I am just trying to tell my Afghan brother dont trust on US and India , they are not in Afghanistan for rehabilitation of Afghanistan or for peace mission , they have common intrest to secure the energy resources.
Afghanistan and Pakistan need each other for their existance , we need them for strategic depth and they need Pakistan for their trade through indian ocean.
Basically Mujahdeen are also fighting war of Pakistan, early exit of US from Afghanistan is in favour Pakistan to keep its independence and sovernity.
We also want good relation with India but on equal terms , we have adantage of strategic location this is the right time to pressurise India to resolve Kashmir issue or forget any gas or oil supply from Iran and central Asia.
That's a load of common sense from a "fundamentalist", although I wouldn't say that US and India can't help. But Amrikan
intentions can be scrutinized.
This is to Unity:
By and large I personally believe American intentions in Afghanistan to be on the whole "good". But the mere possession of good intention has never been enough.
How many times did America "stabilize" Haiti? How long did America run the Philippines? Just having America on your side is
not enough!
Fundamentalist states a central geographical truth, which is that Afghanistan is a relatively resource-poor (okay it has copper)
land-locked country. With the exception of Switzerland, can you name me another land-locked country that doesn't ooze oil and is flourishing?
Okay, Afghanistan has the asset of strategic location. But any over-the-land East/West neo-silk road link doesn't have to go through Afghanistan. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, North of the Pamirs is relatively unimpeded and I am sure you are aware of that.
Not to mention the predominance of sea lane into the forseeable future or the existence of other alternative East/West routes through Russia.
Anyways, the prosperity of Afghanistan then comes down on its most important resource - its own hardy, proud people. And I believe how well the Afghan people will fare in the long run will depend as much on their own talents as on the neighbourly relations.
As an expat who has seen and "tasted" the West, it is easy for you to fall under the spell of "the promise". Don't get overly taken in by the Nation Statehood model dangled by some.
It's a siren call that bedeviled many a primitive people (don't be offended - that includes everyone in Asia by my reckoning).
Now objectively, one cannot say that Pakistan didn't make mistakes in dealing with the Afghan situation. It seems to me that Pakistan invested so much into Afghanistan that it almost got itself into a "tail wagging the dog" situation.
But I wouldn't count on a "land-locked" tail prospering while completely severed from the K9.