Region

Dilemma

India is in a difficult situation. Its pet government in Afghanistan has vanished into thin air and so has its huge investment in the region. Where does it go from here?

By Ghanwah Ijaz Cheema | October 2021


The sudden non-violent fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban left the world in a shock. While everyone is still striving to figure out how they should deal with the new reality, the unforeseen escape of the previous Afghan leadership has not discouraged any country more than India. Since the former Afghan government maintained close relations and extended unparalleled support to India for covertly operating against Pakistan, the unanticipated August 15 occurrence has compelled Indian strategists to return to their strategic drawing boards.

With the Taliban in power, would India be able to continue its sneaky adventures to influence Afghanistan? This article attempts to anticipate the options that India could exploit to serve its two objectives: to develop relations with the new Afghan government and to work against Pakistan.

Two fold ambitions
Afghanistan has been an essential player for India to implement its anti-Pakistan designs; hence, losing impact on the Afghan decision-making bodies, is a significant setback for India.

In terms of influence, the Indian money that was coming to war-torn Afghanistan under the ruse of nation-rebuilding was used to bribe former key politicians to stay silent on Afghanistan being used as a proxy against Pakistan and also to extract anti-Pakistan statements from them.

A significant chunk of the $3 billion investment that India claims to have injected in public goodwill was used to sabotage Pakistan rather than human development in Afghanistan. For instance, the formation of the Shahtoot Dam project and the operational Salma Dam on Pakistan’s side had been a tactic to pressurize Pakistan in times of conflict. However, the Afghan government’s abrupt change has held back the Indian ‘Dam web’ dream against Pakistan for the time being.

Furthermore, according to the Pakistan interior minister, approximately 60 training camps were established under the RAW-NDS nexus to destabilize Pakistan. Afghanistan, for decades, had been a base to operate and an open playfield for the Indian militants to get trained. One such example could be the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) attack’s preliminary investigations, which suggested that RAW premediated the attack and the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) terrorists who carried out the heinous act, were in touch with their handlers in Afghanistan.

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