Deadly attacks on Afghan minorities show the Taliban isn’t keeping its promises - Vox
A week of deadly attacks targeted Afghan minorities — and the Taliban has done little to respond.
Experts from the U.S. Institute of Peace provide the latest analysis and perspective on the world’s critical hot spots, U.S. and global security and issues involved in violent conflict, based on the Institute’s work on the ground and with key individuals, governments and organizations. They give interviews and background briefings to journalists and write for news outlets around the world.
A week of deadly attacks targeted Afghan minorities — and the Taliban has done little to respond.
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“Pakistan has come to the begrudging conclusion that the Taliban are unlikely to deliver on its counterterrorism concerns,” said Asfandyar Mir, a senior analyst at the United States Institute of Peace, a think tank in Washington. “These strikes can be an attempt to alter the Taliban's calculus on support for the TTP by ramping up some costs.”
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"Instead of behaving in pro-Pakistan ways," Mir said, "the Taliban are actively challenging the status of the Afg-Pak border and enabling anti-Pakistan insurgents, such as the increasingly violent TTP."
But the core strategic concern about the CPEC by both India and the US – partners in the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue – is “more about what China gets in return from Pakistan, in particular in the military domain”, said Asfandyar Mir, a senior expert at the Washington-based US Institute of Peace.
Asfandyar Mir, of the United States Institute for Peace, said: “The dispute over the appointment was the straw that broke the camel’s back, it was not the main fight between the two.”