CHINAMacroReporter

The Taliban: 'China's Perfect Partner'?

Breaking through the blow-by-blow reporting that started when the Taliban began its sweep to victory are the geopolitical analyses of who gains and who loses in Afghanistan.
by

|

CHINADebate

August 28, 2021
The Taliban: 'China's Perfect Partner'?

THE TALIBAN & CHINA

  1. Beijing’s Headache
  2. Into the Void
  3. What China Wants
  4. Pakistan
  5. Rare Earths
  6. What the Taliban Wants from China
  7. Chinese Investment in Afghanistan
  8. A Few Thoughts on America’s Withdrawal
  9. Great Analyses

Breaking through the blow-by-blow reporting that started when the Taliban began its sweep to victory are the geopolitical analyses of who gains and who loses in Afghanistan.

  • And the focus is on China.

Today we’ll look at just a few issues, such as:

  • What China wants in Afghanistan
  • What the Taliban wants from China
  • How keen or not the Chinese are to invest in Afghanistan.

There are of course many others to consider (including my favorite: Will the U.S. withdrawal encourage China to invade Taiwan? Short answer: No.)

  • But the issues considered here are some of the most immediately consequential.

You can find the links to the essays quoted here and more at #9, below.

1 | Beijing’s Headache

‘The hurried withdrawal of the U.S. from Afghanistan — the 1975 fall of Saigon déjà vu — has been heralded as a win for China and an opportunity for Beijing to extend its influence across the region,’ writes Bloomberg’s Shuli Ren.

‘But in reality, Afghanistan is now a big headache for Beijing, which fears chaos there will spill over not just to its restive region of Xinjiang but to Pakistan.’

2 | Into the Void

‘In Afghanistan, China is ready to step into the void left by the hasty U.S. retreat to seize a golden opportunity,’ says Zhou Bo, a retired PLA senior colonel.

  • ‘While Beijing has yet to formally recognize the Taliban as Afghanistan’s new government, China issued a statement on Monday saying that it “respects the right of the Afghan people to independently determine their own destiny” and will develop “friendly and cooperative relations with Afghanistan.” ’
  • ‘The message here is clear: Beijing has few qualms about fostering a closer relationship with the Taliban and is ready to assert itself as the most influential outside player in an Afghanistan now all but abandoned by the United States.’

‘Beijing can offer what Kabul needs most:’

  • ‘political impartiality and economic investment.’

‘Afghanistan in turn has what China most prizes:’

  • ‘opportunities in infrastructure and industry building — areas in which China’s capabilities are arguably unmatched — and access to $1 trillion in untapped mineral deposits, including critical industrial metals such as lithium, iron, copper and cobalt.’

But, Shuli Ren writes:

‘The U.S.’s hurried exit from Afghanistan was certainly bad publicity, but America’s debacle is not a win for China.’

  • ‘One superpower wants its soldiers to return home.’
  • ‘And the other? China just wants some positive internal rates of return to justify its dream of a new Silk Road.’

3 | What China Wants

Ian Johnson at the Council on Foreign Relations contends:

  • ‘In some ways, Afghanistan under the Taliban is China’s perfect partner: dysfunctional, dependent, and happy with whatever China can do for it.’
  • 'China’s engagement in Afghanistan can show other countries how China supports regimes: with few questions asked as long as they support Chinese interests.'

‘What kind of relationship will Beijing have with the Taliban?’

  • ‘Beijing’s relationship with the Taliban will be twofold.’

‘First, it will be mercantilistic.’

  • ‘China will seek to revive business ventures inside Afghanistan, which the Taliban is likely to support because investment will provide badly needed revenues. The Afghan economy is fragile and highly dependent on Western donors’ foreign aid, which will almost certainly be cut off.'
  • So any sort of investment, especially if it is not accompanied by lectures on human rights, will be welcome.’
  • ‘The economic interests are important but not decisive. At the end of the day, Afghanistan is an insignificant market and has only a few sources of raw materials.’

‘Second, the relationship will depend on each side not interfering in the other’s internal affairs.’

  • ‘For Beijing, that means the Taliban cannot export extremism into China’s troubled Xinjiang region, which shares a tiny border with Afghanistan, or condemn the Chinese government’s abuses against Uyghur Muslims in that region.’
  • ‘For the Taliban, it means China will not question the group’s human rights abuses unless Chinese citizens are involved.’

‘Of course, for China, recognizing the Taliban makes for strange optics: fighting Islamists at home but embracing them abroad.’

  • 'But it shows that China could be the ultimate realpolitik nation.’

Andrew Small at the German Marshall Fund says:

  • ‘China has several immediate goals.’

‘It wants to see a government emerge in Afghanistan that can consolidate its position, domestically and internationally.’

  • ‘This means the Taliban at least providing the semblance of a politically inclusive government and smoothing some of the roughest edges off their behavior, particularly while the spotlight is on them.’
  • ‘Beijing doesn’t want a sanctioned, pariah state in its neighborhood, and it doesn’t want a government that will offer the illusion of total control only for things to unravel into another round of conflict at a later point.’

‘The window between the Taliban’s victory and diplomatic recognition is also one where China can lean hard on its most important demand: that the Taliban abjure ties with transnational terror groups.’

  • ‘From Beijing’s perspective that primarily means Uyghur groups that target China itself and groups that may destabilize neighbors that matter to China, particularly Pakistan.’

4 | Pakistan

‘The key to Afghanistan’s peace and stability, of course, also lies partly in Pakistan,’ says Zhou Bo.

  • ‘Despite their proximity, the “conjoined twins,” as described by the former Afghan president Hamid Karzai, don’t always look in the same direction.’
  • ‘Pakistan’s Afghanistan policy is driven largely by the strategic goals of ensuring a friendly government in Kabul and undercutting India’s increasing influence in Afghanistan.’
  • ‘It is in Beijing’s own interest — not least for the success of Belt-and-Road — to ensure that Pakistan and Afghanistan are on good terms.’

Andrew Small writes:

  • ‘The pat logic that says that China can get Pakistan to do whatever it wants, and that Pakistan can get the Taliban to do whatever it wants, ergo China can get the Taliban to do whatever it wants, is demonstrably untrue.’
  • ‘The experience Beijing has gleaned over the last decade, particularly with the Afghan reconciliation talks, has made it better aware of its own limitations and the limitations of what the Pakistanis are willing and able to deliver.’
  • ‘But there is no question that this is going to be a period when Beijing will expect its Pakistani friends to bend over backward to ensure that the Islamist militant movement that they hosted and backed, and about which China has always made its reservations very clear, does not detrimentally affect Chinese interests now that it has come to power.’

Shuli Ren writes:

‘The People’s Republic has invested huge infrastructure projects in Pakistan as well as extended huge loans to Islamabad as part of the Belt and Road Initiative.’

  • ‘While China has not invested much in Afghanistan, it can’t afford for the Taliban to destabilize Pakistan.’
  • ‘Beijing still has very vivid memories of its last creditor’s trap, which it stumbled into with Venezuela six years ago.’

‘One more failed bet on a failed state will cut to the heart of Xi’s BRI dreams.’

  • ‘The Chinese people may not be all that generous about Beijing’s largesse abroad if it amounts to little.’

5 | Rare Earths

Admiral James Stavridis, former Supreme Allied Commander of NATO & Dean of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University contends:

  • ‘China is clearly positioning itself to be a major international partner to the Taliban.'

‘China wants to consolidate a dominant position in regard to the $1-2 trillion worth of rare earths -- most notably lithium.’

  • ‘As China seeks to consolidate as much control as they can over strategic supply chains for everything from microchips to electric car batteries, they want primacy in Kabul -- and will be the first major nation to recognize the new regime.'

‘For Pakistan, this is a moment of triumph.’

  • ‘They have assiduously supported the Taliban for the past two decades, both to control terrorist groups that occasionally threaten Pakistan and to deny India a foothold in a country on the other side of their border.’
  • ‘Closely aligned with China internationally, they will seek to partner with the Chinese in exploiting the mineral wealth and blocking India from a role with the Taliban regime.’

6 | What the Taliban Wants from China

‘The Taliban know they will not receive real economic backing from the West—at least not without conditions they will find unacceptable—China is one of the few places they can turn,’ says Andrew Small.

  • ‘Beijing provided the Taliban with money and arms when they were in exile, and made investments during their last period of rule, so there is a residue of goodwill.’

‘Beijing will almost certainly be willing to swing in with some immediate economic support.'

  • ‘This will be nothing remotely comparable to the level of aid the previous government received from the West, but some direct financing and some modest economic projects are plausibly within China’s gift.’

‘Beijing will want to convey the sense that far larger investments are possible, though, if certain conditions are met.’

  • ‘It has already been given reassurances by the Taliban that they will not allow attacks to be launched from Afghan soil and that they will treat Xinjiang as China’s internal affair.’

‘The Taliban only need to look at the diplomatic protection China affords to Pakistan and the economic commitments Beijing has made in the neighborhood to see what might be on offer.’

‘China can dangle these inducements to a government that is likely to be in a difficult spot, economically and diplomatically.’

7 | Chinese Investment in Afghanistan

‘Afghanistan until now has been an attractive but a missing piece of the enormous Belt and Road Initiative puzzle,’ writes Zhou Bo.

  • ‘If China were able to extend the Belt-and-Road from Pakistan through to Afghanistan — for example, with a Peshawar-to-Kabul motorway — it would open up a shorter land route to gain access to markets in the Middle East.’

David Sacks of the Council on Foreign Relations sees a different story:

  • Some now believe that the time is ripe for China to prioritize Afghanistan for BRI investment.’

‘Prioritizing Afghanistan for BRI investment may also help China address certain risks.’

  • ‘In particular, Chinese policymakers believe that Afghanistan, which shares a border with China, could be used as a base from which terrorists launch attacks against China.’
  • ‘Beijing also fears that instability in Afghanistan could spill over into Pakistan and Central Asia, destabilizing countries on China’s periphery and putting BRI at risk.’

‘So it would not be surprising if China announced billions of dollars in new infrastructure commitments in Afghanistan in the coming months.’

  • ‘This would further the narrative China is attempting to build that it is the best bet for providing economic prosperity, while the United States is a has-been power.’
  • ‘It might also lend the Taliban international legitimacy and help it build support domestically, as it can demonstrate that it is interested in governing the country and delivering economic development to Afghans.’

‘In the end, however, one should not expect that significant new Chinese investment will materialize.’

  • ‘BRI is retrenching and China’s risk tolerance is declining.’
  • ‘In recent years, lending across BRI has fallen.’
  • ‘BRI has entered an era of smaller lending and its backers are prioritizing projects where Chinese lenders have a greater chance of being repaid.’

‘As China looks for smaller and safer bets in BRI countries, Afghanistan does not come to mind as an appealing destination.’

  • ‘So at a time when BRI is retrenching, investing in Afghanistan is simply too risky and does not have enough economic upside.’
  • ‘China is unlikely to expend significant resources to connect CPEC with Afghanistan, and Afghanistan will not become a focal point for BRI.’

‘China is likely to be deterred from investing significant money in Afghanistan given the country’s deteriorating security and Beijing’s concerns with their ability to protect Chinese investments in Afghanistan.’

  • ‘China benefitted from the security U.S. forces in Afghanistan provided, and now that the United States has withdrawn it will need to devote significant resources to securing any future projects.’

8 | A Few Thoughts on America’s Withdrawal

As disheartening as the policy failures in Afghanistan are, they have to be distinguished from the superb conduct of the U.S. military.

  • America’s enemies who believe the chaos at the Kabul airport indicates something lacking in the courage, will, or abilities of U.S. soldiers, sailors, Marines, and air-men & -women are confusing inept policymakers with exemplary fighters.

As we in America mourn the 13 dead Marines, soldiers, & sailor and (as I am writing) 169 Afghan citizens, and remain watchful for news of those wounded, there was today a story that I found so moving I wanted to share it.

  • The day after the bombing that killed their comrades, Marines elected not to retreat to relative safety behind the gates to carry out their screening duties.
  • Instead they ventured again out into the crowds, taking, as one report says, frightened Afghan children on their backs and their fearful parents by the hand to guide them into the airport for their escape from Taliban rule.
  • All the time knowing that among those surging toward the gates could be another suicide bomber.
  • I am in awe of their courage, dedication, and humanity. They represent everything I love about this country.

This comes on top of stories that CIA and U.S. military operators are flying Blackhawk helicopters into the heart of Taliban-controlled Kabul to rescue those unable to reach the airport.

  • And of reports of the many private initiatives to bring those who Afghans who aided the U.S. in its 20-year war to safety.

There is something wonderful in the hearts of all these heroes that our policymakers would do well to understand and to take as a guide.

9 | Great Analyses

Here are a few the essays I’ve drawn on here. Have a look:

More

CHINAMacroReporter

May 22, 2022
The Next U.S.-China Crisis: CEOs & Boards Are Not Ready
‘The bad news is that very few corporations engaged in China have contingency plans or long-term strategies to hedge against the downside risks of growing geopolitical competition.’
keep reading
May 14, 2022
China GDP: 'A very long period of Japan-style low growth.’
Here are some of the insights from ‘The Only Five Paths China’s Economy Can Follow’ by Peking University’s Michael Pettis. This excellent analysis of China’s economy is worth a careful reading.
keep reading
May 1, 2022
'Zero Covid' & the Shanghai lockdown
Joerg Wuttke is the president of the EU Chamber of Commerce in China - the 'official voice of European business in China.'
keep reading
February 18, 2021
'Like It Or Not, America Is Still A Superpower'
‘The twentieth century was littered with the carcasses of foreign leaders and governments that misjudged the United States, from Germany (twice) and Japan to the Soviet Union to Serbia to Iraq. Perhaps the Chinese, careful students of history that they are, will not make the mistake that others have made in misjudging the United States.’
keep reading
February 16, 2021
'Is China experiencing an advance of the state sector?'
‘The value-added produced by state-owned enterprises has usually been in the range of 25-30% of China’s GDP. And what’s really striking about those numbers is that they just haven’t changed very much over the past 25 years. The share of China’s economic output being produced by SOEs today, under Xi Jinping, is not significantly different than it was under Hu Jintao, or even in the later years of Jiang Zemin.’
keep reading
February 16, 2021
‘China Blocked Jack Ma’s Ant IPO After Investigation Revealed Likely Beneficiaries’
‘Behind layers of opaque investment vehicles that own stakes in Ant Financial are a coterie of well-connected Chinese power players, including some with links to political families that represent a potential challenge to President Xi and his inner circle. Those individuals, along with Mr. Ma and the company’s top managers, stood to pocket billions of dollars from a listing that would have valued the company at more than $300 billion.’
keep reading
February 14, 2021
How to Keep U.S.-Chinese Confrontation From Ending in Calamity
'The two countries need to consider something akin to the procedures and mechanisms that the United States and the Soviet Union put in place to govern their relations after the Cuban missile crisis—but in this case, without first going through the near-death experience of a barely avoided war.'
keep reading
February 14, 2021
The United States, China, and Taiwan: A Strategy to Prevent War
‘We believe that a crisis is building over Taiwan and that it is becoming the most dangerous flashpoint in the world for a possible war that involved the United States of America, China, and probably other major powers.'
keep reading
February 13, 2021
Why China Will Go Green - Really
‘To Communist Party leaders, greenery increasingly aligns with their economic and political interests. China, a populous country that is cruelly lacking in clean water and arable farmland, and which hates having to rely so heavily on imported energy, has a selfish interest in embracing what President Xi Jinping calls “ecological civilisation”.’
keep reading
February 11, 2021
'The Biden Team Wants to Transform the Economy. Really.'
‘Biden and his more activist advisers hope to modernize key industries and counter an economic threat from China, swiftly emerging as the world’s other superpower. “The package that they put together is the closest thing we’ve had to a broad industrial policy for generations, really,” says Scott Paul, the president of the Alliance for American Manufacturing.’
keep reading
February 10, 2021
‘What the ‘Hong Kong Narrative’ gets wrong'
‘For a significant cohort of the [“pro-democracy”] protesters, the more accurate label would be “anti-China activists.” The one thing that seems to unite them is not a love of democracy, but a hatred of China.'
keep reading
February 8, 2021
Why the Anglosphere sees eye to eye on China
‘Some of America’s European allies are very wary of what they fear will be a new cold war with China. By contrast, the US is getting more support from the UK, Australia and Canada.’
keep reading
February 7, 2021
' "Longer Telegram" | To Counter China’s Rise, the U.S. Should Focus on Xi'
A strategy that focuses more narrowly on Xi, rather than the CCP as a whole, presents a more achievable objective.'
keep reading
February 7, 2021
'The Sources of Soviet Conduct'
'The main element of any United States policy toward the Soviet Union must be that of a long-term, patient but firm and vigilant containment of Russian expansive tendencies.’
keep reading
February 7, 2021
'Remarks by President Biden on America's Place in the World'
“We’ll confront China’s economic abuses; counter its aggressive, coercive action; to push back on China’s attack on human rights, intellectual property, and global governance.”“But we are ready to work with Beijing when it’s in America’s interest to do so. We will compete from a position of strength by building back better at home, working with our allies and partners, renewing our role in international institutions, and reclaiming our credibility and moral authority, much of which has been lost.”“That’s why we’ve moved quickly to begin restoring American engagement internationally and earn back our leadership position, to catalyze global action on shared challenges.”
keep reading
February 7, 2021
'In Search of Today’s George Kennan'
‘Kennan provided a framework to break through the bitter divide between those who believed America should return to its prewar isolationism, and those who believed the USSR was itching for a dramatic showdown with the capitalist west.’
keep reading
February 7, 2021
' "Longer Telegram" Sets Off Fierce Global Debate'
'The fierce global debate set off this week by a thought-provoking paper - “TheLonger Telegram: Toward a New American China Strategy” – has underscored the urgency and difficulty of framing a durable and actionable U.S. approach to China as the country grows more authoritarian, more self-confident and more globally assertive.'
keep reading
February 7, 2021
The 'Longer Telegram' & Its Discontents
Why everyone wants to be George Kennan‘In 1947 X penned his history-changing “Sources of Soviet Conduct” in Foreign Affairs,’ wrote Edward Luce in the Financial Times in 2018.‘The piece, which crystallised America’s cold war containment strategy, was the making of George F Kennan’s life-long reputation as a master of geopolitics.’‘ As the architect of a doctrine that won the cold war.’
keep reading
February 7, 2021
'Brookings experts analyze President Biden’s first foreign policy speech: Focus China'
'To respond effectively, Biden argued, America will need to rebuild leverage, e.g., by pursuing domestic renewal, investing in alliances, reestablishing U.S. leadership on the world stage, and restoring American authority in advocating for universal values.'
keep reading
February 7, 2021
'Why the ‘Longer Telegram’ Won’t Solve the China Challenge'
‘Perhaps the most problematic aspect of the 'Longer Telegram's' emphasis on Xi—“All U.S. political and policy responses to China therefore should be focused through the principal lens of Xi himself”—is the author’s conclusion that Washington should be seeking to escape from, and even try to effect the removal of, Xi’s leadership because that could restore U.S.-China relations to a potentially constructive path: “its pre-2013 path—i.e., the pre-Xi strategic status quo.” ’
keep reading
February 4, 2021
Why Beijing Is Bringing Big Tech to Heel
‘Beijing’s recent antitrust efforts are motivated less by worries about the tyrannical nature of monopoly power than by the belief that China’s tech giants are insufficiently committed to promoting the goal advanced by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) of transformative technological innovation—and thus may be undermining the effectiveness of Chinese industrial policy.’
keep reading
February 3, 2021
'Secretary of State Antony Blinken on U.S. Policy Toward China'
‘There’s no doubt that China poses the most significant challenge to us of any other country, but it’s a complicated one.’
keep reading
February 3, 2021
'Burma’s Coup and Biden’s Choice'
‘The top U.S. priority in Asia is limiting Beijing’s ability to control independent states like Burma, which is strategically situated in the Indo-Pacific. The U.S. response needs to take into account China’s regional designs.’
keep reading
February 3, 2021
'Myanmar, Burma and why the different names matter'
‘Unlike most of the world, the U.S. government still officially uses "Burma." '
keep reading
February 3, 2021
'Coup a further complication for tricky Myanmar-China ties'
‘Even if China played no role at all in ousting Suu Kyi, Beijing is likely to gain still greater sway over the country.’
keep reading
February 3, 2021
‘Beijing Won’t Let America “Compartmentalize” Climate Change'
‘‘You want China to take action on climate change?" asks Xi Jinping. "Let’s talk about what you’re going to give to get it.’’
keep reading
February 3, 2021
Burma: At the Center of the U.S.-China Competition
In today’s issue: 1. China Lays Out Its Position / 2. The U.S. Lays Out Its Position / 3. Burma: At the Center of the U.S.-China Competition / 4. Burma or Myanmar?
keep reading
February 3, 2021
'A Conversation with Politburo Member Yang Jiechi'
‘History and reality have shown time and again that these issues concern China's core interests, national dignity, as well as the sentiments of its 1.4 billion people. They constitute a red line that must not be crossed.’
keep reading
February 3, 2021
'National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan on U.S. Policy Toward China'
‘Being prepared to act as well to impose costs for what China is doing in Xinjiang, what it’s doing in Hong Kong, for the bellicosity of threats that it is projecting towards Taiwan.’
keep reading
February 3, 2021
'Coup Puts Myanmar at the Center of the U.S.-China Clash'
‘Chinese oil and gas pipelines snake across Myanmar from China’s landlocked Yunnan province to the Bay of Bengal—a route that Beijing wants to transform into a broader economic corridor with road and rail connections.’
keep reading
February 3, 2021
'Biden's whole-of-National Security Council China strategy'
'National security adviser Jake Sullivan is personally focused on China as a priority, building capacity across departments and agencies and running processes that break down old silos between foreign and domestic policy.'
keep reading
January 31, 2021
'Biden’s Nightmare May Be China'
‘The coming years represent the greatest risks since I began covering U.S.-China relations in the 1980s, partly because Xi is an overconfident, risk-taking bully who believes that the United States is in decline.’
keep reading
January 31, 2021
Opinion | Marco Rubio: 'China is exploiting U.S. capital markets and workers. Here's what Biden should do.'
‘China can finance its industrial ambitions with the deepest, most liquid capital markets in the world — our own.’
keep reading
January 31, 2021
The UK Stands Up, the U.S. Not So Much
“We have honored our profound ties of history and friendship with the people of Hong Kong, and we have stood up for freedom and autonomy—values both the U.K. and Hong Kong hold dear.” British Prime Minister Boris Johnson
keep reading
January 31, 2021
'U.S.-China Capital Flows Vastly Underestimated'
‘And yet, debates around US-China passive securities investment suffer from shortcomings similar to those inherent in the early debates about US-China bilateral FDI and VC: official data do not provide a clear picture for policymakers to understand the scope and patterns of two-way investment flows and stocks.’
keep reading
January 31, 2021
'Why U.S. Securities Investment in China is Vastly Underestimated'
‘The conduits of US securities investment in China that are obscured or ignored in the US Treasury International Capital (TIC) dataset constitute a majority of all holdings, so these figures vastly underestimate the true scope at the end of 2020.’
keep reading

Heading

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse varius enim in eros elementum tristique. Duis cursus, mi quis viverra ornare, eros dolor interdum nulla, ut commodo diam libero vitae erat. Aenean faucibus nibh et justo cursus id rutrum lorem imperdiet. Nunc ut sem vitae risus tristique posuere.