Reading the Af-Pak Narrative, from the US disengagement to Russian re-engagement

The US has prolonged its stay in Afghanistan with the security situation remaining far from improving. The indefatigable demand for resources to maintain counter-insurgency operations was a major debate in 2016 US Presidential elections with a demand for an earlier withdrawal from America’s Trillion...

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Main Author: ambrish -- dhaka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Jurist, Publishing Group 2017-12-01
Series:Sravnitelʹnaâ Politika
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.comparativepolitics.org/jour/article/view/642
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spelling doaj-251a7b111d104c9386f62ad78ccf917d2021-07-29T08:10:15ZengJurist, Publishing GroupSravnitelʹnaâ Politika2221-32792412-49902017-12-0184664Reading the Af-Pak Narrative, from the US disengagement to Russian re-engagementambrish -- dhaka0Jawaharlal Nehru UniversityThe US has prolonged its stay in Afghanistan with the security situation remaining far from improving. The indefatigable demand for resources to maintain counter-insurgency operations was a major debate in 2016 US Presidential elections with a demand for an earlier withdrawal from America’s Trillion dollars plus war effort. Russians having sensed the weakening of the US influence warmed upto the idea of new Afghan situation involving Taliban and their masters, the Pakistan army. Russia had experienced vulnerabilities of Islamisation in Central Asia and Caucasus, and the ISIS brand radicalisation added to the fear of political destabilisation of Central Asian states. The Islamic State showed up in Afghanistan and Pakistan as ISIS-Khorasan branch. Russia needed Pakistan as an ally to fight Daesh’s presence on its southern periphery. However, there remained many intertwined security challenges that complicate the South Asian geopolitics, especially, the Af-Pak region. Russia’s Taliban policy might be the hitherto unused leverage that it might be using in order to strike balance all along the shatterbelt.https://www.comparativepolitics.org/jour/article/view/642russiatalibangeopoliticsmiddle eastdaeshsyria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author ambrish -- dhaka
spellingShingle ambrish -- dhaka
Reading the Af-Pak Narrative, from the US disengagement to Russian re-engagement
Sravnitelʹnaâ Politika
russia
taliban
geopolitics
middle east
daesh
syria
author_facet ambrish -- dhaka
author_sort ambrish -- dhaka
title Reading the Af-Pak Narrative, from the US disengagement to Russian re-engagement
title_short Reading the Af-Pak Narrative, from the US disengagement to Russian re-engagement
title_full Reading the Af-Pak Narrative, from the US disengagement to Russian re-engagement
title_fullStr Reading the Af-Pak Narrative, from the US disengagement to Russian re-engagement
title_full_unstemmed Reading the Af-Pak Narrative, from the US disengagement to Russian re-engagement
title_sort reading the af-pak narrative, from the us disengagement to russian re-engagement
publisher Jurist, Publishing Group
series Sravnitelʹnaâ Politika
issn 2221-3279
2412-4990
publishDate 2017-12-01
description The US has prolonged its stay in Afghanistan with the security situation remaining far from improving. The indefatigable demand for resources to maintain counter-insurgency operations was a major debate in 2016 US Presidential elections with a demand for an earlier withdrawal from America’s Trillion dollars plus war effort. Russians having sensed the weakening of the US influence warmed upto the idea of new Afghan situation involving Taliban and their masters, the Pakistan army. Russia had experienced vulnerabilities of Islamisation in Central Asia and Caucasus, and the ISIS brand radicalisation added to the fear of political destabilisation of Central Asian states. The Islamic State showed up in Afghanistan and Pakistan as ISIS-Khorasan branch. Russia needed Pakistan as an ally to fight Daesh’s presence on its southern periphery. However, there remained many intertwined security challenges that complicate the South Asian geopolitics, especially, the Af-Pak region. Russia’s Taliban policy might be the hitherto unused leverage that it might be using in order to strike balance all along the shatterbelt.
topic russia
taliban
geopolitics
middle east
daesh
syria
url https://www.comparativepolitics.org/jour/article/view/642
work_keys_str_mv AT ambrishdhaka readingtheafpaknarrativefromtheusdisengagementtorussianreengagement
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