What's new

India’s credibility at stake

PakSword

MODERATOR
Joined
Dec 6, 2015
Messages
19,505
Reaction score
103
Country
Turkey
Location
United Arab Emirates
Last month Afghanistan’s National Security Advisor, Hamdullah Mohib, was in New Delhi during which he addressed the Raisina Dialogue wherein he hailed India as a “key partner” of his country, sharing the vision “for a peaceful and prosperous Afghanistan.” Underscoring that “violence and terrorism have no constituencies in Afghanistan,” Mohib asserted that “a ceasefire is necessary to create a conducive environment for talks.” And then in private, he reportedly asked New Delhi to consider deploying Indian troops in Afghanistan in a peacekeeping role as the peace negotiations between the Taliban and the US once again gains momentum.

This is one of those discussions in New Delhi that no one wants to have. There is a seeming consensus in the Indian strategic community that this is a no go area for India. It doesn’t matter if the costs of inaction are mounting by the day and India’s reluctance to proactively shape the ground realities in Afghanistan has made it so marginal in the country that the only recourse it has is of asking other actors to keep its interests in mind. Officially, India has been repeatedly ruling out sending troops to Afghanistan, asserting that it would like to help Afghanistan through economic and humanitarian aid.

But in the past, such requests had been coming from the US. It was easy to dismiss them. So long as the US policy supports Indian economic and cultural presence in Afghanistan, it is welcome. But when the US demands that India should go for hard power commitment in the war torn nation, New Delhi can look the other way. India’s default position on Afghanistan has been to rely on American military for furthering its interests. The fact that India could emerge as a significant economic player in Afghanistan, much liked by ordinary Afghans, has much more to do with American forces shaping the battlefield than with any strategic foresight on India’s part. The result of this extraordinary situation has been that every time there is a likelihood that Americans might be withdrawing their troops, Indian establishment would hector Washington on how short sighted that move is and the costs it would impose on the region. It is indeed ironical that a nation which doesn’t want to put any troops on the ground in what is its strategic neighbourhood has not been loath to criticise a nation from where Afghanistan is thousands of miles away.

Now the request is coming directly from the Afghan government. The Ghani government is warily looking at the prospect of the peace deal between the Taliban and the US. It is under no illusion that after American forces depart, Taliban would challenge other actors to regain its past supremacy, leading to widespread turmoil and the frittering away of all the gains made over the last two decades. In such a context, allies of India would need Indian military’s protection and support. It would also be important to protect India’s significant investment in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban.

Yet, the debate on Afghanistan in India is still stuck in the age old stock phrases and has hardly evolved. There is actually no policy beyond saying that “there shall not be boots from India on the ground [in Afghanistan].” There are multiple reasons for why Indian military involvement in Afghanistan will be problematic, ranging from the lack of success of foreign powers in Afghanistan to India’s inability to achieve anything militarily on its own to Indian forces getting sucked into a confrontation with Pakistan based proxies. All of these points have some validity but how is it that for a nation whose foreign policy has rapidly evolved in the last two decades, these reasons have been cast in stone? There needs to be a stock taking now that ground realities are changing rapidly in Afghanistan and for all of India’s claims at being a major partner, it is nowhere in the picture when it comes to the final outcome.

Since the fall of the Taliban since 2001, India has emerged as Afghanistan's biggest regional donor, proving more than $3 billion in official assistance. It has undertaken some key infrastructural projects in Afghanistan and has been involved in building Afghanistan’s capacity in various spheres. In the military realm, however, apart from some limited training to the Afghan army and police and four Mi25 helicopters, India has been reluctant to move forward with any degree of seriousness. As far back as 2013, then Afghan President Hamid Karzai had given India a “wish-list” of military equipment which included 105 mm artillery and medium-lift aircraft among others. And that wish has now morphed into Mohib’s request for Indian troops.

But India’s approach of no military involvement remains consistent, something that many in Indian foreign policy establishment hold dear. For a government that believes in shedding the shibboleths of the past, perhaps there is still time to reinvigorate the idea of India as regional security provider. If Afghanistan becomes a haven for extremists and Pakistan backed proxies become the ultimate arbiters there, India would have the most to lose. And its credibility as a power of any worth would be in tatters. It is time for Indian policy makers to start weighing the costs of inaction in Afghanistan.

Harsh V. Pant
Director, Studies & Head Strategic Studies Programme
Professor Harsh V Pant is Director, Studies and Head of the Strategic Studies Programme at Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Defence Studies and King's India Institute as Professor of International Relations at King’s College London. He is also a Non-Resident Fellow with the Wadhwani Chair in US-India Policy Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC.

https://www.orfonline.org/research/indias-credibility-at-stake-61101/



 
Last month Afghanistan’s National Security Advisor, Hamdullah Mohib, was in New Delhi during which he addressed the Raisina Dialogue wherein he hailed India as a “key partner” of his country, sharing the vision “for a peaceful and prosperous Afghanistan.” Underscoring that “violence and terrorism have no constituencies in Afghanistan,” Mohib asserted that “a ceasefire is necessary to create a conducive environment for talks.” And then in private, he reportedly asked New Delhi to consider deploying Indian troops in Afghanistan in a peacekeeping role as the peace negotiations between the Taliban and the US once again gains momentum.

This is one of those discussions in New Delhi that no one wants to have. There is a seeming consensus in the Indian strategic community that this is a no go area for India. It doesn’t matter if the costs of inaction are mounting by the day and India’s reluctance to proactively shape the ground realities in Afghanistan has made it so marginal in the country that the only recourse it has is of asking other actors to keep its interests in mind. Officially, India has been repeatedly ruling out sending troops to Afghanistan, asserting that it would like to help Afghanistan through economic and humanitarian aid.

But in the past, such requests had been coming from the US. It was easy to dismiss them. So long as the US policy supports Indian economic and cultural presence in Afghanistan, it is welcome. But when the US demands that India should go for hard power commitment in the war torn nation, New Delhi can look the other way. India’s default position on Afghanistan has been to rely on American military for furthering its interests. The fact that India could emerge as a significant economic player in Afghanistan, much liked by ordinary Afghans, has much more to do with American forces shaping the battlefield than with any strategic foresight on India’s part. The result of this extraordinary situation has been that every time there is a likelihood that Americans might be withdrawing their troops, Indian establishment would hector Washington on how short sighted that move is and the costs it would impose on the region. It is indeed ironical that a nation which doesn’t want to put any troops on the ground in what is its strategic neighbourhood has not been loath to criticise a nation from where Afghanistan is thousands of miles away.

Now the request is coming directly from the Afghan government. The Ghani government is warily looking at the prospect of the peace deal between the Taliban and the US. It is under no illusion that after American forces depart, Taliban would challenge other actors to regain its past supremacy, leading to widespread turmoil and the frittering away of all the gains made over the last two decades. In such a context, allies of India would need Indian military’s protection and support. It would also be important to protect India’s significant investment in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban.

Yet, the debate on Afghanistan in India is still stuck in the age old stock phrases and has hardly evolved. There is actually no policy beyond saying that “there shall not be boots from India on the ground [in Afghanistan].” There are multiple reasons for why Indian military involvement in Afghanistan will be problematic, ranging from the lack of success of foreign powers in Afghanistan to India’s inability to achieve anything militarily on its own to Indian forces getting sucked into a confrontation with Pakistan based proxies. All of these points have some validity but how is it that for a nation whose foreign policy has rapidly evolved in the last two decades, these reasons have been cast in stone? There needs to be a stock taking now that ground realities are changing rapidly in Afghanistan and for all of India’s claims at being a major partner, it is nowhere in the picture when it comes to the final outcome.

Since the fall of the Taliban since 2001, India has emerged as Afghanistan's biggest regional donor, proving more than $3 billion in official assistance. It has undertaken some key infrastructural projects in Afghanistan and has been involved in building Afghanistan’s capacity in various spheres. In the military realm, however, apart from some limited training to the Afghan army and police and four Mi25 helicopters, India has been reluctant to move forward with any degree of seriousness. As far back as 2013, then Afghan President Hamid Karzai had given India a “wish-list” of military equipment which included 105 mm artillery and medium-lift aircraft among others. And that wish has now morphed into Mohib’s request for Indian troops.

But India’s approach of no military involvement remains consistent, something that many in Indian foreign policy establishment hold dear. For a government that believes in shedding the shibboleths of the past, perhaps there is still time to reinvigorate the idea of India as regional security provider. If Afghanistan becomes a haven for extremists and Pakistan backed proxies become the ultimate arbiters there, India would have the most to lose. And its credibility as a power of any worth would be in tatters. It is time for Indian policy makers to start weighing the costs of inaction in Afghanistan.

Harsh V. Pant
Director, Studies & Head Strategic Studies Programme
Professor Harsh V Pant is Director, Studies and Head of the Strategic Studies Programme at Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Defence Studies and King's India Institute as Professor of International Relations at King’s College London. He is also a Non-Resident Fellow with the Wadhwani Chair in US-India Policy Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC.

https://www.orfonline.org/research/indias-credibility-at-stake-61101/
All these analysts should first tell how to land Indian troops in Afghanistan???
 
Last month Afghanistan’s National Security Advisor, Hamdullah Mohib, was in New Delhi during which he addressed the Raisina Dialogue wherein he hailed India as a “key partner” of his country, sharing the vision “for a peaceful and prosperous Afghanistan.” Underscoring that “violence and terrorism have no constituencies in Afghanistan,” Mohib asserted that “a ceasefire is necessary to create a conducive environment for talks.” And then in private, he reportedly asked New Delhi to consider deploying Indian troops in Afghanistan in a peacekeeping role as the peace negotiations between the Taliban and the US once again gains momentum.

This is one of those discussions in New Delhi that no one wants to have. There is a seeming consensus in the Indian strategic community that this is a no go area for India. It doesn’t matter if the costs of inaction are mounting by the day and India’s reluctance to proactively shape the ground realities in Afghanistan has made it so marginal in the country that the only recourse it has is of asking other actors to keep its interests in mind. Officially, India has been repeatedly ruling out sending troops to Afghanistan, asserting that it would like to help Afghanistan through economic and humanitarian aid.

But in the past, such requests had been coming from the US. It was easy to dismiss them. So long as the US policy supports Indian economic and cultural presence in Afghanistan, it is welcome. But when the US demands that India should go for hard power commitment in the war torn nation, New Delhi can look the other way. India’s default position on Afghanistan has been to rely on American military for furthering its interests. The fact that India could emerge as a significant economic player in Afghanistan, much liked by ordinary Afghans, has much more to do with American forces shaping the battlefield than with any strategic foresight on India’s part. The result of this extraordinary situation has been that every time there is a likelihood that Americans might be withdrawing their troops, Indian establishment would hector Washington on how short sighted that move is and the costs it would impose on the region. It is indeed ironical that a nation which doesn’t want to put any troops on the ground in what is its strategic neighbourhood has not been loath to criticise a nation from where Afghanistan is thousands of miles away.

Now the request is coming directly from the Afghan government. The Ghani government is warily looking at the prospect of the peace deal between the Taliban and the US. It is under no illusion that after American forces depart, Taliban would challenge other actors to regain its past supremacy, leading to widespread turmoil and the frittering away of all the gains made over the last two decades. In such a context, allies of India would need Indian military’s protection and support. It would also be important to protect India’s significant investment in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban.

Yet, the debate on Afghanistan in India is still stuck in the age old stock phrases and has hardly evolved. There is actually no policy beyond saying that “there shall not be boots from India on the ground [in Afghanistan].” There are multiple reasons for why Indian military involvement in Afghanistan will be problematic, ranging from the lack of success of foreign powers in Afghanistan to India’s inability to achieve anything militarily on its own to Indian forces getting sucked into a confrontation with Pakistan based proxies. All of these points have some validity but how is it that for a nation whose foreign policy has rapidly evolved in the last two decades, these reasons have been cast in stone? There needs to be a stock taking now that ground realities are changing rapidly in Afghanistan and for all of India’s claims at being a major partner, it is nowhere in the picture when it comes to the final outcome.

Since the fall of the Taliban since 2001, India has emerged as Afghanistan's biggest regional donor, proving more than $3 billion in official assistance. It has undertaken some key infrastructural projects in Afghanistan and has been involved in building Afghanistan’s capacity in various spheres. In the military realm, however, apart from some limited training to the Afghan army and police and four Mi25 helicopters, India has been reluctant to move forward with any degree of seriousness. As far back as 2013, then Afghan President Hamid Karzai had given India a “wish-list” of military equipment which included 105 mm artillery and medium-lift aircraft among others. And that wish has now morphed into Mohib’s request for Indian troops.

But India’s approach of no military involvement remains consistent, something that many in Indian foreign policy establishment hold dear. For a government that believes in shedding the shibboleths of the past, perhaps there is still time to reinvigorate the idea of India as regional security provider. If Afghanistan becomes a haven for extremists and Pakistan backed proxies become the ultimate arbiters there, India would have the most to lose. And its credibility as a power of any worth would be in tatters. It is time for Indian policy makers to start weighing the costs of inaction in Afghanistan.

Harsh V. Pant
Director, Studies & Head Strategic Studies Programme
Professor Harsh V Pant is Director, Studies and Head of the Strategic Studies Programme at Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Defence Studies and King's India Institute as Professor of International Relations at King’s College London. He is also a Non-Resident Fellow with the Wadhwani Chair in US-India Policy Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC.

https://www.orfonline.org/research/indias-credibility-at-stake-61101/

This is the best idea, in the history of ideas in this world since the beginning of time. I will donate petrol money for this cause.

Now, please don't get stingy, they don't just want a few hundred or a few thousand troops. you need to send at least 100,000 as you did in Sri Lanka during the 1980s. Afghans are your best friends so I think 200,000 is fair.
 
This is the best idea, in the history of ideas in this world since the beginning of time. I will donate petrol money for this cause.

Now, please don't get stingy, they don't just want a few hundred or a few thousand troops. you need to send at least 100,000 as you did in Sri Lanka during the 1980s. Afghans are your best friends so I think 200,000 is fair.

Never forget a known Urdu/Hindi proverb:
"Baniye ka bacha kuch daikh ker he girta hae":lol::lol::lol:
 
In the early 80s, I believe, the valiant Indian army went to Maladives...and restored democracy there.

India is protector of the democracies...and in the Concert of Domcracies it is the Biggest!

In IndoPacific OceanRegion it is the second most powerful force after the Americans... and is also a StrategicPartner of the US on diplomatic, geo-economic/geopolitical and technological shperes.

After working so hard to help Kabulistan for almost two decades and helping the Kabuliz to enjoy the Glow of Freedom..surely, India cann't let Kabulistan to wolves... afterall.. Indian has thousands of years old relationship and friendship with Kabuliz...

It would be unimaginable to even question India's committment to Kabulistan and its budding Democracy...

As a GlobalPower India cann't afford to let Kabulistan go to wolves and let all the hardwork and investment go to waste.

In essence it is test case
for both the US and India...to validate the TensileStrength of their StrategicRelationship.

India shall never be taken seriously at the HighTable if it is not even willing to shape the environment in the region to its liking.. and Kabuliz love everything about India and Indian culture... so they will never be hostile to IndianArmy.

Pakistan doesn't have to provide any route as Chabahar is available..and from their Indians can stage their troop deployments and carefree logistical management.

It will also help to bring both the US and Iran closer... India shall become a bridge of bringing these TwoActors together and become a gaurantour of peace in the ME as well...with full backing of GCC countries.

At least 50.000 Indian troops are needed...along with Indian airforce deployment...

If Indians have any strategic foresight and political will then they can use this deployment to capture GB/AJK...and be forever linked to Kabulistan and build a Kabuli-Indian civilisational linkage only achieved during Ashoka times..

Modi has a once in a thousand years opportunity to take not only GB/AJK but also liberate Balochistan as he has so often claimed. 50.000 Indian troops along with NDS/ANS ... will be an existential challenge for Pakistan...

Bombing Balakot might be good for domestic consumption but on the Grand Chessboard India needs to prove its military worth by shapping the events in the broader region to its liking...

Securing Kabulistan India shall be in a position to move inlands to CentralAsia and curb the Chinese Influence there as well...thus paralysing BRI for good... aligning the US and Indian StrategicGoals...

With the deep respect it enjoys in GCC and strategic partnership with Persia
... India can become the PivotalPower of Asia...all it has to do is deploy at least 50.000 troops in Kabulistan and make sure that the Glow of Freedom there doesn't die out.

AkhandBharat starts from Kabulistan... Destiny is Calling... only a true leader like Modi can answer this call!

Just imagine Brhamos deployed in Kabulistan... checkmate for both China and Pakistan in a single move!

Global Geopolitical Future is now in Indian hands!


@PakSword @RescueRanger @jaibi @The Eagle @WebMaster @Horus @Irfan Baloch @Signalian @Dubious @masterchief_mirza @Verve @Areesh @DESERT FIGHTER @Rafi @Dazzler @MastanKhan @Mentee @SIPRA
 
In the early 80s, I believe, the valiant Indian army went to Maladives...and restored democracy there.

India is protector of the democracies...and in the Concert of Domcracies it is the Biggest!

In IndoPacific OceanRegion it is the second most powerful force after the Americans... and is also a StrategicPartner of the US on diplomatic, geo-economic/geopolitical and technological shperes.

After working so hard to help Kabulistan for almost two decades and helping the Kabuliz to enjoy the Glow of Freedom..surely, India cann't let Kabulistan to wolves... afterall.. Indian has thousands of years old relationship and friendship with Kabuliz...

It would be unimaginable to even question India's committment to Kabulistan and its budding Democracy...

As a GlobalPower India cann't afford to let Kabulistan go to wolves and let all the hardwork and investment go to waste.

In essence it is test case
for both the US and India...to validate the TensileStrength of their StrategicRelationship.

India shall never be taken seriously at the HighTable if it is not even willing to shape the environment in the region to its liking.. and Kabuliz love everything about India and Indian culture... so they will never be hostile to IndianArmy.

Pakistan doesn't have to provide any route as Chabahar is available..and from their Indians can stage their troop deployments and carefree logistical management.

It will also help to bring both the US and Iran closer... India shall become a bridge of bringing these TwoActors together and become a gaurantour of peace in the ME as well...with full backing of GCC countries.

At least 50.000 Indian troops are needed...along with Indian airforce deployment...

If Indians have any strategic foresight and political will then they can use this deployment to capture GB/AJK...and be forever linked to Kabulistan and build a Kabuli-Indian civilisational linkage only achieved during Ashoka times..

Modi has a once in a thousand years opportunity to take not only GB/AJK but also liberate Balochistan as he has so often claimed. 50.000 Indian troops along with NDS/ANS ... will be an existential challenge for Pakistan...

Bombing Balakot might be good for domestic consumption but on the Grand Chessboard India needs to prove its military worth by shapping the events in the broader region to its liking...

Securing Kabulistan India shall be in a position to move inlands to CentralAsia and curb the Chinese Influence there as well...thus paralysing BRI for good... aligning the US and Indian StrategicGoals...

With the deep respect it enjoys in GCC and strategic partnership with Persia
... India can become the PivotalPower of Asia...all it has to do is deploy at least 50.000 troops in Kabulistan and make sure that the Glow of Freedom there doesn't die out.

AkhandBharat starts from Kabulistan... Destiny is Calling... only a true leader like Modi can answer this call!

Just imagine Brhamos deployed in Kabulistan... checkmate for both China and Pakistan in a single move!

Global Geopolitical Future is now in Indian hands!


@PakSword @RescueRanger @jaibi @The Eagle @WebMaster @Horus @Irfan Baloch @Signalian @Dubious @masterchief_mirza @Verve @Areesh @DESERT FIGHTER @Rafi @Dazzler @MastanKhan @Mentee @SIPRA

Paa Jee: Tussi aina Ganguaan noon chuk chuka kay marvayo gay.:lol::lol::lol:
 
If India seeks to become in the league of powerful countries and wants the seat in SC in UN then it must grow balls and land its troop in Afghanistan and actually make its presence felt. No powerful country every earned its title by howling and whining. And since India has easily assisted its regional neighbors like Sri Lanka, Maldives etc in past , I don't find any reason why it should not move up the ladder and go to a a war-torn country like Afghanistan and start behaving like a UNSC member that it is looking forward to come. This will be a welcoming move since Afghanis do have a positive view of Indians.

highly Recommended move

India is protector of the democracies...and in the Concert of Domcracies it is the Biggest
Not to mention the Liberation of East Pakistan By General Mckshswsaw by cutting Pakistan in Half, India has the capacity I believe, not sure why dont they do it. Is bcoz they don't have the balls to do that in Fgahnistan ?
 
Last edited:
Nahi, nahi...nahi... ussi tay dar gae ain!

Just look at the economic, political and military benefits to India... this will be a biggest mistake of historic propotions if India leaves its Kabuli brothers in the hands of the wolves!

We need to look from different perspectives..otherwise, our PakBias might blind us to the true Might of India!

It is quite scary scenario
really...because the Americans needed our supply routes..which Indians don't because of Persian route!

Chabahar is stagging ground for AkhandBharat... but our political class never saw it coming....

We are now going to be squeezed from both the western border and the eastern...

India
is now going to emerge as the GreatGlobalPower of 21st Century!

The Chinese XinJiang is now going to be boxed by Indian troops..and CPEC well ... we can forget about CPEC if/when Indian troops land in Kabulistan!

It is rather scary scenario...which we must give serious thought!

Mangus

OK. You mean that TheGreatParathaEmpire is in the becoming. I am scared, to the teeth.:(:(:(
 
Last month Afghanistan’s National Security Advisor, Hamdullah Mohib, was in New Delhi during which he addressed the Raisina Dialogue wherein he hailed India as a “key partner” of his country, sharing the vision “for a peaceful and prosperous Afghanistan.” Underscoring that “violence and terrorism have no constituencies in Afghanistan,” Mohib asserted that “a ceasefire is necessary to create a conducive environment for talks.” And then in private, he reportedly asked New Delhi to consider deploying Indian troops in Afghanistan in a peacekeeping role as the peace negotiations between the Taliban and the US once again gains momentum.

This is one of those discussions in New Delhi that no one wants to have. There is a seeming consensus in the Indian strategic community that this is a no go area for India. It doesn’t matter if the costs of inaction are mounting by the day and India’s reluctance to proactively shape the ground realities in Afghanistan has made it so marginal in the country that the only recourse it has is of asking other actors to keep its interests in mind. Officially, India has been repeatedly ruling out sending troops to Afghanistan, asserting that it would like to help Afghanistan through economic and humanitarian aid.

But in the past, such requests had been coming from the US. It was easy to dismiss them. So long as the US policy supports Indian economic and cultural presence in Afghanistan, it is welcome. But when the US demands that India should go for hard power commitment in the war torn nation, New Delhi can look the other way. India’s default position on Afghanistan has been to rely on American military for furthering its interests. The fact that India could emerge as a significant economic player in Afghanistan, much liked by ordinary Afghans, has much more to do with American forces shaping the battlefield than with any strategic foresight on India’s part. The result of this extraordinary situation has been that every time there is a likelihood that Americans might be withdrawing their troops, Indian establishment would hector Washington on how short sighted that move is and the costs it would impose on the region. It is indeed ironical that a nation which doesn’t want to put any troops on the ground in what is its strategic neighbourhood has not been loath to criticise a nation from where Afghanistan is thousands of miles away.

Now the request is coming directly from the Afghan government. The Ghani government is warily looking at the prospect of the peace deal between the Taliban and the US. It is under no illusion that after American forces depart, Taliban would challenge other actors to regain its past supremacy, leading to widespread turmoil and the frittering away of all the gains made over the last two decades. In such a context, allies of India would need Indian military’s protection and support. It would also be important to protect India’s significant investment in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban.

Yet, the debate on Afghanistan in India is still stuck in the age old stock phrases and has hardly evolved. There is actually no policy beyond saying that “there shall not be boots from India on the ground [in Afghanistan].” There are multiple reasons for why Indian military involvement in Afghanistan will be problematic, ranging from the lack of success of foreign powers in Afghanistan to India’s inability to achieve anything militarily on its own to Indian forces getting sucked into a confrontation with Pakistan based proxies. All of these points have some validity but how is it that for a nation whose foreign policy has rapidly evolved in the last two decades, these reasons have been cast in stone? There needs to be a stock taking now that ground realities are changing rapidly in Afghanistan and for all of India’s claims at being a major partner, it is nowhere in the picture when it comes to the final outcome.

Since the fall of the Taliban since 2001, India has emerged as Afghanistan's biggest regional donor, proving more than $3 billion in official assistance. It has undertaken some key infrastructural projects in Afghanistan and has been involved in building Afghanistan’s capacity in various spheres. In the military realm, however, apart from some limited training to the Afghan army and police and four Mi25 helicopters, India has been reluctant to move forward with any degree of seriousness. As far back as 2013, then Afghan President Hamid Karzai had given India a “wish-list” of military equipment which included 105 mm artillery and medium-lift aircraft among others. And that wish has now morphed into Mohib’s request for Indian troops.

But India’s approach of no military involvement remains consistent, something that many in Indian foreign policy establishment hold dear. For a government that believes in shedding the shibboleths of the past, perhaps there is still time to reinvigorate the idea of India as regional security provider. If Afghanistan becomes a haven for extremists and Pakistan backed proxies become the ultimate arbiters there, India would have the most to lose. And its credibility as a power of any worth would be in tatters. It is time for Indian policy makers to start weighing the costs of inaction in Afghanistan.

Harsh V. Pant
Director, Studies & Head Strategic Studies Programme
Professor Harsh V Pant is Director, Studies and Head of the Strategic Studies Programme at Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Defence Studies and King's India Institute as Professor of International Relations at King’s College London. He is also a Non-Resident Fellow with the Wadhwani Chair in US-India Policy Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC.

https://www.orfonline.org/research/indias-credibility-at-stake-61101/
I would usually say something but i can no longer say it:nana:) This is another piffle paffle what about the investment india did and the countless embassies or consulates giving afghans visa to work in the strong indian economy. Then the massive lobby to garner charbahar to keep its foot in that nation! mahan shakti will be felt very soon.
 
Jee Pa Jee,

Indians can finally take revenge of Panipat inside Kabulistan as well!


But we are overlooking the economic benefits... the rare earth metals, oil, gas, iron ore and copper/gold... all will be bought in Indian currency...which Kabulis will be grateful to have.

Same for CentralAsian countries...selling their gas and natural resources to India in Indian currency.

India can then force Russia to sell everything in Indian currency!

India can then print money at will... and will trade with GCC/Persia only in Indian currency...both for buying and selling!

This is how GreatGlobalPowers behave!

Though such development would mean that we will become Indian slaves forever...but there is NOTHING we can do to stop it.

All it takes is 50.000 Indian troops and Indian airforce deployment in Kabulistan! Chabahar is always ready for business...

@salarsikander has questioned what Gen Bakri has posed so eloquently...but now it is in the hands of Indian strategists.. all we can do is watch in paralysed amazement....that right before our eyes a GreatGlobalPower emerges and we cann't do anything about it.

With a single move India becomes the Decider of Destiny of not only Asia but the entire Global Power Architecture!


Mangus

Of course, what you are foreseeing, is very scary. But, then since, we are merely small fries, in this great global game; wouldn't it be opportune and appropriate that you, instead, tag our intellectual Eastern friends, who would be the main beneficiary of this coming great global change, long after that bygone era of Lingam Intergalactic Technologies.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom