According to media reports, testifying before a powerful
Congressional Committee on Afghanistan, former General H. R. McMaster, said
that the United States needs to hold the Pakistan Prime Minister accountable
for some of his comments after the fall of Kabul in August.
It is also delusional, he said, to think that any of the
money that would go to the Taliban or through the Taliban for humanitarian
purposes would not immediately be used by the Taliban to solidify their power
and to become an even greater threat. “So, we're in a situation where we're
facing a really extraordinary dilemma that it's going to be tough for us to
mitigate the humanitarian crisis without empowering the Taliban,” he said in
response to a question.
“I don't think we should give any assistance to Pakistan at
all. I think Pakistan has had it both ways for way too long. I think Pakistan
should be confronted with its behavior over the years that have actually
resulted, I think, in large measure in this outcome,” McMaster said.
It was during the Trump Administration that the US had
blocked all security assistance to Pakistan. The Biden Administration has not
resumed the security aide yet.
“I think we ought to hold Imran Khan responsible for his
comments when Kabul fell and he said that the Afghan people have been
unshackled. Why should we send a dime to Pakistan under any conditions? I think
that they should be confronted with international isolation because of their
support for jihadist terrorists, who are threats to humanity, including the
Haqqani network, the Taliban, and groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba,” he said.
Responding to a question from Congressman Scott Perry,
during the Congressional hearing convened by the House Foreign Affairs
Committee, McMaster said that it is a good idea to remove Pakistan’s status as
a major non-NATO ally.
“I would say the only time I think we have ever laid out a
very clear and realistic assessment of South Asia and prioritized the strategy
was President Trump's speech in August of 2017. Now, he abandoned it and he
doubled down on the flaws of the Obama administration. I don't know how that
happened. But I think if you go back to that August 2017 speech, that was the
proper approach to Pakistan as well, which called for a suspension of all
assistance to Pakistan until Pakistan fundamentally changed its behaviour,”
McMaster said.
Congressman Bill Keating said Pakistan remains a problem and
the US needs to assess it.
“Its long-standing activities, by many accounts, have been
negative. I think that's putting it mildly. For decades, though, for decades,
whether you go back to'96 when the Taliban took control, Pakistan was one of
the first to recognize them,” he said.
“When you go through the change in 2001 in Afghanistan and
then the reconstruction of the Taliban starting around 2005, they were there
giving assistance, by all accounts, and I believe those accounts are accurate.
And indeed, right up into this current change in the government, Pakistan,
there were many people that suggested their intelligence was embedded with
them,” Keating said.
Pakistan’s relationship with the Haqqani network is one that
is of great concern.
“That may indeed affect our relations with India in that
respect. But can you comment on that? I think they have been duplicitous, not
just recently, not just in the few months of this administration, but for
decades in this with many administrations, Republican and Democratic alike,” he
said.
Former US Ambassador to Pakistan Ryan Croker acknowledged
that Pakistan worked against the US in some very fundamental aspects with their
support for the Taliban.
“Earlier, I tried to present their narrative as to why. We
were going to walk out, and they did not want to be left with the Taliban as a
mortal enemy. They may get that anyway. And as satisfying as it would be to a
lot of us, myself included, to do something to punish Pakistan for this, I
don't think we have the luxury. They are already worried over the repercussions
inside their own country of the Taliban's so-called victory in Afghanistan,” he
said.
“Now, we can say, ‘Yeah. Well, they deserve whatever they
get.’ But again, a blow-up in Kashmir is going to bring a regional war. So, I
think reassessment is always good, but let's reassess with a clear eye on the
dangers now that the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan has created throughout the
region. We do not need a completely destabilized Pakistani state with nuclear
weapons,” Croker said.
McMaster told the lawmakers that the Taliban was backed by
ISI and that’s why they recaptured Afghanistan.
“The Taliban's differential advantage was the backing by the
ISI of other groups. But it was the unscrupulous units who are willing to terrorize.
They didn't give up their differential advantage. And so, I don't think it's a
mystery at all why they collapsed. And I think it should be unacceptable, to
disparage the Afghans who did fight, and over 60,000 of them made the ultimate
sacrifice to preserve the freedoms we're now seeing,” he said.
The Taliban, he said, went around to the Afghan units, and
they said, "Hey, here's how this is going to go."
With the backing of the Pakistani ISI, intertwined with the
Haqqani network and Al-Qaida, what they did is they told those commanders,
"Hey, listen. You accommodate with us. We give you the signal, or we kill
your family. How does that sound?" he said.
And that's why the Afghan forces collapsed in addition to
the withdrawal of US intelligence support, the withdrawal of our airpower,
which was the Afghan forces differential advantage, McMaster said.