The Prague Post - Growing India-Taliban ties anger neighbouring Pakistan

EUR -
AED 4.27005
AFN 76.12916
ALL 96.743651
AMD 441.499205
ANG 2.081343
AOA 1065.042013
ARS 1662.107815
AUD 1.73487
AWG 2.092877
AZN 1.973525
BAM 1.956683
BBD 2.341356
BDT 142.184154
BGN 1.95262
BHD 0.438321
BIF 3441.741725
BMD 1.16271
BND 1.496514
BOB 8.032624
BRL 6.25631
BSD 1.162525
BTN 105.466587
BWP 15.526005
BYN 3.352613
BYR 22789.1085
BZD 2.338055
CAD 1.614986
CDF 2528.893751
CHF 0.92877
CLF 0.026141
CLP 1032.276555
CNY 8.102749
CNH 8.087727
COP 4291.479808
CRC 568.153909
CUC 1.16271
CUP 30.811805
CVE 110.314774
CZK 24.287491
DJF 207.013405
DKK 7.471229
DOP 74.063099
DZD 151.374345
EGP 55.125342
ERN 17.440644
ETB 181.396847
FJD 2.652838
FKP 0.869649
GBP 0.867241
GEL 3.127435
GGP 0.869649
GHS 12.595683
GIP 0.869649
GMD 86.040554
GNF 10177.592154
GTQ 8.913022
GYD 243.169719
HKD 9.066054
HNL 30.657833
HRK 7.536336
HTG 152.281984
HUF 386.22867
IDR 19746.239296
ILS 3.677877
IMP 0.869649
INR 105.660829
IQD 1522.88713
IRR 48979.142814
ISK 146.199273
JEP 0.869649
JMD 183.452774
JOD 0.824385
JPY 183.673821
KES 149.98943
KGS 101.679191
KHR 4680.192219
KMF 494.151314
KPW 1046.437605
KRW 1713.007886
KWD 0.358219
KYD 0.968737
KZT 594.448216
LAK 25136.341577
LBP 104102.171147
LKR 360.122488
LRD 209.834678
LSL 19.034688
LTL 3.433179
LVL 0.703311
LYD 6.31685
MAD 10.702929
MDL 19.930993
MGA 5402.437593
MKD 61.547891
MMK 2441.376205
MNT 4143.937694
MOP 9.339514
MRU 46.546802
MUR 53.810293
MVR 17.975253
MWK 2015.809538
MXN 20.532074
MYR 4.714737
MZN 74.29425
NAD 19.034688
NGN 1651.640501
NIO 42.779302
NOK 11.745346
NPR 168.746139
NZD 2.010587
OMR 0.447061
PAB 1.162525
PEN 3.906263
PGK 4.966241
PHP 69.127695
PKR 325.340594
PLN 4.226409
PYG 7945.585067
QAR 4.226807
RON 5.091389
RSD 117.372025
RUB 90.22477
RWF 1694.964772
SAR 4.360142
SBD 9.4454
SCR 16.18576
SDG 699.374434
SEK 10.736897
SGD 1.494349
SHP 0.872333
SLE 28.079897
SLL 24381.438469
SOS 663.199237
SRD 44.599799
STD 24065.741578
STN 24.511059
SVC 10.171589
SYP 12859.074094
SZL 19.039591
THB 36.357841
TJS 10.805475
TMT 4.081111
TND 3.409638
TOP 2.799525
TRY 50.31475
TTD 7.893562
TWD 36.686396
TZS 2936.198674
UAH 50.410345
UGX 4132.864758
USD 1.16271
UYU 44.9903
UZS 13914.278155
VES 396.850584
VND 30538.568099
VUV 139.914825
WST 3.24418
XAF 656.253103
XAG 0.012476
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.142281
XCG 2.095145
XDR 0.816168
XOF 656.253103
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.277213
ZAR 19.155897
ZMK 10465.778366
ZMW 23.33753
ZWL 374.392022
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    -0.9000

    48.22

    -1.87%

  • AZN

    0.4740

    94.427

    +0.5%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    84.04

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.92

    -0.25%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    17.08

    +0.29%

  • BTI

    0.1400

    58.22

    +0.24%

  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    23.48

    -0.3%

  • BCE

    -0.1000

    24.14

    -0.41%

  • NGG

    1.5300

    80.89

    +1.89%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    13.47

    +0.15%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    13.7

    +1.17%

  • RELX

    -0.2200

    41.63

    -0.53%

  • RIO

    -1.2200

    85.13

    -1.43%

  • BCC

    -0.7600

    85.51

    -0.89%

  • BP

    0.2300

    35.38

    +0.65%

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.

Text size:

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.

B.Barton--TPP