That is the opposite of what would happen. The more groups there are, the higher the level of violence. One group is easier to control and deal with, a thousand smaller groups are harder to defeat. Look at any nation facing multiple insurgencies. You can stand by your statement all you want, but it is simply wrong.
Please, let’s not exaggerate. We are talking about Afghan Taliban, after the death of their leader a powerful splinter group has emerged and the important point to note is that the splinter group is from the same ethnic background, most of its leaders and foot soldiers come from the same area and to fund their terrorist activity they will have to fight for the same (commission from drug smuggling, smuggling goods between Pakistan and Afghanistan, Arab financiers etc.) resources.
Wouldn’t that make them weaker, why is it so difficult to understand?
This is the classic case of; a divide and conquer strategy, and the funny thing is that Afghan government did not have to put any efforts.
And as I gave you the example of TTP, internal rivalry and splinter groups weakened them and then it was easier for us to defeat them. We did not regain our territory through negotiations, we defeated Pakistani Taliban and their supporters on the battlefield.
The second round of talks were to be about a ceasefire, leading into a political settlement for the later talks.
Sorry to say, but that’s your kham khayali.
They've never begged Pakistan to bring the taliban to the negotiating table, they've begged Pakistan to hand over taliban leaders residing in Pakistan. There is a clear difference here. It's the US that's been pushing for a political settlement, which the Afghans have reluctantly accepted.
You are right they did ask Pakistan to hand over Taliban leaders, but that was not to put them front of the firing squad, the fact is almost all the Taliban that Pakistan handed over to Afghanistan were freed by Afghanistan in the anticipation that they will bring fellow Taliban leaders to the negotiation table.
The irony is Mullah Akhund, the Taliban’s shadow governor for Kunduz and Taliban’s former foreign minister, Mullah Hassan were released by Pakistan, the release of Akhund and Hassan was part of a deal that led to the opening of a Taliban office in Doha.
Rather than working for peace, Akhund and Hassan led the Taliban terrorists to take over Kunduz last October.
Karzai even said in one of his interviews that mullah Omar can stand for presidential election in Afghanistan.
He had also set up a High Peace Council for opening peace talks with the Taliban, which was led by the late former President Rabbani.
And as I said, Afghanistan was literally begging Pakistan to bring Taliban to the negotiating table.
I’m surprise you did not even know that?
Anyway, here are some links for you, and if you want more I can give you more links:
Karzai seeks Pakistani help in Taliban peace talks | Asia | DW.COM | 28.08.2013
Karzai seeks Pakistani help in Taliban peace talks
Aug 28 2013
Afghan leader Hamid Karzai seeks Pakistan help in Taliban talks - latimes
Afghan leader Hamid Karzai seeks Pakistan help in Taliban talks
February 17, 2012
Afghans in Pakistan for Taliban peace talks - Al Jazeera English
20 Nov 2013
The delegation’s arrival follows a breakthrough in negotiations during a summit between the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, the British prime minister David Cameron and his Pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharif.
Karzai formed the Afghan High Peace Council in 2010 to pursue a negotiated peace with the Taliban.
The history of Afghanistan suggests otherwise. The taliban couldn't be defeated by over 50+ nations, including a Super power and former superpowers. it's been 14 years, what makes you think the taliban can be defeated so easily now?
This is an accepted fact, the war can only end through negotiations. The US is pushing for this, the Chinese are pushing for this, the Russians are pushing for this, Iran is pushing for this, Pakistan is pushing for this, and it seems that the only nation NOT pushing for this is India.
First of all, Taliban do not represent Afghan nation.
50 nations fighting the Taliban is a joke, the fact is, this was and is United States war and to some extent British, the rest of the countries had mostly supporting role.
Let’s look at the troop’s numbers, Malaysia 2----Austria, Greece and Iceland each have 3, and 38 countries had less than 500 troops.
Do you know that the Taliban terrorists who were controlling 90% of Afghanistan collapsed in two months.
If George Bush had not started a stupid war in Iraq and had he focused on Afghanistan, Taliban would have been history.
The TTP and the Afghan taliban are different in nature and doctrine, despite bother being extremist. The Afghan taliban's goals are strictly related to Afghanistan alone, they have no desire to expand beyond Afghanistan's borders. The TTP's goals are international, as they plan on removing the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, and eventually threatening to attack Afghanistan's northern neighbors. Their plan is to establish a global Caliphate.
You are right, TTP has a global agenda no doubt about that, but you are wrong to say that “the Afghan Taliban’s goals are strictly related to Afghanistan alone”
There is a saying, actions speak louder than words, let us look at their actions.
Afghan Taliban could have never captured 90% of Afghanistan without the help of Pakistani, Arabs, Chechen, and Uzbek terrorists. Nek Muhammad, Baitullah Mehsud, Hakimullah Mehsud, Fazlullah, Wali-ur-Rehman and Sufi Muhammad all had fought for Afghan Taliban’s.
Afghan Taliban's had turned Afghanistan into a terrorist hub, terrorists from around the world had their terrorist training camps there.
The list is long, but here are few examples:
We all know Al Qaeda had several terrorist training camps in Afghanistan.
When Tahir Yuldashev co-foundeder of Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan fled Uzbekistan, he was welcomed by the Taliban and allowed to open a terrorist training camp near the border with Uzbekistan.
ETIM (
East Turkestan Islamic Movement ) and Chechen terrorist were also getting trainings in those camps.
Our own sectarian terrorists Sipah-e-Sahab and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi also had their own terrorist camps.
The Taliban had close relationship with LeJ founder Riaz Basra and gave him sanctuary in Afghanistan and had refused to hand him over, while he was wanted by the Pakistan government for the murder of hundreds of innocent Shias.
So now the question is, if the Afghan Taliban's had no global agenda then how come they were allowing all kinds of international terrorists to run their own terrorist training camps?
I suggest you should read, Taliban by Ahmed Rashid, In The Line Of Fire by Pervez Musharraf, Taliban the unknown enemy by James Fergusson and Fountainhead Of Jihad by Vahid Brown & Don Rassler.
You're also forgetting the capability of both the ANA and Pakistan. The ANA is simply ill-equipped to deal with the insurgency, and suffers heavily from both defections and desertions. The ANA is having a hard time sustaining it's numbers, and is not motivated at all to defend it's own country. It's dominated by the Northern tribes, in particular the Tajik. There are reports that say the reason behind the abandonment of Kunduz to the taliban was entirely due to tribal politics. The Tajik soldiers (that numbered ten thousand) simply didn't want to defend a Pashtun city, so they left, which ended up letting a few hundred taliban militants over run the city. Adding to this, the ANA simply doesn't have the equipment, or the expertise to deal with the insurgency for the long term.
Pakistan, on the other hand, has the will, the expertise, and the power to deal with the TTP.
PA (unlike the ANA) has a high level of nationalism instilled within each personnel. PA does NOT suffer from desertion, and does NOT suffer from defection. Every year, more and more men and women join the military, increasing it's numbers. PA also doesn't care about ethnicity, and welcomes everyone; in fact, it's recent drive of trying to get more and more minorities to join the military has made the PA even more resistant to sectarian divide.
PA has the high tech systems to search and destroy militant sanctuaries, which the ANA don't have. It has even inducted UCAVs to combat militants hiding in harsh terrain.
The ONLY reason why the TTP hasn't been wiped out is because of militant sanctuaries in Afghanistan. The TTP has very little support in Pakistan, which is why it has had to rely heavily on foreign fighters. Meanwhile, the only reason why the Afghan taliban hasn't been wiped out is because it has a lot of support from Afghan tribes that draws it's numbers from, mainly Pashtun. It is an organization that relies heavily on locals, which means it's numbers tend to be a vast majority of Afghan at all times.
The TTP control less than 1% of the territory in Pakistan (soon to be 0%), the Afghan taliban are said to control 20-50% of the Rural Afghanistan, with some presence over at least 70-80% of Afghan territory.
Frankly, your comparison doesn't hold up to scrutiny.
You make it sound easy. Anyway, corruption isn't Afghanistan's number one enemy, it's warlords. Many of the Afghan leaders are former tribal warlords, which has lead to certain tribes getting preferential treatment. Look at Abdul Rashid Dostum, many say he's the real power in Afghanistan, calling him a king maker. He's accused of arming Uzbek militias, by smuggling weapons and drugs, and hiding large cashes of weapons and ammunition. Many even accusing him of trying to turn parts of the ANA into his own personal army, by sending his own forces to join the ANA.
Anyway, the truth is that Afghanistan's tribal politics pretty much forces negotiations. The Afghan taliban cannot be beat, as long as Afghanistan itself isn't united, even if the Afghan taliban itself weaks and divides into different factions. There is a reason why the Afghan taliban emphasis so much about unity among it's own various militant leaders and groups. I suspect that this divide is going to be temporary precisely because the Afghan taliban understand unity is important, at least more than the current political leaders of Afghanistan.
I don’t disagree with you for most of the stuff you have said, but that is just one side of the coin, the other side is that US is still there in Afghanistan and as long as America is there, Taliban cannot take over Afghanistan
and don’t forget Afghan Taliban also had sanctuaries.
Afghan Armed Forces are basically only 8 to 10 years old and since 2013 they have taken over the security responsibilities of Afghanistan and with the exception of what happened in Kunduz, their overall the performance have been improving.
Warlords are part of the corruption that I was talking about.