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Border Clash Tests Afghan-Pakistan Relations

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Border Clash Tests Afghan-Pakistan Relations

By Usman Ansari

AAMIR QURESHI/AFP

An exchange of gunfire has left the Pakistan-Afghan border tense. Here, Pakistani troops arrive to cordon a Shiite Muslim mosque after an attack by a suicide bomber in Islamabad in February.

ISLAMABAD — Afghan and Pakistani troops continue to face off along part of their mutual border after an exchange of fire early Wednesday reportedly caused casualties on both sides.

Analysts believe the fighting could undermine what had until recently been a warming bilateral relationship, but at the same time there are considerable pressures on both sides to stop any escalation.

The media arm of Pakistan's military, Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), released a statement Wednesday stating "An RPG-7 rocket and a few rounds of small arms were fired on Angoor Adda gate from the Afghan side due to which 2 Pakistani security personnel were injured. Pakistani troops responded and targeted positions from where fire was coming."

Official Afghan sources state there was one fatality on the Afghan side, sparked by construction work being undertaken by the Pakistanis. Pakistan's ambassador to Kabul was later summoned by the Afghan government over the incident.

However, Claude Rakisits, nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council's South Asia Center, does not believe the situation will escalate, primarily because it is not in the interest of neither country to do so.

He highlights a number of factors on the Afghan side that would encourage Kabul to try and reduce tensions because "even though [Afghan] President Ghani recently went very public about his frustration with Pakistan's failure to stop the recent Taliban attacks in Afghanistan, he also knows that he has little choice but to work with Pakistan," he said.

Adding, "Having dumped the Indians in favor of China and Pakistan, his country's future is now intimately linked to the success of China's recently signed $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor [CPEC] project, which if fully implemented will be good news for Afghanistan and its economic development."

Though this project is being undertaken in Pakistan, Rakisits says both Afghanistan and Pakistan are under pressure from China to maintain a good bilateral relationship, not least because of China's own security interests.

"Given China's massive investment in building up Pakistan's decrepit infrastructure, its leaders will expect the Pakistan military to ruthlessly hunt down the Taliban and their fellow ideological travelers, including the Uighur-dominated East Turkestan Islamic Movement [ETIM]."

Though Pakistan is seen as China's main concern and closest ally in South Asia, Beijing also has strong interests in a secure and stable Afghanistan under government control.

"Like President Ghani, Chinese President Xi does not want to see the Taliban return to power in Kabul, as this would provide the ETIM with a friendly haven from where to launch terrorist attacks into Xinjiang province," Rakisits said.

The skirmish comes at a delicate time as Pakistan makes final preparations to eradicate the remaining pockets of the Pakistani Taliban (TTP), their allies and affiliates.

Remaining TTP positions in North Waziristan's Shawal Valley are being softened up by air strikes before ground troops move into the heavily forested mountainous area. Some terrorists are already reported to have slipped across the border into Afghanistan.

However, author, analyst, and former Australian defense attache to Islamabad Brian Cloughley says "matters in Afghanistan are being conducted emotionally rather than with an eye to pragmatism and the aim of defeating insurgents."

He believes Afghan irredentism is so strong it negates pressure on Kabul to maintain good relations with Pakistan.

"The fact of the matter is that the Afghans are still not prepared to accept the validity of the border as defined by the Durand Line which, contrary to all the noisy statements over the years by [former Afghan President Hamid] Karzai and so forth, is the legal boundary, accepted by Afghanistan in the past and not subject to alteration," he said.

He says Kabul's view was strengthened by the US, however.

"The US tacitly accepted the Afghan position when Washington refused to build barriers along the border, which had been proposed by Pakistan in order to prevent incursions both ways and have left Kabul in the position of having had achieved international support for its faulty stance."

Elsewhere, Iran fired mortar rounds into the Killi Nakar and Gorkadan areas of Pakistan's Balochistan province late Tuesday, the third time in a week it has targeted alleged terrorists crossing the border to attack Iran.

The terrorist group Jaish al-Adl killed eight Iranian border guards in April, but no casualties have been reported in this latest incident.

Again, Rakisits believes this situation will be contained as neither Iran nor Pakistan desire escalation.

He draws attention to the recently announced "3,500 posts for Levies and Khasadar forces to maintain law and order in Balochistan," and also Chinese strategic interests plus the Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project, as stabilizing factors.

"As part of the Chinese-funded CPEC project, the gas line on the Pakistan side of the border will be completed so that Iranian gas can start flowing through. Accordingly, Pakistan and China will want to make sure that bilateral relations between Tehran and Islamabad remain on an even keel," he said.

Adding, "China has a lot riding on this CPEC project, including the $1.6 billion upgrade of the port of Gwadar, which is less than 50 miles from the Iranian-Pakistan border."

Email: uansari@defensenews.com
 

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Sir, you need to improve how to DISPLAY picture properly instead many attachments, no-one can see small pictures.

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Steps:
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Use bombing on Afghani's terrorists camp in Afghanistan soil, can Pakistan borrow B1 Lancer bombers?
 
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It is the failure of afghan national forces that they can not tackle these terrorists on the other hand Pakistan army is capable of hunting them and driving them out from where they came from
 
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It proves India's worriness over their good relation.

Did you read the word 'India' in the article? That's right, NO (save for the dumping part)..... Because nobody cares about India on the Western front.

Afghanistan has quite clearly opted for Gwadar and the CPEC rather than India's measly Chabahar offering.

Go be an Indian elsewhere. This is a Pakistani forum and these are Pakistani threads.
 
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Ghani is under pressure from the ultra right wingers under heavy Indian influence.

Moreover this further complicates things:

"He believes Afghan irredentism is so strong it negates pressure on Kabul to maintain good relations with Pakistan"

By the way i think successive Pakistani government specially that of Haram Khor Zardari did not take measures to get the US support Pakistan over Afghanistan on the Durand line. That Haram Zada traitor we had as an Ambassador for Pakistan to US further made sure that Pakistan remains low on US priority list.
 
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The situation with Afghanistan will never improve, there are just too many stakeholder trying to play the same hand there. The most realistic option we have is to persevere through this stage, somehow work to complete our port infrastructure. Once we have that down, the situation will undergo a change on its own, our engagement with the region will change drastically and Afghanistan will have to align itself with Pakistan's vision for Central Asia (which is trade, commerce and energy).
 
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The situation with Afghanistan will never improve, there are just too many stakeholder trying to play the same hand there. The most realistic option we have is to persevere through this stage, somehow work to complete our port infrastructure. Once we have that down, the situation will undergo a change on its own, our engagement with the region will change drastically and Afghanistan will have to align itself with Pakistan's vision for Central Asia (which is trade, commerce and energy).
since the warming up of relations, MoU, leadership meetings between the two countries there have been back to back incidents that led to a day that we are back to Karzai days only one party stands benefiting which was openly upset because of some very modest and token improvements between the two countries
I recall Musharraf saying the Ghani is just one person we can bank on him. the majority of NA leadership and people in the ANA and intelligence are basically morbid Pakistan haters and close Indian friendship and have had military and intelligence training from them. they were not going to sit quiet and let Ghani and Islamabad get closer.
 
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since the warming up of relations, MoU, leadership meetings between the two countries there have been back to back incidents that led to a day that we are back to Karzai days only one party stands benefiting which was openly upset because of some very modest and token improvements between the two countries

I recall Musharraf saying the Ghani is just one person we can bank on him. the majority of NA leadership and people in the ANA and intelligence are basically morbid Pakistan haters and close Indian friendship and have had military and intelligence training from them. they were not going to sit quiet and let Ghani and Islamabad get closer.
sir, being a bit paranoid there maybe ?

could it also be that your forces have an expansionist agenda in Afghanistan ?

prior to 2001, apart from the emirates and the Sauds (surprise, surprise :rolleyes:) is it not true that Pakistan was the only other state who officially recognized the Taliban as the legit authority in that country ?

Pakistan helped set up the mujaheddin network in the cold war, and they morphed into the Taliban later.

all polls show that the majority of Afghani people view Pakistan unfavorably, there was even that thread about the university guy.

basically, things have not been good between Afghanistan/Pakistan since the Taliban were toppled by NATO forces after the 9/11 attacks.. I don't see why India must be dragged into what is clearly a relationship defined by decades of resentment and mistrust.. af-pak love story got soviet war/ nato war/9/11 qaeda base and got know what other crap.. none of it to do with India.
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but khufia agencies, who knows the truth.. maybe it was Pakistani commandos who gunned down 18 of our guys in manipur, maybe there are marcos and garuds in waziristan :big_boss:
 
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since the warming up of relations, MoU, leadership meetings between the two countries there have been back to back incidents that led to a day that we are back to Karzai days only one party stands benefiting which was openly upset because of some very modest and token improvements between the two countries
I recall Musharraf saying the Ghani is just one person we can bank on him. the majority of NA leadership and people in the ANA and intelligence are basically morbid Pakistan haters and close Indian friendship and have had military and intelligence training from them. they were not going to sit quiet and let Ghani and Islamabad get closer.

Yes but Ghani's latest statements are proof that if things go south, he will not stand by this process of reconciliation and will opt to join the camp that looks to Pakistan as a quick escape for their troubles. I would therefore be mindful of placing too high an expectation against him. At the same time, I wish we can curb cattle, wheat and vegetable smuggling to Afghanistan, those guys eat our foods at much cheaper rates than we ever did.
 
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