Moskova, Taliban ile Askeri Ortaklık İmzaladı: CIA'nın Operasyon Kasırgası'ndan Beri Tam Bir Çember
Yazan Maksym Misichenko · ZeroHedge ·
Yazan Maksym Misichenko · ZeroHedge ·
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The panel generally agrees that Russia's military-technical pact with the Taliban is more about diplomatic pressure and securing influence in Central Asia than immediate military or economic gains. They caution about potential risks, including sanctions escalation, capital constraints, and security vacuums, with little consensus on concrete opportunities for markets.
Risk: Sanctions escalation and capital constraints could hinder Russia's ability to build infrastructure and stabilize the region, potentially leading to a chaotic security vacuum.
Fırsat: None explicitly stated by the panel.
Bu analiz StockScreener boru hattı tarafından oluşturulur — dört öncü LLM (Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok) aynı istekleri alır ve yerleşik anti-hallüsinasyon koruması ile gelir. Metodoloji'yi oku →
Moskova, Taliban ile Askeri Ortaklık İmzaladı: CIA'nın Operasyon Kasırgası'ndan Beri Tam Bir Çember
The Cradle aracılığıyla
Rusya ve Taliban liderliğindeki Afganistan hükümeti, Rus haber ajansı Interfax tarafından bu hafta bildirilen bir askeri ve teknik işbirliği anlaşmasına vardı.
Anlaşma, Moskova'da düzenlenen Uluslararası Güvenlik Forumu sırasında sonuçlandırıldı. Interfax'ın muhabirine göre, Taliban Savunma Bakanı Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob, etkinlikteki yan toplantılarda Rusya Güvenlik Konseyi Sekreteri Sergey Şoygu ile görüşmeler yaptı.
Rusya Savunma Bakanlığı, X üzerinden
Görüşmede Yaqoob, Rusya ile etkileşimin Taliban liderliğindeki yönetim için önemli olduğunu ve her iki tarafın da ikili ilişkilerini genişlettiğini söyledi. Ayrıca Afganistan ve Rusya'nın tarihi bağları paylaştığını ve Kabil'in bu ilişkileri sürdürmeyi ve güçlendirmeyi amaçladığını ekledi.
Şoygu, etkinlik sırasında batılı ülkeleri Afganistan'ın dondurulmuş varlıklarını serbest bırakmaya ve ülkenin yeniden inşası için sorumluluk almaya çağırdı.
“Batılı ülkelerin dondurulmuş Afgan varlıklarını serbest bırakması, Afganistan'daki 20 yıllık varlıklarının tüm sorumluluğunu tam olarak kabul etmesi ve ülkenin savaş sonrası yeniden inşasının tüm yükünü üstlenmesi gerektiğine inanıyoruz” dedi Şoygu.
Bir gün sonra, Perşembe günü, Rusya'nın Yardımcı Savunma Bakanı Vasily Osmakov, bölgesel güvenlik ve potansiyel ikili askeri işbirliğini görüşmek üzere Yaqoob ile Moskova'da görüştü.
Bakanlığa göre, iki taraf Orta ve Güney Asya'daki güvenlik sorunlarını ve silahlı kuvvetleri arasındaki işbirliğinin potansiyel görünümünü, askeri işbirliği alanları da dahil olmak üzere ele aldı.
Rusya, 2021'de Afganistan'da kontrolü ele geçiren Taliban liderliğindeki devleti tanıyan ilk ülke oldu. Bu tanıma 2025 Temmuz ayında gerçekleşti.
ABD birlikleri, Taliban'ın 2021'deki zaferinden ve ardından ülkenin kontrolünü ele geçirmesinden sonra Afganistan'dan aceleci ve kaotik bir şekilde çekildi.
Silahlı kuvvetler büyük miktarda ekipman geride bıraktı. 2023 tarihli İçişleri Bakanlığı'nın iç değerlendirmesi, kaotik tahliyeti kötü planlamaya bağladı.
Operasyon Kasırgası döneminden uzun bir yol kat ettik...
O zamandan beri, ülke yaklaşık 9 milyar dolar tutarında dondurulmuş Afgan varlıklarına erişim engellenmiş durumda. Washington, bu fonların büyük çoğunluğunu New York Federal Rezerv Bankası aracılığıyla kontrol ediyor.
Tyler Durden
Cumartesi, 30/05/2026 - 11:40
Dört önde gelen AI modeli bu makaleyi tartışıyor
"The agreement is mostly symbolic posturing unlikely to drive near-term moves in energy or defense sectors."
Russia's military-technical pact with the Taliban, reached via Shoigu-Yaqoob talks, signals Moscow's bid to fill the post-2021 vacuum and pressure the West on the $9B frozen assets. This could stabilize Central Asian borders for Russian interests while complicating US and Chinese influence plays. Markets should monitor secondary effects on Pakistan-India defense budgets and any shifts in Afghan rare-earth or transit corridors rather than expecting immediate oil or arms-trade spikes. The 2025 recognition timing shows calculated diplomacy amid Ukraine constraints.
The deal may prove largely performative given the Taliban's internal fractures and Russia's limited spare capacity for new commitments, producing no measurable change in regional commodity flows or defense equities.
"The agreement is diplomatically symbolic but operationally vague; the real test is whether it translates to tangible arms flows or shifts US-Russia competition in Central Asia, neither of which the article demonstrates."
The article frames this as geopolitical theater—Russia pivoting where the US withdrew—but the substance is thin. A 'military and technical cooperation agreement' is vague; no specifics on arms transfers, training scope, or financial commitments. Russia recognizing Taliban in July 2025 is old news by May 2026. The real leverage here is Afghanistan's $9B in frozen assets. Russia's public demand that the West unfreeze them suggests Moscow sees diplomatic pressure as the play, not military buildup. For markets: this is noise unless it signals broader US-Russia escalation in Central Asia or affects energy/commodity flows through the region. The article's 'full circle' framing is narrative theater masking limited concrete action.
Russia-Taliban military ties could be performative posturing for domestic audiences and regional rivals (China, Iran, Pakistan), with minimal actual capability transfer or strategic value—making this a non-event that the article inflates by invoking Cold War nostalgia.
"Moscow is prioritizing regional security over global integration, using the Taliban as a buffer to mitigate domestic terror threats at the cost of further alienating Western financial systems."
This partnership is less about a formal military alliance and more about Russia’s desperate need to secure its 'soft underbelly' in Central Asia. By engaging the Taliban, Moscow is attempting to outsource regional counter-terrorism efforts against ISIS-K, which remains a potent threat to Russian domestic security. From a market perspective, this signals a further fragmentation of global trade blocs. If Russia successfully stabilizes the border, expect increased infrastructure spending in the region, potentially benefiting Russian state-backed construction and energy firms like Gazprom. However, the lack of international legitimacy for the Taliban makes any 'technical cooperation' a high-risk, low-reward endeavor that keeps the region firmly outside the orbit of Western capital markets.
The Taliban’s internal factionalism and historical inability to control all Afghan territory suggest that any Russian investment in this military partnership will likely result in a 'sunk cost' rather than regional stability.
"Even if the partnership deepens, the near-term market impact remains modest; the real signal is geopolitical risk rebalancing rather than a tradable catalyst."
Signaling from Moscow about deepening military-technical ties with the Taliban could reflect Russia's aim to lock in influence across Central Asia and hedge against Western pressure on Afghanistan. The article mixes diplomatic theater with snippets of defense talks but provides little concrete detail on what 'military-technical cooperation' actually entails—training, maintenance, arms sales, or strategic alignment? The real catalysts would be whether Moscow can secure access to Afghan assets and transit routes without triggering a Western backlash or sanctions. Near-term market impact should be modest; the longer-run risk is a more multipolar security framework in Central Asia that could alter regional risk premia for energy, logistics, and defense exposures.
The strongest counter is that the piece likely overstates depth of ties; even if recognition occurred, actual military-technical cooperation could be symbolic, with limited operational substance. Any broad deployment or sustained arms exchanges would almost certainly provoke Western pushback and sanctions, making the move risky and unlikely to translate into immediate market catalysts.
"Sanctions cap any infrastructure upside, raising risk premia across regional energy plays instead."
Gemini assumes stabilization would lift Gazprom via new infrastructure outlays, but existing sanctions already block Russian state firms from Western capital and tech required for those projects. Pairing this with Claude's emphasis on vague terms, any concrete arms or training flows could invite secondary sanctions that also deter Chinese or Pakistani corridor financing. Result is wider risk premia on all Central Asian energy and logistics exposures rather than selective Russian gains.
"Russia's capital scarcity, not Western sanctions, is the real brake on translating Taliban ties into material regional gains."
Grok's sanctions escalation risk is real, but I'd push back on the framing. Secondary sanctions on Chinese/Pakistani financing are speculative—Beijing has weathered worse without retreating from Central Asia plays. The actual constraint isn't Western punishment; it's that Russia lacks *fungible capital* post-Ukraine. Even if sanctions didn't tighten, Moscow can't simultaneously fund Ukraine operations and build Afghan infrastructure. That's the binding constraint, not geopolitical blowback.
"Russia's goal is security outsourcing to protect its southern flank without committing troops, not economic development."
Claude is right about the capital constraint, but both ignore the 'ISIS-K' factor Gemini raised. This isn't about infrastructure or trade; it's about Russia buying a counter-terrorism proxy to avoid diverting its own troops from Ukraine to protect the CSTO border. If Moscow successfully offloads regional security costs onto the Taliban, it actually strengthens their domestic position. The market risk isn't sanctions—it's the potential for a localized, chaotic security vacuum if the Taliban fails.
"Asset access and governance are the real chokepoints that will prevent any near-term market upside from Moscow's Afghanistan diplomacy."
Gemini's focus on ISIS-K and 'outsourcing' security misses a critical constraint: without access to Afghan assets and credible governance, Moscow cannot monetize influence in Afghanistan. Recognition alone doesn't unlock capital or transit rights; sanctions and capital controls remain binding. Any proposed Gazprom-infrastructure boost would require Western sanction relief and partner financing, which are unlikely in the near term, so the market impact should be muted or negative if risk premia rise.
The panel generally agrees that Russia's military-technical pact with the Taliban is more about diplomatic pressure and securing influence in Central Asia than immediate military or economic gains. They caution about potential risks, including sanctions escalation, capital constraints, and security vacuums, with little consensus on concrete opportunities for markets.
None explicitly stated by the panel.
Sanctions escalation and capital constraints could hinder Russia's ability to build infrastructure and stabilize the region, potentially leading to a chaotic security vacuum.