The Japan Times - Growing India-Taliban ties anger neighbouring Pakistan

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Growing India-Taliban ties anger neighbouring Pakistan
Growing India-Taliban ties anger neighbouring Pakistan / Photo: - - India's Ministry of External Affairs/AFP/File

Growing India-Taliban ties anger neighbouring Pakistan

As fighting between Pakistan and Afghanistan escalated into rare, bloody combat this month, Islamabad pointed fingers at another adversary, accusing India of fuelling the conflict.

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Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said that New Delhi had "incited" the Afghan Taliban, while his Defence Minister, Khawaja Muhammad Asif, described Kabul as acting like a "proxy of India".

Existential archrivals, Pakistan and India have fought repeated wars since partition cleaved the subcontinent at the end of British rule in 1947.

They have also long swapped claims of stoking militancy in each other's territory as part of alleged destabilisation campaigns.

But in recent months, Islamabad has warily watched India cosy up to Taliban-governed Afghanistan, even as its own relations with Kabul sharply deteriorated.

The diplomatic reconciliation culminated in the Taliban foreign minister's arrival in New Delhion October 9 the first visit by a top Taliban leader since the hardliners returned to power in 2021.

As India rolled out the red carpet for UN-sanctioned minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, explosions rocked Kabul as well as a market near the Pakistan border.

Wahid Faqiri, an Afghan expert in international relations, said rapprochement between India and the Taliban had compelled Pakistan to react.

By inviting the Taliban foreign minister for a week of talks, New Delhi aimed to "aggravate the ongoing tension between Pakistan and Afghanistan", he said.

While the October 9 explosions officially went unclaimed, the Taliban government accused Islamabad of an "unprecedented" incursion, and retaliated with its own offensive.

The exchanges set in motion more than a week of deadly artillery barrages and drone strikes -- the worst violence between the South Asian neighbours in years.

After an initial truce collapsed, a second ceasefire was inked on October 19.

- 'Blaming its neighbours' -

One-time allies Afghanistan and Pakistan have had frosty relations since the withdrawal of US-led troops and return of the Taliban government.

Initially, Islamabad struck an optimistic tone, with then-intelligence chief Lieutenant-General Faiz Hameed giving public assurances that "everything will be fine".

But Islamabad has since continuously accused the Taliban authorities of providing a safe haven to militant groups as deadly terror attacks in Pakistan surge.

The Pakistani Taliban (TTP) and its affiliates are behind much of the violence -- largely directed at security forces.

In October alone, over 100 security personnel and police officers were killed in attacks carried out by assailants from Afghanistan, a Pakistani security source told AFP.

For two years now, the rising violence in Pakistan has also helped fuel a mass deportation campaign, with millions of Afghan migrants and asylum seekers blamed for driving up crime and pushed back across the border.

Former Pakistani diplomat Maleeha Lodhi said the Taliban foreign minister's trip to New Delhi may have been an "irritant, but wasn't the motivation for the Pakistani reprisals".

"The principal driver for Pakistan's ire and frustration with the Taliban authorities is their refusal to rein in TTP," she said.

Pakistan's military has also accused New Delhi of supporting the TTP.

India's foreign ministry denies the charge, and instead accuses Pakistan of trying to evade responsibility for its domestic turmoil and security problems.

"It is an old practice of Pakistan to blame its neighbours for its own internal failures," it said.

- 'Solidarity' -

The bonhomie between New Delhi and Kabul was initially "difficult to justify" in India due to the dominant public perception of Islam as contrary to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's popular Hindu nationalism, said Praveen Donthi, an analyst at International Crisis Group (ICG).

The absence of women journalists at an initial press conference during Muttaqi's visit also sparked strong criticism, but public opinion shifted, Donthi said, when the Taliban minister expressed "solidarity" with India over an April 22 terrorist attack in Pahalgam.

That attack in the flashpoint Kashmir region precipitated a four-day war between the nuclear-armed foes, with New Delhi accusing Islamabad of backing the terrorists.

The Afghan minister's solidarity may have bought him some fans in India, but it aggravated Islamabad, with the joint statement describing the disputed region as "Jammu and Kashmir, India" -- suggesting Indian sovereignty.

At the end of the Afghanistan-India exchange, New Delhi announced it would upgrade its diplomatic mission in Kabul to a fully fledged embassy.

That represented another stepping stone towards the Taliban government's ultimate goal of formal international recognition, a move only Moscow has made and that analysts say remains far off for India.

For now, the rekindling is a significant win for the Taliban authorities, and a pointed shift in the complex India-Pakistan-Afghanistan relations.

K.Abe--JT