Da ba dubai arabic proverb
The Saudis and UAE could also use their financial clout as leverage as they have in the past, with the Taliban likely to be critically short of cash to govern the country given that Kabul's foreign currency reserves are parked in the United States, out of reach. Pakistan was the only other country to formally recognise the previous Taliban regime. "Saudi Arabia still has a strong religious card vis-a-vis the Taliban," Karim said, suggesting that Riyadh could also open channels with the group via Pakistan.Īfghanistan has a long border with Pakistan, which long sheltered Taliban leaders and has long-standing ties with Riyadh and Abu Dhabi. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has also acted to ease restrictions on daily life in the conservative kingdom - the birthplace of Islam, including curbing the powers of religious police, permitting women to drive and allowing public entertainment. Saudi Arabia could try to exert amoderating influence on the Taliban with its status as custodian of Islam's two holiest sites, said Umar Karim, a fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies. Washington has not said whether it would recognise a Taliban government. Two diplomats in Qatar, where the Taliban maintain a representative office, said Gulf states were likely to take their cue from top security ally the United States. "The international community should give them hope that it will accept them and cooperate with them in return for their commitment to international norms." "The world should respect the current situation in Afghanistan and not take measures to restrict them (Taliban)," he tweeted on Wednesday. Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim Al Thani, a Qatari ruling family member and former premier, said countries will have to deal directly with the Taliban. Saudi Arabia and the UAE tried to facilitate inter-Afghan peace talks after the fall of the Taliban 20 years ago, but were not involved in the main negotiations hosted by Qatar that failed to yield a political settlement. "Both countries are pragmatic and have proven they can work with different regimes around the world," a diplomat based in Qatar said. Riyadh and Abu Dhabi have limited their response to the Taliban takeover to saying they would respect the choice of Afghans and urging the group to foster security and stability after a protracted insurgency against U.S.-backed rule. Whether pragmatism will extend to a re-establishment of diplomatic relations is unknown: Saudi and UAE authorities did not respond to Reuters requests for comment regarding Afghanistan and the Taliban. "The Saudis have a historical relationship with Afghanistan and will eventually have to accept the Taliban (again).They have no other option," said a foreign diplomat in Riyadh, who like others asked not to be further identified. Riyadh had already frozen ties with the Taliban in 1998 over its refusal to hand over then-al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, who made his name fighting Soviet occupation in Afghanistan in the 1980s and was stripped of his Saudi citizenship for attacks in the kingdom and activities against the royal family. Gulf powers severed ties with the Taliban in September 2001 for "harbouring terrorists" after airplanes hijacked by al Qaeda militants, mostly Saudi nationals, crashed into New York’s World Trade Center and Washington's Pentagon, killing thousands.
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