Analysts see global competitions as obstacle to get Afghanistan out of crisis

KABUL (SW) – Analysts believe global competitions are an obstacle to creating a global consensus to get Afghanistan out of the crisis.

Mohammad bin Abdul Rahman Al Thani, the Prime Minister of Qatar, recently said that for Afghanistan to get out of the current situation, the formation of a global consensus is needed. He, by warning of the failure of scattered global efforts to solve the Afghan crisis, asked the world to interact with the caretaker government of Afghanistan with a consensus; a desire that, according to the experts, should go through the global and regional competition that countries have with each other.

However, experts say that in a situation where global competition has escalated on various issues, especially the Ukraine crisis, and Afghanistan has lost the center of attention of global politics, it is not possible to form a global consensus on the Afghan crisis.

In this regard, Mahmoud Anzarabi, an expert on international relations, said: “The opposite point of this issue/international consensus is that each country moves based on its own interests and does not think much about consensus.”

According to him, the approach of the Islamic Emirate in Afghanistan has made the country more distant from the world than before and the efforts to solve the current political and economic crisis have faced a challenge.

Analysts say that the lack of a clear and defined foreign policy in the current government, the lack of legitimacy of this government, decisions and actions that cause tension with the world and standing up to global demands are among the most important actions of the caretaker government. According to experts, the way out of Afghanistan’s current situation is to get closer to the world.

Tariq Farhadi, expert on political issues, says that Qatar can better play its role in solving the current crisis in Afghanistan by convincing the Islamic Emirate to accept the demands of the world, rather than asking the world for more interaction with the Islamic Emirate. He added: “Qatar itself is partly responsible for the situation in Afghanistan because it doesn’t want the government to change its attitude.”

Experts believe that by calling the world to form a global consensus to solve the current crisis in Afghanistan, Qatar is demanding the formation of a government in line with its interests in this country.

Weis Naseri, another expert on political issues, said that he is worried about the instrumental use of the Afghanistan issue in Qatar’s foreign policy. He added: “Unfortunately, Afghanistan and the Islamic Emirate will not come to a logical and national decision as long as Afghanistan remains a victim of Qatari policies and adventure.”

Two years have passed since the return of the Islamic Emirate to power, but its sovereignty over Afghanistan has not yet been recognized by any country, and all the efforts of the caretaker government in this area have been fruitless.

ENDS

Share: