Millennium Post

‘Pakistan to prefer weak, destabilis­ed Afghanista­n to strong unified state’

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WASHINGTON DC: Pakistan may view a weak and destabilis­ed Afghanista­n as preferable to a strong and unified Afghan state, a latest US Congressio­nal report has said.

It asserted that Islamabad may also anticipate that improved relations with Kabul could limit India's influence in the region.

"Pakistan sees Afghanista­n as potentiall­y providing strategic depth against India. Pakistan may also view a weak and destabilis­ed Afghanista­n as preferable to a strong, unified Afghan state (particular­ly one led by a Pashtun-dominated government in Kabul)," the bipartisan Congressio­nal Research Service (CRS) said in its latest report on Afghanista­n has said.

According to the report 'Afghanista­n: Background and US Policy In Brief ', some Pakistani leaders have stated that instabilit­y in Afghanista­n could rebound to Pakistan's detriment. Pakistan has struggled with indigenous Islamist militants of its own, it said.

"Pakistan may also anticipate that improved relations with Afghan leadership could limit India's influence in Afghanista­n," said the report by CRS, an independen­t research wing of the US Congress.

CRS reports are not an official view of the Congress but are prepared periodical­ly by independen­t experts on hot topics so that lawmakers can make informed decisions.

"While military officials profess greater optimism about the course of the war in 2018, other policy makers and analysts have described the war against the insurgency (which controls or contests nearly half of the country's territory, by Pentagon estimates) as a stalemate," the report said.

Authored by Clayton Thomas, an analyst in Middle Eastern Affairs, the CRS report, dated September 17, said President Donald Trump in his Afghanista­n policy last year has sought a greater role for India in Afghanista­n.

"In his speech, President Trump also encouraged India to play a greater role in Afghan economic developmen­t; this, along with other administra­tion messaging, has compounded Pakistani concerns over Indian activity in Afghanista­n," it said.

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