to head the
WTC after
the Ladakh
tensions began in May 2020. Earlier Gen Zhang Xudong was appointed on December 19, 2020 to head the
WTC,
replacing 65-year-old Gen Zhao Zongqi who retired from the PLA. In fact, a
deeply worried
Xi, who is also Chairman of the Central Military Commission, visited Lhasa on
July 22 and 23 after a gap of ten years (he had visited Tibet as Vice-President
in 2011) to find out for himself why the Tibetan natives were not joining the
PLAGF’s combat branches in larger numbers, choosing instead to opt for
recruitment in the People’s Armed Police and non-combat military branches like
the Medical Corps. While in Lhasa, Xi met the PLA’s top brass of TMD as well as
their Chengdu-based WTC leadership, both of whom have not even succeeded in
hiring local Tibetan porters.