1.
Diplomatic Pressure
The first option would be to apply diplomatic pressure on
the Taliban government, possibly through Qatar or Pakistan as intermediaries.
The US may frame Bagram’s access as essential for counterterrorism monitoring,
and push for a limited presence under international arrangements rather than
outright US control.
2.
Economic and Sanctions Leverage
If diplomacy fails, Washington could use financial levers
that include:
Tightening sanctions on Taliban leaders.
Blocking international recognition of the Taliban
government.
Cutting off humanitarian exemptions or aid that Afghanistan
relies on.
This would make Kabul’s refusal costlier.
3.
Regional Partnerships
The US might deepen military partnerships with neighbors
instead. For instance:
Expanding use of bases in Central Asia (though Russia and
China will resist this).
Strengthening presence in the Persian Gulf (Qatar, UAE).
Increasing over-the-horizon operations using drones and
satellites.
This would reduce dependency on Bagram, though at a higher
logistical cost.
4.
Covert Operations
If Washington views Bagram as critical for counterterrorism,
it could resort to covert methods—arming rival Afghan groups, intelligence
penetration, or even destabilization strategies to pressure the Taliban into
concessions.
5.
Accept and Adapt
Though difficult, the US may accept that Afghanistan is now
firmly outside its reach and adapt by monitoring from afar. This would reflect
Washington’s reluctance to re-engage militarily in Afghanistan after two
decades of war.
No comments:
Post a Comment