Analysis-As Taliban advances, China lays groundwork to accept an awkward
reality
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[August 14, 2021]
By Yew Lun Tian
BEIJING (Reuters) - A series of photos
published last month by Chinese state media of Foreign Minister Wang Yi
standing shoulder to shoulder with visiting Taliban official decked out
in traditional tunic and turban raised eyebrows on the country's social
media.
Since then, China's propaganda machinery has quietly begun preparing its
people to accept an increasingly likely scenario that Beijing might have
to recognize the Taliban, the hard line Islamist movement that is
rapidly gaining territory in Afghanistan, as a legitimate regime.
"Even if they can't control the whole country, they would still be a
significant force to reckon with", an influential social media
commentator known to be familiar with China's foreign policy thinking
wrote on Thursday. The commentator, who goes by the pen name Niutanqin,
or "Zither-Playing Cow", made the remarks on his WeChat channel.
On Friday, the Global Times, a major state-backed tabloid, published an
interview with the leader of an Afghan opposition party who said "the
transitional government must include the Taliban".
The Taliban's momentum as U.S. forces withdraw is awkward for China,
which has blamed religious extremism as a destabilizing force in its
western Xinjiang region and has long worried that Taliban-controlled
territory would be used to harbour separatist forces.
But China also hews to a policy of non-interference in the internal
affairs of other countries.
It has also drastically tightened security in Xinjiang, hardening its
borders and putting what UN experts and rights groups estimate were at
least a million ethnic Uyghurs and other Muslims in detention centres
that China describes as vocational training facilities to help stamp out
Islamist extremism and separatism.
Last month's meeting in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin followed a
similar visit by a Taliban delegation in 2019, but comes as the group is
much more powerful, with Wang saying he hoped Afghanistan can have a
"moderate Islamist policy".
"Isn't this the same Taliban that blew up the Buddhas of Bamiyan in
front of world media? Shouldn't we have a bottom line?" a Chinese
netizen commented on the Twitter-like Weibo below a news clip showing
Wang standing next to a Taliban official.
PRAGMATIC CHINA
In dealing with the Taliban, an increasingly powerful China may be able
to leverage the fact that, unlike Russia or the United States, it has
never fought them.
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Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi meets with
Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, political chief of Afghanistan's
Taliban, in Tianjin, China July 28, 2021. Li Ran/Xinhua via REUTERS
When the Taliban were last in power between 1996-2001, China had
already suspended relations with Afghanistan, having pulled out its
diplomats in 1993 following the outbreak of civil war.
"This is us being pragmatic. How you want to rule your country is
largely your own business, just don't let that affect China," said
Lin Minwang, a South Asia expert with Shanghai's Fudan University.
"When a major Asian power like China shows it recognizes Taliban's
political legitimacy by meeting them so openly, it is giving the
Taliban a big diplomatic win," Lin said.
State media published at least two analytical stories this week
highlighting that Afghanistan had been the "graveyard of empires"
and cautioning China not to be mired in the "Great Game",
reinforcing a message that China harbours neither the intentions of
sending troops into Afghanistan nor the illusion that it can fill
the power vacuum left by the United States.
After their meeting with Wang, the Taliban said they hope China can
play a bigger economic role.
"This shows that China might have dangled promises of economic aid
and investment to a post-war Afghanistan as a carrot to encourage
both sides to stop fighting and reach a political settlement," said
Zhang Li, a professor of South Asian studies at Sichuan University.
The risks to China of regional instability were highlighted last
month when 13 people, including nine Chinese workers, were killed in
Pakistan in a suicide bombing on a bus. China is building massive
infrastructure projects in Pakistan under its Belt & Road
initiative.
"China's number one priority is for the fighting to stop, as chaos
breeds religious extremism and terrorism," Zhang said.
(Reporting by Yew Lun Tian; Editing by Tony Munroe and Kim Coghill)
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