


The White House on April 6 suggested that countries are free to decide how they want to deal with the isolated Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
Asked by the Epoch Times how the United States would approach the growing China-Taliban relationship, National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications John Kirby suggested that that matter was not up to the administration.
“Every country’s got to take their own view of how they’re going to relate to the Taliban,” Kirby said during a Thursday press conference.
“We don’t recognize them as an official government in Afghanistan.”
The Taliban has not been recognized as a legitimate regime by any nation, including China, but Beijing has sought to deepen economic ties with the Taliban, with an eye on Afghanistan’s estimated more than $1 trillion worth of mineral deposits.
Kirby did appear to indicate that the United States could recognize the Taliban later if the Islamic regime did more to provide equal rights to women and girls.
“If they want to be recognized, at least by the United States, if they want to be seen as legitimate, then they need to own up to the promises they made about how they were going to govern that country and how they were going to treat their own people including women and girls,” he said.
After the Taliban rose back to power in 2021 ahead of the United States’ widely criticized withdrawal from the country, observers have expressed concern over that the power vacuum will be filled by the Chinese regime that is already seeking to broaden its influence in Central Asia and the Middle East.
In January, the Taliban inked a $540 million oil deal and Xinjiang Central Asia Petroleum and Gas Company (CAPEIC), based in China, its biggest deal since the takeover.
The deal will provide CAPEIC with a 25-year contract to extract oil from more than 1,700 square miles of the Amu Dariya basin in Afghanistan, and provides the Taliban with a 20 percent stake in the effort.
The move is viewed by analysts as part of a wider effort by communist China to take advantage of the United States’ chaotic withdrawal, as well as to present an alternative model of international relations in the Middle East.
That effort, analysts say, is aimed largely at eroding U.S. influence abroad and proliferating the regime’s own, authoritarian vision for a so-called “multipolar world order.”
The Biden administration also released a report on Thursday which attempted to deflect much of the blame for its withdrawal from Afghanistan, which resulted in 13 U.S. Service Members being killed and a windfall of advanced weapons systems falling into the hands of the Taliban.
Kirby defended the administration’s action, saying President Joe Biden was “proud” of the way that the withdrawal was conducted, and blamed any chaos on the Trump administration for not providing a plan for the operation and also the Afghan defense forces, whom he claimed “fail[ed] to act for their country.”