For the Ancients: China does not have a real usable border with Afghanistan. The Wakhan corridor - and much of the Karakorum Road to Pakistan - are no picnic ground. China has spent more energy sealing borders by basing troops in their upper reaches, extending even into neighboring Tajikistan and with reported patrol forays into the Wakhan corridor. Then there is the checkered story of China’s economic relations with Afghanistan - grand announcements regarding the Mes Aynak copper mine near Kabul, but never made operational; rail projects which have not happened, and even as recently as 2020 a road project with the Afghan government in the Wakhan corridor. Chinese investment and trade into Afghanistan in fact declined steadily after 2007 until very recently. A major agreement for pine-nuts export to China matters economically but has no strategic value. Above all, China is supposed to crave stability and is not a risk-taker. Historically, it has been slow - sometimes among the last - to recognize regime changes. In Pakistan itself, it fears the actions of radical terrorist factions against its workers and interests. For the build-up of the planned CPEC corridor that is meant to extend to the port of Gwadar, Pakistan has had to commit a special military detachment of more than 10,000 soldiers. Therefore, China is supposed to be reacting - if quite nimbly - and adjusting to what China’s Mofa euphemistically calls "major changes". One could even assert that it plans to use the issue of terrorism as one of common interest with the United States: on August 16, Wang Yi is said to have offered to Anthony Blinken a dialogue for a "soft landing", to avert "a civil war or a humanitarian crisis" and "a relapse into a hotbed and shelter for terrorism".
In other words, while China clearly cannot but seek a propaganda benefit from what it calls America’s "hasty departure", its distrust of the Taliban and fears of repercussions in the region and inside China would dictate that it sticks to its cautious attitude.
But the Moderns have more up to date and better arguments. First, with the exception of Panshir, which is totally surrounded and where neighboring states are foremost intent on locking up borders, the Taliban have total control, and there cannot be another foreign intervention for a very long time. Second, China under Xi has decided on a frontal confrontation with the United States and more generally Western democracies - not shying away from decoupling, testing American resolve on many issues. It is openly practicing what Henry Kissinger called strategic linkage: for example, Wang Yi repeats on Afghanistan what a Mofa spokesman said in January 2021 about the climate issue: the U.S. cannot expect cooperation while it "works hard to contain and suppress China".
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