By Tariq Rizwan
Despite India’s
longstanding friendship with former USSR
and persistently stabbing Afghans in the back by assisting the Soviet
occupation forces in massacring thousands of Afghans in its decade long
occupation, unfortunately Afghanistan
is once again considered a close ally of Modi Sarkar. While exploiting the
historical links between Kabul & Delhi during Mughal Era, aid provided to Northern
Alliance/US alliance during the ouster of Taliban regime in 1990s and the
growing trade, the all time antagonist India
is alarmingly strengthening clutches on Kabul.
India is running a chain of unannounced Consulates in Afghan cities along
Pak-Afghan border without plausible trade. Indian investment in selected projects
is targeted towards Pakistan
like construction of water dams/storages to block downward flow of water inside
Pakistan and enjoying
tremendous influence on Afghan foreign policy prompting mistrust between Islamabad & Kabul
as witnessed by the recent clashes on Torkham border. India remained a strong ally of former USSR during the three decades war in Afghanistan, hence, equally responsible for the
destruction of war torn Afghanistan
by providing all kind of assistance to the occupying Soviet troops. Indian
mines, laid across Afghanistan during Soviet occupation, remained a high risk
and considered a threat to Afghan and ISAF/US troops operating in the country.
India has completed various
construction projects including Dilaram-Zaranj road project to link New Delhi with Kabul via Iranian Chabahar
Port and divert Afghan trade from
Pakistani Ports of Karachi
and Gwadar. In the garb of such rebuilding efforts, Indian RAW is making
tremendous ingress in Afghanistan.
It is resulting in destabilizing Western Pakistan
including Balochistan, KPK and FATA. India is running a network in these
areas by providing weapons, logistic and financial support to the groups,
involved in militant activities with focus on CPEC route. Indian RAW agent
Kulbushan Yadav and TTP commander Latifullah Mehsud, presently in Pakistan’s
custody are witnesses in this regard.
US, in order to shift
its policy to Far East, has finally selected India as a close ally in the
region to cater for Washington’s interests in Afghanistan as well as contain
China. Therefore, Indian presence in the region especially in Afghanistan is undermining friendly relations
between Pakistan & Iran on one hand and Pakistan
& Afghanistan
on the other. The Indian glamour diplomacy has worked well. Due to Indian cultural
invasion, the recent Gallup survey has revealed that 75% Afghans prefer India
over US and China, with 50%
expressing approval, the most positive rating of India for any other surveyed Asia-Pacific country.
Though US is trying to settle India in Afghanistan
as a policeman but India
has some contradictory goals in the region to that of US. A US Congressional
Research Service report says that India’s
goals in Afghanistan are to
deny Pakistan a strategic
depth and the ability to block India
from trade and other connections to Central Asia
and beyond. The report has been prepared as research and reference material for
US lawmakers, including a brief description of India’s Afghan policies. India is making efforts to prevent militants in Afghanistan from attacking Indian targets in Afghanistan.
Though India
aims to prevent Pakistan
from regaining “preponderant” influence in present day Afghanistan yet it does not want to be saddled
with the burden of helping secure Afghanistan
after the US
departure. India is afraid of threat of nexus
between Kashmiri and Afghan Taliban as evident from past Afghan Taliban’s
hosting of Al Qaeda during 1996-2001. Al Qaeda’s association with Kashmir based
groups is very strong due to Illyas Kashmiri factor, killed in a drone attack
in Waziristan. Some of these groups have
committed major acts of terrorism in India, including the terrorist
attacks in Mumbai and Pathankot. India wants to confuse the Kashmiri
freedom struggle with US counter terrorism agenda and overcome the threat
through US global efforts of countering terrorism.
Apart Afghanistan's
recent military and strategic engagement with Pakistan
in its fight against Taliban militants was seen by India
as a major policy shift from former President Hamid Karzai's government, which
accused Islamabad of destabilizing Kabul. Ghani's maiden
visit to India
is also aimed at shoring up Indian investment. India is focusing on trade not to
become controvercial. India
has, so far, invested over $2 billion in infrastructure projects and the social
sector in the country in recent years. India
though delivered three unarmed helicopters to Kabul yet consciously stayed away from
engaging militarily in the 13-year-long war. New Delhi has also recently rejected a
request to supply some military equipment.
Indeed, India
is doing all possible efforts to keep the key neighbors Pakistan and Afghanistan at bay. Recently,
Indian Prime Minister Nerender Modi has emphasized “We share Afghanistan's
pain over persisting terrorism and extremist violence that destroy lives,
derail progress and his country would continue to provide capacity-building
support for Afghan security forces”. The recent tripartite agreement among India, Iran
and Afghanistan is
considered a great success for New Delhi’s
agenda to keep Pakistan away
from Iran and Afghanistan.
Moreover, to deny Pakistan’s
Gwadar Port the access and benefit of being the gateway to Central Asia and China to reach out to warm water and oil rich Middle East.
Afghanistan is neither part of Central Asia nor South Asia, but only
western neighbor of Pakistan.
The strategic location of the Pakistan
and Afghanistan has been
declared as a "cockpit of Asia" by
Lord Curzon. Geography has placed the region at the crossroads of global
and regional politics. But the war-torn region faces diverse problems of
conflicting group-identities, narcotics trade, a small arms highway, money
laundering, mineral smuggling and cultural clashes. Despite, the region has tremendous strategic importance and
particularly economic interests-as a potential conduit for energy routes
(oil/gas pipelines of Central Asia).
Being one of
the poorest and land locked country, Afghanistan has a natural way out through
Pakistan, regulated under 1965 Afghan Transit Trade Agreement that allowed transit to Afghan imports from
all the countries through the port of Karachi. It was replaced by Afghan
Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement (APTTA) signed in 2010. Despite irritants in Pak Afghan relations, both are have
very strong common bonds including geography, history, to some extent language
Pashtu and religion. They are natural allies against terrorism. Both are worst
victims of terrorist acts, want peace and prosperity in the region. All the
extra regional powers including India
have expansionist designs while Afghan soil and feel no pain for the agonies of
local populace. Pakistan and
Afghanistan
are inter-dependent having common objectives in terms of security, trade and
development. Hence, there is a dire need to enhance bilateral cooperation in
all fields and take all necessary measures to overcome the existing mistrust
and differences between the two neighbors.
The writer
is a freelance journalist
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