West must stop playing the ‘Great Game’ in Afghanistan: former UN official

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The West must stop pursuing &Great Game& politics and for once put the people of Afghanistan first, a former senior UN official has said.In
an op-ed published by UK&s Financial Times newspaper on Tuesday, Mark Malloch Brown, a former UN deputy secretary-general, said some 28.8
million Afghans require immediate assistance, up from 18.4 million in August 2021; 6 million are one step from famine.He added that women
and girls have been doubly hit by both the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan&s (IEA) rollback of their rights — including to work and learn
— and wider crises of poverty and hunger that harm them the most.&Once more Afghanistan is isolated: denied diplomatic recognition, aid
drying up, sanctioned and its assets frozen
In the US and Britain, many are all too keen to brush the policy failures the country represents under the proverbial carpet; best forgotten
before the next elections,& Brown said.He said that this is also part of a longer cycle of geopolitical and regional competition that has
consistently failed to put the Afghan people first.&Whether the policy has been proxy war or neglect, invasion or sponsorship of insurgents,
surge or drawdown, outsiders have consistently ill-served the country&s people in a way that has typically led to the next chapter in the
tragedy,& Brown said.He said that prioritizing ordinary Afghans involves dealing with the IEA, even if that means making nominal concessions
to it.&A contact group of Western powers, Afghanistan&s neighbors, the Taliban (IEA) and ideally Afghan civil society might thus pursue
goals including a more humane counter-narcotics strategy, improved flows of aid, especially to women and girls, and much greater clarity on
sanctions to encourage foreign investment in areas such as irrigation
It might engage with Afghan actors beyond the Taliban, sowing the seeds of a more inclusive polity,& he said.Brown said that all parties
have a vital interest in preventing the country from plunging over the edge
&Famine, state failure and even new conflict in Afghanistan would further destabilize Pakistan and the wider region, and make further
refugees flee the country
Afghans now make up the largest cohort attempting to cross the English Channel.&&This presents Western and other leaders with a simple
choice: keep pursuing ‘Great Game& politics or for once put the people of Afghanistan first
More than 30 years of the former have got us where we are
A new approach is long overdue,& he added.The post West must stop playing the ‘Great Game& in Afghanistan: former UN official first
appeared on Ariana News.