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loved by who? ashrad ghani and saleh? they will love swines if they start paying them!India is loved in Afghanistan and Pakistan is hated because we are involved in development activities and not terrorism.
Oh you frustrated little pakistani I was talking about a common Afghan not factions. They have a favourable opinion of us while you people are hated. This is why Afghans attack and beat up Pakistanis during cricket matches overseas for what you have done to their country.loved by who? ashrad ghani and saleh? they will love swines if they start paying them!
thats the crux of afg-ind relationship as long as banya keeps paying he shall find love in afghanistan! banya in afg is like that sad guy who never find true love so to keep himself happy buys expensive hockers gift her expensive toys and in retuen they love her and pleasure her!!
sad sad banya!
lols!!Oh you frustrated little pakistani I was talking about a common Afghan not factions. They have a favourable opinion of us while you people are hated. This is why Afghans attack and beat up Pakistanis during cricket matches overseas for what you have done to their country.
Lol that is precisely what happened prior...when USSR was there...they armed Afghans...and the Mujahideen were armed by US, KSA, Pak, etc.Just give the Afghans all the stuff the US military cannot easily fly out and leave the place alone.
lols!!
world is not tweeper and stop believing in perception! reality is always wonderful!
your kind is sad sad sad sad!
india? wht india got to do with afg?
we dont want them in controll they fought and won the war and have local support they will have their control! we are no one in this situation!Time will tell i think they will continue helping kabul just like they did help the northern alliance how much this will help who knows
Taliban can have it we have no borders and in a traditional war the mighty sourmas would wipe the floor with the Taliban . Having them as a neighbour is your problem and good luck against this lot hope you can control them .Can not honestly understand why you would want them in you controlled them once but say they start causing trouble on your borders it just another headache plus you lose the tariffs the Americans paid to transport equipment. I ask this not to troll but dont see why people so happy
lols seriously? how? Vedic geography?Trump POTUS was right, India has built a library in afghanistan, need more.
And India maps shows it borders Afghanistan, lol...
Precisely this is the reason why india should not be in Afg, you people dont understand how afghanistan works. There's a power struggle coming in Afg and will kill many people but people like you are gonna blame Pakistan for it. You people dont understand Afghanistan, its culture, people. The source of Your knowledge and information on afghanistan is your media so please you can say what you want, in that region nobody cares about india.Actually, Pakistani thinks that Afghanistan is a backyard of Pakistan as same as during the 1990s.
But, The world has seen the output with World 9/11. So no one wants (US, Russia, and India) the same situation as before.
Pakistan needs to accept that and work for peace in the region and Afghanistan.
Precisely this is the reason why india should not be in Afg, you people dont understand how afghanistan works. There's a power struggle coming in Afg and will kill many people but people like you are gonna blame Pakistan for it. You people dont understand Afghanistan, its culture, people. The source of Your knowledge and information on afghanistan is your media so please you can say what you want, in that region nobody cares about india.
Ask a common afghani, more than 15+ million lives in Pakistan, others sell items in border regions to Pakistanis, afg main trading partner is Pak, 90% trade goes through Pakistan, border bazars are being established by Pakistan to benifit common afghan, while you're funding terrorists under the banner of development, pakistan is actively building hospital, providing funding for various development projects, Afghanistans cricket is a phenomenal example of pakistans support to Afghanistan. Then theres Peshawar to mizar-e-sharif project in pipeline with other projects. Rupee is use as a currency in various areas of Afghanistan over afghani. As i said, your knowledge and information on afghanistan is purely based on what your media portrays which is based on utter hatred for Pakistan to such extent that it feeds wrong information to its own people. Cheers!!.Ask to a common afghani - in that region the people care about India or not.
India is doing the development work in Afghanistan and for the same reason, A common Afghani loves India and Indian.
Ask a common afghani, more than 15+ million lives in Pakistan, others sell items in border regions to Pakistanis, afg main trading partner is Pak, 90% trade goes through Pakistan, border bazars are being established by Pakistan to benifit common afghan, while you're funding terrorists under the banner of development, pakistan is actively building hospital, providing funding for various development projects, Afghanistans cricket is a phenomenal example of pakistans support to Afghanistan. Then theres Peshawar to mizar-e-sharif project in pipeline with other projects. Rupee is use as a currency in various areas of Afghanistan over afghani. As i said, your knowledge and information on afghanistan is purely based on what your media portrays which is based on utter hatred for Pakistan to such extent that it feeds wrong information to its own people. Cheers!!.
India, Pakistan, China, Russia have stake in Afghanistan's stable future: Joe Biden.
PTI |
PUBLISHED ON APR 15, 2021 10:34 AM IST
U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on his plan to withdraw American troops from Afghanistan, at the White House, Washington, U.S., April 14, 2021. Andrew Harnik/Pool via REUTERS(REUTERS)
US President Joe Biden has said India, Pakistan, Russia, China, and Turkey have a significant stake in the stable future of Afghanistan and these regional stakeholders should do more to bring peace in this war-torn country, from where he will withdraw all American troops by September 11.
"We will ask other countries in the region to do more to support Afghanistan, especially Pakistan, as well as Russia, China, India, and Turkey. They all have a significant stake in the stable future of Afghanistan," Biden said in a nationally televised speech from the White House on Wednesday.
In less than 100 days after taking over as the president of the US on January 20, Biden announced to begin to withdraw all American troops from Afghanistan by September 11.
The US currently has a little over 2,500 troops, which is far less than the 100,000-plus during the Barack Obama administration.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters that there is no military solution to the current situation Afghanistan, rather a diplomatic solution is required.
“Even as we are withdrawing our troops, we will continue to support diplomatic and humanitarian work. We will ask other countries to step up, whether that's Pakistan, Russia, China, India, Turkey -- countries in the region that certainly have a stake in stability. We will continue to provide significant humanitarian resources,” Psaki said in response to a question.
“We will continue to be engaged. This is the president's assessment about whether having troops on the ground, a military presence in the same way -- in a version of the same way it has been over the last two decades -- is in our national interest. And he has made the decision it is not,” she said.
Biden said the war in Afghanistan was never meant to be a multi-generational undertaking. "We were attacked. We went to war with clear goals. We achieved those objectives. (Osama) Bin Laden is dead, and al Qaeda is degraded in Iraq, in Afghanistan. And it's time to end the forever war,” he asserted.
The Biden administration on Wednesday did not give details of its expectations from India on the latter's role in Afghanistan after the complete withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan.
In the past, successive US administrations have praised India’s role in peace and development in Afghanistan.
“India has been the largest regional contributor to Afghan reconstruction, but New Delhi has not shown an inclination to pursue a deeper defense relationship with Kabul,” said a recent report on Afghanistan by the independent Congressional Research Service.
“Pakistan’s security establishment, fearful of strategic encirclement by India, apparently continues to view the Afghan Taliban as a relatively friendly and reliably anti-India element in Afghanistan. India's diplomatic and commercial presence in Afghanistan and US rhetorical support for it exacerbates Pakistani fears of encirclement,” said the CRS report.
India, Pakistan, China, Russia have stake in Afghanistan's stable future: joe Biden
In less than 100 days after taking over as the president of the US on January 20, Joe Biden announced to begin to withdraw all American troops from Afghanistan by September 11.www.hindustantimes.com
This situation I can explain As - Afghanistan forcefully married to Pakistan because of geography limitation but they love to India without any conditions.
India has done a wonderful job by doing development work in Afghanistan.
(1) The building of Afghanistan’s Parliament in Kabul (the complex includes a library, so in that sense India did build a library in the country).
(2) The restoration of the Stor palace in the same city.
(3) Rebuilding of the Habibia High School, also in the capital, and providing it with grants-in-aid.
(4) Reconstruction of the Salma dam, now known as the Afghan-India Friendship Dam.
(5) The establishment of an electricity transmission line from Pul-e-Khumri to Kabul.
(6) Reconstructing the Indira Gandhi Institute for Child Health/Indira Gandhi Children’s Hospital in Kabul (which had also been built with India’s help decades ago) and supporting it in many ways.
(7) financing the establishment of the Afghan National Agriculture Sciences and Technology University (ANASTU) in Kandahar and assisting it in various ways.
(8) constructing the Chimtala power substation in Kabul.
(9) building the cricket stadium in Kandahar.
(10) building a cold storage warehouse in the same city.
(11) upgrading telephone exchanges in some provinces.
(12) expanding the national television network.
(13) digging tube wells in some of the provinces.
(14) reportedly rehabilitating three water reservoirs.
(15) establishing five toilet and sanitation complexes in Kabul.
(16) Zaranj-Delaram road,
(17) hundreds of smaller, less visible and harder to trace projects, including community development ones. The completed ones include dozens of schools and basic health clinics: check the report here for lists and maps. (I can’t find a library there.) Even here, however, charity meets pragmatism: the large projects were often realized in the area of the capital or the safer northern and western parts of the country, while many of the small projects were earlier spread across the Pashtun borderlands, thereby directly challenging Pakistan’s influences in this zone (see also the map in the report linked above).
(18) hundreds of buses for the Kabul transportation system.
(19) 285 military vehicles for the Afghan National Army.
(20) Mi-25 and Mi-35 choppers for the air force.
(21) 10 ambulances for public hospitals in five cities.
(22) Airbus aircraft for the national airlines.
(23) materials for substations and a transmission line in the Faryab province.
(24) high protein biscuits for Afghan schoolchildren.
(25) shipments of wheat and pulses.
(26) funds to an Afghan Red Crescent Society program.
(27) free medicine and medical consultations in its medical missions in five Afghan cities.
(28) Afghan public institutions with technical advisers.
(29) training for Afghan public servants and policemen.
(30) hundreds of scholarships for Afghan students; vocational courses for Afghan youth
(31) lets Afghanistan’s national cricket team use an Indian stadium as its home ground.