Reference Text
Time Left10:00
Even
before
the
Taliban
announced
its
new
'spring
offensive',
violence
in
Afghanistan
had
escalated
dangerously
this
year.
According
to
the
UN
Assistance
Mission
in
Afghanistan,
the
number
of
casualties
in
the
first
three
months
of
2018
was
already
2,258
(763
killed,
1,495
injured).
Last
year,
the
U.S.
announced
a
new
'South
Asia
policy'
for
Afghanistan,
which
was
officially
welcomed
by
both
New
Delhi
and
Kabul
and
hailed
as
a
game-changer
for
the
region.
Just
eight
months
later,
the
policy
itself
seems
uncertain.
And
although
the
U.S.
administration
has
taken
some
steps
on
Pakistani
funding
of
terrorism
across
the
Durand
Line,
it
has
clearly
not
yielded
calm
on
the
ground,
as
wave
upon
wave
of
terrorist
violence
has
lashed
Kabul
and
other
cities.
Sunday's
bomb
attack
in
Kabul
at
a
voter
registration
centre,
where
more
than
57
were
killed,
carried
a
doubly
diabolical
message
from
the
Islamic
State.
Not
only
did
the
group
attack
Afghanistan's
fragile
democratic
process,
making
it
clear
that
elections
next
year
could
face
more
violence,
but
a
majority
of
the
victims
were
Shias,
highlighting
the
sectarian
turn
in
the
conflict.
In
addition,
the
statement
from
the
Taliban
rejecting
Afghan
President
Ashraf
Ghani's
offer
of
talks
'without
preconditions'
and
calling
for
the
targeting
of
American
forces
in
Afghanistan
as
part
of
a
'spring
offensive'
signals
the
security
challenge.
According
to
the
U.S.,
Afghan
forces
control
just
a
little
over
half
the
territory
today,
down
from
nearly
three-fourths
in
2015.
There
seems
little
to
suggest
then
that
the
U.S.
policies
guiding
Afghanistan,
and
Kabul's
efforts
to
protect
its
people,
are
making
any
headway.
It
is
necessary
for
both
to
take
a
more
hard-headed,
realistic
view
of
the
road
ahead.
There
is
a
need
to
stop
the
'Great
Game'
for
influence
in
Afghanistan.
Growing
U.S.-Russia
tensions
are
creating
space
for
proxies
for
both
on
Afghan
soil,
and
the
attacks
by
al-Qaeda
and
IS-related
terror
groups
have
their
roots
in
the
larger
war
between
Iran
and
the
Arab
world.
Tensions
between
India
and
Pakistan
cast
a
shadow
over
Afghanistan,
with
India's
development
assistance
under
attack.
In
turn,
driven
by
the
desire
to
secure
itself
from
Islamist
groups,
China
is
trying
to
build
a
rival
military
base
in
Afghanistan.
Ironically,
in
the
wake
of
9/11
and
the
Taliban's
defeat
in
2001,
for
a
while
all
these
countries
were
actually
on
the
same
page
on
helping
Afghanistan.
It
is
not
as
if
efforts
have
not
been
made
for
bilateral
and
multilateral
peace
talks
in
recent
months,
but
each
one
has
amounted
to
too
piecemeal
an
effort.
Defeating
terrorism
in
Afghanistan
needs
every
stakeholder
to
put
aside
differences,
and
acknowledge
that
the
current
situation
is
a
danger
to
all.
Even
before
the
Taliban
announced