Read Editorial with D2G – Ep CLX (160)

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DRAWING KABUL INTO A CLOSER EMBRACE

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India’s policy of deepening its engagement in the post-Taliban Afghanistan through economic reconstruction will mark a milestone when Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurates a dam built with Indian aid in Herat province. The 42 MW dam, with an investment of over $275 million, will boost the agricultural and industrial sectors of Herat, one of the few success stories in this war-torn country. The project underlines India’s resolve to sharpen its profile in the region. The Herat visit comes close on the heels of a regional corridor agreement Mr. Modi signed with Iranian and Afghan leaders in Tehran, under which India will finance the development of Iran’s Chabahar port, which will be linked to Afghan road networks.

India’s interest in seeing Afghanistan move towards greater peace and prosperity cannot be overstated. India is one of the closest regional powers that has invested in institution and infrastructure building in Afghanistan. For India, Afghanistan has immense strategic potential. Besides the infrastructure work India has initiated and completed, it has also signed the TAPI pipeline project that aims to bring natural gas from Turkmenistan through Afghanistan and Pakistan to India. More important, a friendly, stable regime in Kabul is geopolitical insurance against Pakistan’s deep state.

Both countries share concerns about Pakistan’s good-terrorist-bad-terrorist nuancing (A nuance is a small difference in sound, feeling, appearance, or meaning – अति सूक्ष्म अंतर ). Afghanistan is currently going through a particularly turbulent (A turbulent time, place, or relationship is one in which there is a lot of change, confusion, and disorder – अशांत ) transition. The government in Kabul has been stretched in trying to stop Taliban advances over the past few months. President Ashraf Ghani seems to have realised that a complete military victory is improbable (Something that is improbable is unlikely to be true or to happen – असंभव ). In fact, Mr. Modi goes to Afghanistan at a time when Mr. Ghani is openly targeting Pakistan for supporting the Taliban.

This raises the question of whether New Delhi’s engagement should be limited to infrastructure development or whether it should expand its relationship. Lately, India has signalled a small shift in its policy by delivering M-25 attack helicopters to Kabul. But it remains cautious about making larger overtures on security and is wary (If you are wary of something or someone, you are cautious because you do not know much about them and you believe they may be dangerous or cause problems – सावधान ) of being sucked into a never-ending war. Such caution is required. But it should not deter India from playing a bigger role in a country whose stability is vital for its regional ambitions and whose people traditionally count India as a well-meaning friend. As the Chabahar agreement brought together India, Afghanistan and Iran, New Delhi should work to bring together more regional powers invested in Afghanistan’s stability and economic development.

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