From the DW:
“Afghanistan: Taliban face
financial squeeze from West”
With military retaliation against
the Taliban ruled out, the West is turning to financial reprisals. The US has
frozen Afghanistan's central bank assets and global development aid is halted. The
speed of the Taliban's capture of Afghanistan last weekend has left the West
scrambling to curtail the Islamist militants' grip on the country. Military
action has been all but ruled out and instead the United States and its NATO
allies have turned to financial warfare.
US President Joe Biden and the Federal Reserve have frozen billions of
dollars in Afghan currency reserves held in the US. Nearly $9 billion (€7.7
billion) in assets are kept in the US and other countries, including $1.2
billion in gold and more than $300 million in international currencies. In
anticipation of the fall of Kabul, Biden last week halted shipments of US
dollars to Afghanistan — a move the country's former central bank chief Ajmal
Ahmady said would lead to "dire" prospects for the people. US
financial newspaper The Wall Street Journal reported that Washington is also
blocking Taliban access to government accounts managed by the Federal Reserve
and other US banks.
Cash 'close to zero' Ahmady
wrote on Twitter that the country was “reliant on obtaining physical shipments
of cash every few weeks,” due to a large currency account deficit. "The
amount of such cash remaining is close to zero," he warned. Several
countries, including Germany, have halted development aid. Afghanistan relies
heavily on foreign assistance to keep its fragile economy running. Last year,
the country received nearly $8 billion in aid. The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) has suspended around $340 million foreign exchange reserve assets that
the Taliban could turn into hard currency citing a "lack of clarity within
the international community regarding recognition of a new government." Any
Afghan bank reserves the militants can acquire will be insufficient to run the
country, raising the prospect that one of the world's poorest nations is set to
fare much worse. Hans-Jakob Schindler, a former coordinator for a United
Nations team that monitored the Taliban and other extremist groups, told DW
that the reserves are not enough to "run the country in a sustainable
manner." "There’s not much cash, if you think on a national
scale," he said.
Drug trade funded militants Having
long faced international sanctions as a terrorist organization, the Taliban's
insurgency was fueled by the huge Afghan poppy trade, drug trafficking and
extortion. Afghanistan is the largest exporter of opium in the world and
the latest UN report put annual funding from the source for the Taliban
anywhere from $300 million to $1.6 billion. The country's new rulers
have vowed to put an end to the narcotics trade, a promise that has been viewed
with much skepticism, especially in light of the financial reprisals from the
West. "I very much doubt that they want to eradicate drug
production in Afghanistan and their ability to do so," Schindler said,
adding: "The commanders on the ground basically have no other
income." A confidential NATO report revealed that the militant
group also raises money from illegal mining, property and customs revenue from
seized checkpoints. Several unnamed benefactors from Iran, Pakistan, the United
Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Qatar also make regular donations.
Can the Taliban handle
Afghanistan's finances? But the Taliban will clearly require international
legitimacy to rule effectively. The freeze on assets and development aid could
help pressure them to agree on a power-sharing government acceptable to the
West. Any bank reserves seized by the militants during their recent offensive
are unlikely to amount to much, Schindler warned, making new sources of revenue
critical. "We can say the accessible funds to the Taliban are perhaps
0.1-0.2% of Afghanistan’s total international reserves. Not much," Ahmady,
who left the country on Sunday, wrote on Twitter.Afghanistan is estimated to
have between $1 trillion and $3 trillion worth of minerals, including copper
and lithium needed to power the global energy transition. Much of it remains
untapped due to endemic corruption and woeful infrastructure. Some
analysts are skeptical about the Taliban's willingness or competence to exploit
those natural resources, despite several recent mining deals with China under
the previous government. "The Taliban do not intend to rebuild the
Afghan economy and will likely put an end to foreign business deals in the
country," Tilman Brück, Founder and Director of the International Security
& Development Center (ISDC) in Berlin, told DW. "By their nature and
ideology, the Taliban are not interested in economic growth." While
China already has a footprint in the country, Western investors will likely shy
away from involvement with a group that openly rejects liberal values to the
extent the Taliban does, Brück believes. "The scope of private
sector-led investment was always very limited and is even more limited with the
absence of western military powers on the ground," he said. Ahmady predicted that Afghanistan's new
rulers will have to introduce currency controls — limiting access to dollars
immediately — and said that inflation would rise as the local currency
continues to drop, hurting the poorest the most.
^ The best and only way the world
can stop the Taliban at this point is by keeping their money reserves and
isolating them from the global market. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/afghanistan-taliban-face-financial-squeeze-from-west/a-58904182
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