• News
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
    • Movie Explainers
    • TV Explainers
  • Health
  • Travel
Monday, September 29, 2025
WorldWide Online News Portal
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    Alia Bhatt congratulates Diljit Dosanjh on his Emmy nomination: ‘Shining bright indeed’

    Alia Bhatt congratulates Diljit Dosanjh on his Emmy nomination: ‘Shining bright indeed’

    New mommy Kiara Advani flaunts her new ID, ‘Mama’, in a diamond-studded pendant

    New mommy Kiara Advani flaunts her new ID, ‘Mama’, in a diamond-studded pendant

    Rashami Desai drops her Navratri mantra, ‘When In Doubt, Garba It Out’

    Rashami Desai drops her Navratri mantra, ‘When In Doubt, Garba It Out’

    Women’s World Cup: India romp to victory over NZ; Bangladesh beat Sri Lanka in last ball

    Women’s World Cup: India romp to victory over NZ; Bangladesh beat Sri Lanka in last ball

    District authorities responsible for regulating muck dumping in Himachal: Official

    District authorities responsible for regulating muck dumping in Himachal: Official

    India-Russia ties not defined by oil, but is ‘privileged strategic partnership’: FM Lavrov

    India-Russia ties not defined by oil, but is ‘privileged strategic partnership’: FM Lavrov

    Trending Tags

    • Commentary
    • Featured
    • Event
    • Editorial
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
    • Movie Explainers
    • TV Explainers
  • Health
  • Travel
  • News
    Alia Bhatt congratulates Diljit Dosanjh on his Emmy nomination: ‘Shining bright indeed’

    Alia Bhatt congratulates Diljit Dosanjh on his Emmy nomination: ‘Shining bright indeed’

    New mommy Kiara Advani flaunts her new ID, ‘Mama’, in a diamond-studded pendant

    New mommy Kiara Advani flaunts her new ID, ‘Mama’, in a diamond-studded pendant

    Rashami Desai drops her Navratri mantra, ‘When In Doubt, Garba It Out’

    Rashami Desai drops her Navratri mantra, ‘When In Doubt, Garba It Out’

    Women’s World Cup: India romp to victory over NZ; Bangladesh beat Sri Lanka in last ball

    Women’s World Cup: India romp to victory over NZ; Bangladesh beat Sri Lanka in last ball

    District authorities responsible for regulating muck dumping in Himachal: Official

    District authorities responsible for regulating muck dumping in Himachal: Official

    India-Russia ties not defined by oil, but is ‘privileged strategic partnership’: FM Lavrov

    India-Russia ties not defined by oil, but is ‘privileged strategic partnership’: FM Lavrov

    Trending Tags

    • Commentary
    • Featured
    • Event
    • Editorial
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
    • Movie Explainers
    • TV Explainers
  • Health
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
Latest Online News
No Result
View All Result
Home Uncategorized

India braces for its Taliban challenge

newsedgechd by newsedgechd
October 8, 2021
in Uncategorized
0
India braces for its Taliban challenge
0
SHARES
14
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

India braces for its Taliban challenge

The Taliban’s victory over the United States in Afghanistan will not only greatly embolden their fellow jihadists, but also shake up the region’s geopolitics. In particular, an Afghanistan-Pakistan-China axis involving policy coordination would represent a major risk for India.

READ ALSO

Aamir Khan is yet to watch Rajinikanth’s ‘Coolie’, reveals his team

Heavy rain alert in several parts of MP as Monsoon trough re-activates

In the weeks since the Taliban’s theocratic terrorists returned to power in Kabul, the people of Afghanistan, particularly its women and girls, have been subjected to unimaginable suffering as the world’s attention turns to other issues. But many other countries, and especially India, have reason to worry. The Taliban’s victory, following 20 years of unsuccessful American-led “nation-building” efforts in Afghanistan, will not only greatly embolden their fellow jihadists, but will also shake up the region’s geopolitics. For evidence of the destabilising impact of Kabul’s fall, just look at the reactions of Afghanistan’s neighbours.

ADVERTISEMENT

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan’s response – notably his statement that the Taliban’s return to power was akin to throwing off “the shackles of slavery” – highlights what was already known: Taliban-run Afghanistan will be a creature of Pakistan. When the Taliban ruled the country from 1996 to 2001, their “Islamic Emirate” functioned as a wholly owned subsidiary of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency. This time, Pakistan’s control is supposedly a little less absolute, but that did not prevent ISI chief Faiz Hameed from traveling to Kabul soon after its fall to preside triumphantly over the formation of the new Taliban government.

Less overtly but arguably more importantly, China has been working to make the best of a delicate situation. The Chinese have invested $62 billion in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), the single largest project of its transnational Belt and Road Initiative, and are anxious that Taliban extremists do not jeopardise it. Significantly, Foreign Minister Wang Yi formally received a Taliban delegation in July. With economic and strategic gains ripe for the taking, China has announced that it will do business with the Taliban. It is seeking to tap Afghanistan’s considerable underexploited mineral resources, especially rare earths, and reopen the Mes Aynak copper mine. There is even talk of extending the CPEC to Afghanistan. The warm overtures appear to be mutual, with Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, Afghanistan’s new first deputy prime minister, calling China a “trustworthy friend,” despite its systematic persecution of its own minority Muslim population. China’s priority vis-à-vis Afghanistan is to ensure that the Taliban offer neither support nor refuge to Uyghur dissidents from Xinjiang, and do nothing to disturb the functioning of the CPEC. With the Taliban government desperately in need of patronage – 80% of the previous Afghan government’s $5.5 billion budget was financed by external assistance – China seems ideally suited to fill the breach.

These regional dynamics, with Pakistan and China becoming increasingly close, should be of enormous concern to Indian policymakers. Pakistan is a long-term adversary that has actively funded and fomented armed militancy against India, hosting (among others) the organisers of the murderous 2008 Mumbai terror attacks. China, meanwhile, is a systemic rival to India and poses economic, military, and strategic threats. Any Afghanistan-Pakistan-China axis involving policy coordination is a major risk for India.

The Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan gives Pakistan not only the “strategic depth” its military has long sought against India, but also a useful recruiting ground for more militants and terrorists, should the ISI seek to deploy them again. The last time the Taliban were in power, India made common cause with Russia and Iran in actively supporting the Panjshir Valley insurgency of the Northern Alliance under the late Ahmad Shah Massoud. This time, however, an increasingly pro-Chinese Russia has taken a neutral stance on Afghanistan’s issues with India.

ADVERTISEMENT

Iran, under its recently elected hard-line president, Ebrahim Raisi, seems willing to accept the new Islamic emirate as long as the Taliban refrain from the anti-Shia persecution that characterised their previous reign. If Afghanistan’s Shia Hazaras and culturally Persian-influenced Tajiks and Uzbeks are saved the worst of what the Taliban inflicted upon them a quarter-century ago, Iran may stay neutral. Both Iran and Russia are, in any case, pleased that the United States has received its comeuppance in Afghanistan. India could try to reach out to the new government in Kabul, despite recently denying that its external affairs minister met with Taliban representatives in Doha in June. Other Indian diplomats certainly were in touch with Taliban officials, two of whom – Baradar and Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai, the deputy foreign minister – are in the new Afghan government.

ADVERTISEMENT

Baradar spent eight years in Pakistani detention and may be presumed to have no great love for his jailers. But while some Taliban officials have spoken soothingly of wanting good relations with India, others have stated that their Islamic emirate will stand up for India’s Muslims, especially in Kashmir.

As I have argued previously, Pakistan cannot afford to be complacent about the Taliban’s victory. The emergence of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, which seeks to overthrow the Pakistani government for being insufficiently Islamist, and of the Islamic State-Khorasan, which bombed Kabul airport in August, should be triggering anxiety in Islamabad. Moreover, the end of the US troop presence in Afghanistan reduces America’s logistical dependence on the Pakistani security establishment, depriving the ISI of support and resources.

India has invested $3 billion in Afghanistan – in dams, highways, electricity grids, hospitals, schools, and even the parliament building. With all this now in Taliban hands, Indian policymakers may be forgiven for feeling despondent. And Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has done itself no favours with its consistently anti-Muslim rhetoric and domestic policies, which are likely to stoke resentment across the Islamic world.

The Quad partnership – comprising India, the US, Japan, and Australia – strengthens India’s maritime presence in the Indian Ocean. But the main security threats to the country are on its land borders with China and Pakistan, where the Quad is unlikely to be of much use.

India now has a Taliban regime to its northwest, a nuclear-armed, terrorism-supporting state to its west, and a hostile superpower to its northeast, and it faces ongoing threats to its territorial integrity. In this environment, maintaining national security and regional stability will pose an unprecedented challenge for Indian diplomacy in the months and years ahead.

Tags: India braces for its Taliban challenge
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Aamir Khan is yet to watch Rajinikanth’s ‘Coolie’, reveals his team
Uncategorized

Aamir Khan is yet to watch Rajinikanth’s ‘Coolie’, reveals his team

September 15, 2025
Heavy rain alert in several parts of MP as Monsoon trough re-activates
Uncategorized

Heavy rain alert in several parts of MP as Monsoon trough re-activates

September 15, 2025
India must stand with Qatar, distance itself from Israel: Owaisi
Uncategorized

India must stand with Qatar, distance itself from Israel: Owaisi

September 11, 2025
PM Modi to visit Himachal, Punjab today to review flood situation
Uncategorized

PM Modi to visit Himachal, Punjab today to review flood situation

September 9, 2025
BJP planning its own parallel festival in Kolkata
Uncategorized

BJP planning its own parallel festival in Kolkata

September 7, 2025
Uncategorized

Hezbollah leader rejects disarmament, demands Israel’s withdrawal from Lebanon

August 26, 2025

POPULAR NEWS

After criticism, AMU extends tenure of sacked doctors

Jacqueline poses topless to thank fans on garnering 46mn Insta followers

October 26, 2020
Car used by Waze was parked outside Sena MLA’s office: Rane

Urvashi Rautela to make her debut in Tamil with Legend

March 19, 2021
Modi to visit Varanasi for ‘Dev Deepawali’

Rashami Desai sizzles in hot pink bikini photoshoot

November 30, 2020
Models shed clothes for annual Bodypainting Day in NYC

Models shed clothes for annual Bodypainting Day in NYC

July 29, 2021
'Bigg Boss OTT' winner Divya Agarwal to host curtain-raiser

‘Bigg Boss OTT’ winner Divya Agarwal to host curtain-raiser

October 3, 2021

EDITOR'S PICK

Rakul Preet Singh, Neena Gupta come together for comedy film

September 29, 2023

US sues Sudhakar Ramakrishna-run SolarWinds for misleading investors before massive hack

November 1, 2023
Interactive Brokers Unveils Next-Generation Trading Platform: IBKR Desktop

Interactive Brokers Unveils Next-Generation Trading Platform: IBKR Desktop

March 1, 2024

Top 5 actresses who made the best reel female lawyers

April 28, 2022
ADVERTISEMENT

About

We bring you the best Premium WordPress Themes that perfect for news, magazine, personal blog, etc. Check our landing page for details.

Follow us

Categories

  • Business
  • Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Gaming
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Movie Explainers
  • National
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Travel
  • TV Explainers
  • Uncategorized
  • World

Recent Posts

  • Alia Bhatt congratulates Diljit Dosanjh on his Emmy nomination: ‘Shining bright indeed’
  • New mommy Kiara Advani flaunts her new ID, ‘Mama’, in a diamond-studded pendant
  • Rashami Desai drops her Navratri mantra, ‘When In Doubt, Garba It Out’
  • Women’s World Cup: India romp to victory over NZ; Bangladesh beat Sri Lanka in last ball
  • Contribute
  • About Us
  • Contcat Us

© 2022 newsedge360 - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by CP Grafix.

No Result
View All Result
  • Homepages
    • Home Page 1
    • Home Page 2
  • News
  • Politics
  • National
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Travel

© 2022 newsedge360 - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by CP Grafix.