Key Points

Pakistan is experiencing a significant strategic setback as Afghanistan gradually tilts towards India's diplomatic influence. The Taliban's increasing assertiveness and refusal to remain a proxy for Islamabad has fundamentally altered regional dynamics. India's strategic investments and soft-power approach are gradually gaining traction in Afghanistan. The evolving geopolitical landscape suggests Pakistan might be losing its traditional sphere of influence in the region.

Key Points: Pakistan Fears Taliban Shift Towards India's Diplomatic Reach

  • Taliban's growing independence challenges Pakistan's historical influence
  • India's soft-power diplomacy gains ground in Afghanistan
  • Economic and diplomatic tensions escalate between Pakistan and Kabul
  • Regional strategic landscape dramatically reshaping with new alignments
3 min read

Pakistan fears losing more than diplomatic ground with Kabul turning to India

Pakistan confronts strategic challenges as Afghanistan moves closer to India, disrupting traditional regional power dynamics and influencing geopolitical relationships.

"Afghans have always stood beside India yesterday, today, and tomorrow - Khawaja Asif, Pakistan's Defence Minister"

New Delhi, Oct 10

Pakistan could never imagine that a group it once raised and used to spread terror in neighbouring countries would one day run a government and realise that diplomacy does not flow out of the barrel of a gun.

When on the receiving end, Pakistan's Defence Minister Khawaja Asif stated that Islamabad has "run out" of patience over the use of Afghan soil by "terrorists targeting Pakistan".

He has also made a bizarre statement, claiming that Afghans have always stood beside India "yesterday, today, and tomorrow".

If indeed his country had offered support to Afghan refugees, it was to raise a militia, not out of compassion. And all these rhetorics come when Afghanistan's Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi is visiting India.

Pakistan has itself soured its relationship with the Taliban, attacking Afghanistan's border areas, even resorting to aerial bombing, and driving back thousands of refugees from its land to an uncertain future.

Kabul has always refused to recognise the Durand Line - then hurriedly drawn by British occupiers - as a legitimate border.

The porous areas have witnessed intermittent skirmishes, affecting trade and transit. After the withdrawal of US-led troops, Islamabad expected the Taliban to remain eternally grateful and jump to its bidding, but the regime's assertiveness has disrupted that. Kabul's diplomatic overtures towards New Delhi have unsettled Pakistan.

While India does not officially recognise the Taliban regime, its pragmatic engagement signals a shift in Kabul's foreign policy orientation. For Pakistan, this represents a strategic loss and a potential threat.

India's growing ties with Kabul, combined with its strategic partnership with Iran, amplify these fears.

Possible increase in India's diplomatic and trade relation with nations in Pakistan's immediate neighbourhood blow winds of caution for Islamabad.

Meanwhile, Pakistan's economic ties with Afghanistan have also suffered, with border closures, refugee deportations, and diplomatic tensions having disrupted transit routes.

India's investment in alternative corridors like the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) and Chabahar bypasses Pakistan entirely.

But following the re-imposition of sanctions against Iran and the Chabahar Port in particular, foreign companies became reluctant to participate in the port's expansion.

India took over operations in 2018, and used it for trade with Iran and other countries, and also send relief materials to Kabul. Islamabad is eyeing Muttaqi's India visit warily, fearing diplomatic isolation, where, with India engaging Afghanistan, Iran, and other Central Asian nations, Pakistan risks being left out of regional dialogues.

Increased Indian presence could lead to constricting its operations in intelligence gathering, surveillance, and influence over the region. Thus, Afghanistan's tilt towards India adds pressure on Pakistan's western flank.

The Taliban's refusal to act as Islamabad's proxy and India's growing goodwill among Afghans have reshaped the strategic landscape. Pakistan's view of India's advantage in Afghanistan is shaped by a sense of strategic reversal.

What was once a zone of influence has become a source of insecurity.

India's soft-power diplomacy, infrastructure investments, and pragmatic engagement with the Taliban have allowed it to gain ground practically without boots on the ground.

Islamabad now faces two main challenges - managing deteriorating ties with the Taliban and countering India's expanding influence. But given utterances like those by Khawaja Asif, both seem distant for Pakistan.

As regional dynamics evolve, Afghanistan will remain a critical point in South Asia's geopolitical chessboard - one where Pakistan's traditional playbook may no longer suffice.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
India's investment in infrastructure and humanitarian aid is creating genuine goodwill, unlike Pakistan's approach of using Afghanistan as a proxy battleground. This shift was long overdue.
A
Aman W
While I support India's strategic moves, we should be cautious about getting too involved in Afghanistan's complex politics. Our focus should remain on economic and humanitarian engagement.
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Sarah B
The Chabahar port development and INSTC are game-changers for regional connectivity. Pakistan's loss is definitely India's strategic gain in Central Asia.
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Karthik V
Pakistan's Defence Minister saying they've "run out of patience" is ironic considering they've been exporting terror for decades. Now they know how it feels to be on the receiving end.
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Michael C
India's approach of building hospitals, schools, and infrastructure in Afghanistan is creating lasting partnerships. This is how you win friends, not through coercion.
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Nisha Z
The Durand Line issue shows how colonial boundaries continue to create problems. Pakistan's aggressive border policies are pushing Afghanistan closer to India, and they only have themselves to blame.

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