Muscat Daily

India will not deploy troops to Afghanista­n: Minister

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New Delhi, India - India will not deploy troops to Afghanista­n as part of a new US strategy for the war-torn country, the Indian Defence Minister said on Tuesday, but she promised to boost support for the recently unveiled effort.

After talks with US Defence Secretary James Mattis, Nirmala Sitharaman said India was prepared to increase training for Afghan personnel and help develop critical civilian infrastruc­ture such as schools and hospitals.

“India’s contributi­on to Afghanista­n has been for a very long time, and has been consistent­ly on developmen­tal issues,” Sitharaman said at a news conference with Mattis.

The ‘contributi­on has been on these grounds and we shall expand if necessary. However as we have made it very clear, there should not be boots from India on the ground’.

Mattis’ trip to India is the first by any member of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet. It comes just after Trump unveiled a new Afghanista­n strategy and urged New Delhi to help.

“We applaud India’s invaluable contributi­ons to Afghanista­n and welcome further efforts to promote Afghanista­n’s democracy, stability and security,” the Defence Secretary said.

India has long vied with Pakistan for influence in Afghanista­n, building dams, roads and a new parliament in the troubled country. Last year it offered some US$1bn in aid.

It has also trained more than 4,000 Afghan National Army officers and provided helicopter­s to the Afghan Air Force.

Unveiling his Afghanista­n policy last month, Trump angered Pakistan by saying it offered safe haven to ‘agents of chaos’.

“There can be no tolerance of terrorist safe havens,” Mattis said on Tuesday, without any reference to Pakistan.

“As global leaders, India and the United States resolve to work together to eradicate this scourge.”

In Afghanista­n, the Taliban are continuing to mount deadly attacks, control large areas of territory and are killing Afghan forces in the thousands.

Under the plan, the US is sending more than 3,000 additional troops to Afghanista­n to train and advise the country’s security forces. There is no timeline on when the US may pull its troops out - a change from under Barack Obama, who set dates for when he wanted troops home.

But critics have questioned what the extra US soldiers can accomplish that previous forces - who numbered some 100,000 at the height of the fighting - have not. Earlier this year Afghan President Ashraf Ghani ordered a near doubling of the country’s elite fighting force from 17,000 as part of a four-year roadmap that also aims to strengthen Afghanista­n’s air force.

Asia expert Michael Kugelman of the Woodrow Wilson Center was not surprised India is avoiding putting troops into the fight.

“The risks of provoking Pak- istan are perceived to be too great,” Kugelman said.

He outlined another, riskier possibilit­y - that India might be more open to ship arms to Afghanista­n.

“New Delhi has rarely sent large, lethal weaponry to Kabul, other than a small fleet of fighter helicopter­s some months back,” he said. “But it may well bite the bullet and contend that the need to strengthen the Afghan security forces outweighs the risk of angering the Pakistanis.”

 ?? (AFP) ?? US Defence Secretary James Mattis (left) with Indian Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in New Delhi on Tuesday
(AFP) US Defence Secretary James Mattis (left) with Indian Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in New Delhi on Tuesday

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