Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Decoding India’s move in Kabul

Its decision to support the Afghan government, at a time when Ashraf Ghani is weak, is intriguing. But there is a historical backdrop to it

- Avinash Paliwal teaches at SOAS, University of London and is the author of My Enemy’s Enemy: India in Afghanista­n from the Soviet Invasion to the US Withdrawal. The views expressed are personal

India’s powerful national security adviser, Ajit Doval, undertook a long-overdue visit to Kabul last week. It took place soon after external affairs minister S Jaishankar promised more military support to Afghanista­n. Though the specifics of such support are unclear, whatever India offers is unlikely to tilt the military balance in Kabul’s favour after the withdrawal of the United States (US). Why, then, is India opting to intensify support for the Afghan government when the world is hedging its bets and engaging with the Taliban?

With negotiatio­ns between Kabul and the Taliban in Doha gridlocked, intensific­ation of fighting on the ground, including targeted assassinat­ions of civilians, flourishin­g factionali­sm within Kabul, lack of clarity on how US President-elect Joe Biden will proceed with the withdrawal, and an assertive Pakistan, the main question facing India is how long can President Ashraf Ghani withstand these pressures, and what next?

The central driver of India’s Afghanista­n policy is its desire to ensure a strategic balance between

Afghanista­n and Pakistan. Given the power asymmetry between these two countries, such a balance, from an Indian viewpoint, then, is to enable Kabul to influence the terms of talks with Pakistan-supported forces such as the Taliban. To that effect, New Delhi has found determined, if embattled, allies in Ghani and Vice-President Amrullah Saleh.

But there is no guarantee that New Delhi’s approach will yield results. In fact, given India’s mounting security challenges with both Pakistan and China, there are valid concerns about India losing ground entirely if Kabul collapses. So why intensify support for Kabul even if India is unwilling to overtly engage with the Taliban? After all, there is no need to bind itself further to the Ghani government. History offers clues to better understand India’s decision.

In February 1989, Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi dispatched AK Verma, the then chief of India’s external intelligen­ce agency, Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW), to assess the longevity of the Najibullah government, which was under pressure from Mujahideen attacks. Verma returned upbeat and said Najibullah can last “indefinite­ly” with Soviet support. Parallel to Verma’s visit, India had begun outreach to different Mujahideen factions and found a surprising convergenc­e of interest.

Successful outreach to the Mujahideen,

hidden from public view and held anathema till that moment, helped India embrace the new realities after Najibullah’s ouster in 1992 when Soviet support ended. For now, there is no evidence that India’s unofficial outreach to the Taliban and viceversa has generated an understand­ing of that sort. But even if such an understand­ing exists, it is unlikely to be made public by either side — similar to what happened with the Mujahideen.

Overt engagement with India will complicate the Taliban’s relations with Pakistan when it can least afford this. For India, overt diversific­ation risks expediting Ghani’s political collapse instead of ensuring an internal balance within Afghanista­n. Both New Delhi and the Taliban know that they can’t remain aloof forever, especially if the latter comes to power. India’s decision to support Ghani, then, is a sign that there are no endgames for India in Afghanista­n. Thus, it would rather accept a setback in its pursuit of a balance between Kabul and Islamabad and securing the few gains that Afghanista­n has made over the last two decades, instead of coming across as an opportunis­tic.

The other aspect of India’s decision has a sharper edge. On August 15, 1975, India received a strategic shock in the form Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s assassinat­ion in Bangladesh. The rise of the pro-Pakistan army chief Ziaur

Rahman as president in Dhaka generated tremendous anxiety in New Delhi. In a now-declassifi­ed top-secret report, R&AW assessed that Pakistan would “exercise a pervasive influence in various ministries and department­s of the Govt of Bangla Desh, especially in the foreign office [and] … would widen the difference­s between India and Bangla Desh”.

In response (in first of its kind archival evidence seen by this author), R&AW recommende­d that the political leadership take all feasible measure to “soften up areas which are contiguous to Indian territorie­s where we are especially vulnerable” and sought re-appraisal of relations with Pakistan. As a first step, it wanted Indira Gandhi to seriously consider the “idea of providing strong support to antiPakist­ani activities in NWFP, and Baluchista­n now being carried on from bases in Afghanista­n”. To relieve Pakistani pressure on India through Bangladesh, R&AW thought it was necessary “to intensify pressure on Pakistan through Afghanista­n”.

Given India’s security challenges today, it is entirely possible that

Doval’s visit is a signal to Pakistan that the latter is likely to inherit a costly, violent, and ultimately digression­ary mess in Afghanista­n if it continues to pursue revisionis­m. Such signalling is buttressed by India’s belief that even if the US leaves lock stock and barrel, neither Iran nor Russia, despite their alliance with China and engagement with the Taliban, would prefer an Islamic Emirate in Afghanista­n — offering India space to manoeuvre, and influence the outcome of the Afghan war(s) over the next six-to-12 months.

Saleh’s unsubtle tweet: “Had a pleasant meeting with NSA Ajit Doval of India. We discussed the enemy. It was an in-depth discussion”, therefore, must be read for what it is, ie, a real, continuing, challenge to Pakistan.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The decision to support Ghani shows that there are no endgames for India in Afghanista­n. It would rather accept a setback in its pursuit of a balance between Kabul and Islamabad, instead of being seen as an opportunis­t
REUTERS The decision to support Ghani shows that there are no endgames for India in Afghanista­n. It would rather accept a setback in its pursuit of a balance between Kabul and Islamabad, instead of being seen as an opportunis­t
 ??  ?? Avinash Paliwal
Avinash Paliwal

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