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India develops a new axis with Iran and Russia

The proposed exit of the US from Afghanistan and Pakistan’s eagerness to regain its strategic depth in that country pose a challenge for India.

India develops a new axis with Iran and Russia

India’s discomfort with the Obama administration’s AfPak policy is now forcing it to chart a new course towards Afghanistan.

Pakistan’s double game of appeasing certain American demands for cooperation while striving to exert influence in Afghanistan through many of the same insurgent networks that the Americans are fighting to eliminate has long been evident to the US military and political leadership.

After all it was Pervez Musharraf who was forced to acknowledge the possibility that former ISI officials were assisting the Afghan insurgency.

Recent revelations have made it clear that India has been systematically targeted by the ISI. The bombings of the Indian embassy were at the behest of the ISI and the Haqqani network sent bombers to strike Indians in Afghanistan.

The ISI paid the Haqqani network to eliminate Indians working in Afghanistan and gave orders to orchestrate attacks on Indian consulates there. That the Pakistani security complex has engendered targeting of Indian interests in Afghanistan is hardly news for New Delhi.

Indian influence in Afghanistan rose significantly as American support for Pakistan shifted and Washington demanded that Pakistan adopt policies that India had long wanted in the aftermath of 9/11.

Moreover, India emerged as a major economic actor in Afghanistan. But by refusing to use hard power India soon made itself irrelevant as the ground realities changed. The Obama administration, intent on moving out of Afghanistan, has managed to signal to Indian adversaries that they can shape the post-American ground realities to serve their own ends. India lost the confidence of its own allies in Afghanistan.

Moreover, Pakistan’s weak democracy and powerful military and intelligence apparatus has failed to get a grip on the problem that now threatens to overwhelm the Pakistani state. The three-year extension granted to the Pakistani army chief, general Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, will ensure that a return to meaningful democracy will continue to elude Pakistan and the inflexible India-centric security perception of the army will make a rapprochement with

India a non-starter. Kayani remains wedded to the
notion of “strategic depth” — that is, making Afghanistan the kind of proprietary hinterland for Pakistan which it was from 1992 to 2001.

Afghan president Hamid Karzai’s outreach to Islamabad, considered essential to stabilise the situation in Afghanistan by Washington, has caused consternation in New Delhi, Tehran and Moscow. This changing strategic dynamic is forcing New Delhi to reach out to Russia and Iran promptly as they share similar concerns about the emerging power configuration in
AfPak.

New Delhi has made some moves in this direction with the Indian foreign secretary’s visit to Moscow that reiterated the two nations’ shared positions on Afghanistan and Indian attempts to do business with Iran despite western sanctions on Tehran.

Moscow is refocusing on Afghanistan as Islamist extremism and drug trafficking emanating from central Asia have emerged as
major threats to its national security. Moscow hosted the presidents of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Tajikistan in mid-August and has promised to invest significant resources in Afghanistan to develop infrastructure and natural resources.

After keeping itself aloof from AfPak for years after the Taliban’s ouster, Russia is back in the game and even the US is supporting greater Russian involvement. Russia has openly asserted that the security situation in Afghanistan impacts the security of India and Russia, prompting greater cooperation between the two on Afghanistan.

Iran is the third part of this triangle and India’s outreach to Tehran has become serious after signals from Iran that the relationship is drifting. In the second ministerial-level visit from Iran to India in less than a month, Iranian deputy foreign minister was in India in
early August to coordinate the India-Iran approach towards Afghanistan.

Despite western sanctions, the Indian government is encouraging Indian companies to invest in the Iranian energy sector so that economic interests can underpin an India-Iran political realignment. Iran is worried about the potential role for leaders of the almost exclusively Sunni Taliban in the emerging political dispensation in Afghanistan. It has even encouraged India to send more of its assistance to provinces in northern and western Afghanistan that are under the control of those associated with the Northern Alliance.

The rapidity with which events are unfolding in India’s western neighbourhood requires a sustained Indian policy response to minimise the adverse effects of America’s proposed withdrawal and Pakistan’s growing adventurism. It remains to be seen if India’s gravitation towards Russia and Iran would be enough to change the situation in AfPak from evolving to India’s disadvantage.

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