• Title of article

    Peace Talks with Taliban: Expectations, Realities and Way Forward

  • Author/Authors

    Attiq-ur-Rehman National University of Modern Languages (NUML) - International Relations and Peace and Conflict Studies Department, Pakistan

  • From page
    197
  • To page
    205
  • Abstract
    The prodigious campaign of Taliban has emerged as the gravest threat to political stability, social harmony, and economic growth of Pakistan while weakening the contemporary political, social and economic structure of the country. In this way, the combination of religious orthodox and Islamic militancy has emerged as one of the potential challenges for Islamabad. The growing Islamic vigilance in the form of Taliban has forced the Nawaz administration of Pakistan to overcome the threatening Taliban campaign which has reached into its zenith, and caused social, political, religious and sectarian intolerance in the country. Therefore, the leading decision makers of Islamabad decided to arrange a peace talk with Taliban. The optimistic behaviour of Nawaz government prefers to adopt an irrational policy instead of calculating the hard-core realities associated to the Taliban, which is an ideological phenomenon rather than a force of clerically devoted combatants. In order to accelerate a dialogue based peace process with Taliban, it is essential to comprehend the combination of cleric and political creeds inherited in Talibanization. Abandoned fighting force of Taliban is seeking adequate and persistently dispassionate approach rather than a counterfeit talk policy. Therefore, the central theme of the research tries to define the level of incompatibility between estimated expectations and ground realities while forecasting the applicable and implementable way forward.
  • Keywords
    Taliban , Peace Talk , Extremism , Economic Decline , Political Instability , Degrading Security , Drones Attacks
  • Journal title
    South Asian Studies: A Research Journal of South Asian Studies
  • Journal title
    South Asian Studies: A Research Journal of South Asian Studies
  • Record number

    2577914