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Afghanistan and its Troublesome Neighbourhood

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1 Afghanistan and its Troublesome Neighbourhood
The More Things Change, the More they Stay the Same? Kristian Berg Harpviken 16 October 2016

2 Afghanistan The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan is a landlocked country in South-Central Asia. It is variously described as being located within Central Asia, South Asia, or the Middle East. It is bordered by Iran in the west, Pakistan in the south and east, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan in the north, and China in the far northeast. wikipedia

3 Core of region? The conflict in Afghanistan has matured into a relatively stable social system that menaces the lives of millions of people. This conflict forms the core of a regional conflict formation, including the continuing challenges in Tajikistan, the growing conflict led by the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan involving several states, processes of political decay in Pakistan, challenges to political order in Iran, and the insurgency in Kashmir. [The]more desirable policy goal would be reconstructing the country as part of the interstate and economic structure of an entire region. (…) The war is not a civil war but a transnational one. The transnational links are too deep to be untangled and will have to be transformed. Barnett R. Rubin, Ashraf Ghani, William Maley, Ahmed Rashid, Olivier Roy ‘Afghanistan: Reconstruction and Peacebuilding in a Regional Framework’, KOFF, 2001

4 Heart of Asia

5 New Opportunities?

6 The Quadrilateral Coordination Group Bringing Taliban to the table?

7 Regional Security Complexes
a group of states whose primary security concerns link together sufficiently close that their national securities cannot realistically be considered apart from one another (Barry Buzan, People States and Fear, 1991) States as the prime actors Security concerns take precedence Regions robust over time

8 Core of region? The conflict in Afghanistan has matured into a relatively stable social system that menaces the lives of millions of people. This conflict forms the core of a regional conflict formation, including the continuing challenges in Tajikistan, the growing conflict led by the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan involving several states, processes of political decay in Pakistan, challenges to political order in Iran, and the insurgency in Kashmir. [The]more desirable policy goal would be reconstructing the country as part of the interstate and economic structure of an entire region. (…) The war is not a civil war but a transnational one. The transnational links are too deep to be untangled and will have to be transformed. Barnett R. Rubin, Ashraf Ghani, William Maley, Ahmed Rashid, Olivier Roy ‘Afghanistan: Reconstruction and Peacebuilding in a Regional Framework’, KOFF, 2001

9 Afghanistan

10 Afghanistan in the region

11 A Rock Between Hard Places?

12 South Asia

13 South Asia Members Main actors Regional hegemon
Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, The Maldives Main actors India-Pakistan Regional hegemon India Main regional security concern India-Pakistan: existential distrust Main concerns related to Afghanistan ’Strategic depth’ Pashtunistan Durand line

14 South Asia Processes of change Supraregional actors
Ascending India Descending Pakistan Supraregional actors United States, China, Russia (?) Regional security organization SAARC Transnational challenges Al Qaeda Taliban Islamic State Afghan allies Pakistan: Taliban India: Various non-Pashtun groups

15 South Asia

16 Central Asia

17 Central Asia Members Main actors Regional hegemon
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan Main actors Uzbekistan-Kazakhstan Regional hegemon Contested Main regional security concerns Regime stability Balancing Russia Independence Main concerns related to Afghanistan Radicalization/Militancy

18 Central Asia Processes of change Supraregional actors
China/Russia overturns the US Supraregional actors China, US, Russia, Turkey Regional security organization Shanghai, Cooperation Association (SCA) Transnational challenge Drugs Islamist extremism Afghan allies Various non-Pashtun groups

19 Central Asia

20 The Persian Gulf

21 The Persian Gulf Members Main actors Regional hegemon
Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Yemen, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar, United Arab Emirates Main actors Iran-Saudi Arabia Regional hegemon Contested Main regional security concern Iran-Saudi: ideology contest Main concern related to Afghanistan Protecting the Shia US presence

22 The Persian Gulf Processes of change Supraregional actors
Managing tension Uncertainty over Iraq Supraregional actors US Russia-China Regional security organization Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Transnational challenge Al Qaeda Drugs Migration Afghan allies Iran: Shia groups, non-Pashtun groups Saudi: None?

23 The Persian Gulf

24 Generalizations South Asia: Conflict/Proxy War
Central Asia: Non-engagement Persian Gulf: Rivalry

25 Afghanistan in the region
Implications Traditional security first Inertia Afghanistan and security cooperation What’s New?

26 Thank you!


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