Alwaght- Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan rejected the idea of hosting a US military base to be used against alleged militants in Afghanistan arguing that Islamabad “has suffered so much from the wars in Afghanistan” and learned many lessons from its previous mistakes.
In an op-ed for The Washington Post, Khan said “In order to avoid further conflict, US bases will withdraw from Pakistan,” adding that his country "is ready to be a partner for peace in Afghanistan with the United States.”
He acknowledged that Islamabad “made a mistake by choosing between warring Afghan parties” in the past, but has now “learned from that experience.”
“History proves that Afghanistan can never be controlled from the outside,” Khan wrote.
He wrote the opinion piece as the US and its NATO allies are engaged in the process of pulling out their forces from Afghanistan to end two decades of war in the county. All foreign troops were supposed to have been withdrawn by May 1, but US President Joe Biden pushed that date back to September 11.
The US is considering options to keep a foothold in the region, and there has been widespread speculation that Pakistan may allow the US to use its soil for operations after a full withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Last week, David Helvey, the US assistant secretary of defense for Indo-Pacific affairs, told the US Senate Armed Services Committee that Islamabad would allow the US military to use its territory again.
“Pakistan had always allowed overflights and ground access to the US to facilitate its military presence in Afghanistan and would continue to do so,” he said.
Prime Minister Khan, however, rejected that prospect.
“We simply cannot afford this. We have already paid too heavy a price,” Khan said.
“Meanwhile, if the United States, with the most powerful military machine in history, couldn’t win the war from inside Afghanistan after 20 years, how would America do it from bases in our country?” Khan asked.
Pakistan secretly allowed the US to operate drones over Pakistani territory and from at least one base in the southwest of the country during the former presidency of Barack Obama. Islamabad also provided tacit approval for the use of US drone attacks on Pakistani soil, while publicly condemning them, leaked US diplomatic cables showed in 2011.
“US drone attacks, which I warned against, didn’t win the war, but they did create hatred for Americans, swelling the ranks of terrorist groups against both our countries,” Khan wrote.
He said, “The interests of Pakistan and the United States in Afghanistan are the same. We want a negotiated peace, not civil war.”
Khan has formerly warned that a “civil war” could spark in Afghanistan after all the US troop withdraw.
“We oppose any military takeover of Afghanistan, which will lead only to decades of civil war, as the Taliban cannot win over the whole of the country, and yet must be included in any government for it to succeed,” he wrote.
The Taliban’s five-year rule in Afghanistan came to an end following the US-led invasion of the country in 2001. But the militants have now intensified attacks to seize territory again. They are said to be present in almost every province now and are encircling several major cities.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has previously said that his government is ready to fight against the Taliban after the full withdrawal of foreign troops from the country.
But amid the surge in violence, he launched a security shake-up on Friday with the appointment of new defense and interior ministers.
Ghani and his chief peacemaker, Abdullah Abdullah, will also meet with US President Joe Biden on a visit to Washington on Friday.
In their first face-to-face meeting, Biden will seek to reassure Ghani and Abdullah of US support for Afghanistan, including diplomatic, economic, and humanitarian assistance, the White House said in a statement on Sunday.