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Taleban 'getting Chinese weapons'
Paul Danahar
BBC
Tuesday September 4, 2007
Britain has privately complained to Beijing that Chinese-made
weapons are being used by the Taleban to attack British troops
in Afghanistan.
The BBC has been told that on several occasions Chinese arms
have been recovered after attacks on British and American troops
by Afghan insurgents.
The authorities in Beijing have promised to carry out an investigation.
This appears to be the first time Britain has asked China how
its arms are ending up with the Taleban.
Boasting
At a meeting held recently at the Chinese foreign ministry in
Beijing, a British official expressed the UK's growing concern
about the incidents.
(Article continues below)
When asked about the latest British concerns, the Chinese foreign
ministry referred back to a statement made by their spokesman
Qin Gang in July who said China's arms exports were carried out
"in strict accordance with our law and our international
obligations".
For their part, the Taleban have recently begun boasting that
they have now got hold of much more sophisticated weaponry although
they refused to say from where.
Afghan officials have also privately confirmed to the BBC that
sophisticated Chinese weapons are now in the hands of the Taleban.
They said these included Chinese-made surface-to-air missiles, anti-aircraft
guns, landmines, rocket-propelled grenades and components for roadside
bombs.
A senior Afghan official told the BBC: "Chinese HN-5 anti-aircraft
missiles are with the Taleban, we know this... and we are worried
where do the Taleban get them, some of these weapons have been
made recently in Chinese factories."
Another Afghan official who deals with counter-terrorism said:
"Serial numbers and other information from most of the Chinese
weapons have been removed in most cases and it's almost impossible
for us to find out where they come from but we have shared our
concerns with the Chinese and the Americans also."
Worried
The Afghan government considers China to be a friend, and a much
less meddlesome ally than the other big player in its neighbourhood,
India.
But, the counter-terrorism official added, "China is worried
about the presence of the US in the region".
Southern Afghanistan has been awash with Chinese made arms for
decades which are some of the cheapest on the market.
In the past the Taleban got them via the Pakistan intelligence
agency, the ISI, or bought them directly from arms smugglers.
But it is extremely unlikely the ISI would now allow them access
to anti-aircraft missiles or armour-piercing ammunition.
The Pakistani army's relationship between militants in its tribal
areas along the Afghan border has deteriorated sharply in recent
years after Washington put pressure on President Musharraf post-9/11
to crack down on al-Qaeda and Taleban groups operating inside Pakistani
territory.
So the Taleban might well use any sophisticated new weapons it
received against the Pakistani army.
It is not in China's interest either to arm Pakistan-based militants.
Over the last couple of years Chinese workers in Pakistan have
been targeted by militants, in retaliation for the Pakistani army
allegedly going after hard-line Muslim Uighur leaders from China's
Xinjiang province, hiding in the tribal areas.
Proxy network
So instead of Pakistan being the transit point for these weapons,
the finger is being pointed by many commentators towards Iran.
The Afghan government has long acknowledged privately that Iranian
intelligence agencies have been active in southern Afghanistan
post-9/11.
Iran has been pursuing a policy of building up proxy networks
to be able to attack American forces in response to any US attacks
against Teheran's nuclear infrastructure.
A Shia Iran and the Sunni Taleban had been firm enemies since 1998.
Then, Iran threatened to invade western Afghanistan, when the
country was largely controlled by the Taleban, after nine of its
diplomats were massacred in Mazar-e-Sharif.
But times have changed, now America is a common enemy and senior
American commanders in Afghanistan have acknowledged the growing
ties between the two.
The complication for both the UK and US is China.
Unnamed US officials have recently been quoted as saying that
China has been selling arms to Iran which Iran is then passing
on to insurgent groups in Afghanistan and Iraq.
China's booming economy and its seat at the UN security council
have made it an important player on the world stage.
It is a major trading partner for the UK whose economy has benefited
enormously from China's cheap goods.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown's newly-appointed British Minister
for Asia, Lord Mark Malloch Brown acknowledged to journalists
in Beijing last week that countries "need to work with China
to get things done in today's world".
China is going to have to show that getting things done also
means stopping its arms illegally ending up in the hands of men
bent on killing British troops.
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