Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan has questioned the United States’ rationale behind the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 by stressing that the Americans “really messed it up in Afghanistan.”
“I think the US has really messed it up in Afghanistan,” Imran Khan said in an interview with PBS News Hour aired on Tuesday night.
Khan criticized Washington for trying to “look for a military solution in Afghanistan, when there never was one.”
“And people like me who kept saying that there’s no military solution, who know the history of Afghanistan, we were called — people like me were called anti-American. I was called Taliban Khan.”
The prime minister lamented that by the time the United States realized there was no military solution in Afghanistan, “unfortunately, the bargaining power of the Americans or the NATO had gone.”
Khan said the United States and its NATO allies had about 150,000 troops in Afghanistan and that was the time when they ought to go for a political solution rather than attempting to militarily end the war with the Taliban.
“But once they had reduced the troops to barely 10,000, and then, when they gave an exit date, the Taliban thought they had won. And so, therefore, it was very difficult for now to get them (the Taliban) to compromise.”
Commenting on the ongoing peace talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government, which have largely stalled, Khan said Pakistan could not do more to press the Taliban to end their campaign.
“Absolutely, there’s nothing more we can do, except push them as much as we can for a political settlement. That’s all.”
The Pakistani prime minister said the militants could hide at refugee camps in Pakistan that still host three million Afghans, adding that the Taliban constitute the majority in the refugee population.