India called for greater coordination with the United States on Afghanistan, voicing fear that Islamic radicals would gain strength once Western forces pull out.
NATO leaders in a May 21 summit in Chicago committed to pulling combat troops out of Afghanistan by the end of 2014 as Western nations grow tired of more than a decade of war and pessimistic on the chances of further progress.
India is one of the most vocal supporters of continued engagement and has given Afghanistan more than $2 billion since the US-led invasion in 2001 overthrew the Taliban regime, which sheltered virulently anti-Indian militants.
Ahead of high-level annual talks between India and the United States on June 13, Nirupama Rao, New Delhi's ambassador to Washington, said the two nations have been holding talks on building "a stable, democratic and prosperous Afghanistan."
"These consultations must be strengthened," Rao said at the Atlantic Council, a think tank.
"We understand that after 10 long years of war there is a manifest and genuine desire to seek an end to conflict. But equally, we must ensure that the enormous sacrifices and efforts of the past decade have not been in vain," she said.
"Given the history of the last few decades in Afghanistan and the tide of extremism and radicalism that has swept across that country to the great detriment of its men, women and children, one cannot but help be concerned about what the future holds for that country" after the NATO pullout, she said.
India's involvement in Afghanistan has enraged neighboring Pakistan, which helped create the Taliban regime and accuses its historic rival of seeking to encircle it.
The United States partnered with Pakistan after the September 11, 2001 attacks. But relations have plummeted, with US concerns about Pakistan's orientation soaring after US forces found and killed Osama bin Laden near the country's main military academy last year.
The United States has welcomed India's contributions in Afghanistan but some US policymakers believe that Pakistani intelligence has maintained links to Islamic extremists due to a fixation on New Delhi's influence.
Yashwant Sinha, a lawmaker from India's main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, was blunter about fears on Afghanistan during a separate appearance in Washington at the Brookings Institution.
"I have great fears that Pakistan, for its own geopolitical reasons, might want to encourage Taliban to again take over Afghanistan," said Sinha, who served as foreign and finance minister when his right-leaning party was in power from 1998 to 2004.
Sinha said Afghanistan lacked a sufficient military -- or an anti-Taliban force, such as the Northern Alliance which enjoyed Indian, Iranian and Russian support before the war -- to withstand an assault.
"I don't see any local resistance building up immediately if the Taliban were to attempt to overrun Afghanistan," Sinha said.
"NATO has to stay the course in Afghanistan until we are absolutely confident that the Afghan army and the armed forces of Afghanistan are in a position to meet the Taliban threat," he said.
But opinion polls show that a majority of Americans want to end their country's longest war, with many US policymakers concluding that it is unrealistic to eliminate the Taliban through force.
US President Barack Obama and other Western leaders have vowed to support Afghanistan through military training and other assistance after the pullout of combat troops.
Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna will travel to Washington for the June 13 annual dialogue, which is part of efforts by the world's two largest democracies to build closer relations.
India and the United States recently had a rift as Washington urged the import-dependent emerging economy to cut oil imports from Iran as a way to pressure Tehran over its contested nuclear program.
Despite initial unease, India has reduced Iranian imports. The United States is expected to announce in the coming weeks that it will exempt New Delhi from sanctions under a new law that punishes countries that do business with Iran.
Divide Pakistan & Reunite Pashtuns-Afghans to eliminate punjabi ISI sponsored terrorism!!
By: BekasKhan
In: Afghanistan
Tags: Afghanistan, Not, A, Battleground, for, Indo-Paki, War, and, Terrorism, Common, Punjab, or, Kashmir, better, choise
Location: Afghanistan (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 2207 | Comments: 9 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
Advertisement below
|
|
| Liveleak on Facebook | |
|
LIKE Liveleak.com |
-
Bloomberg: Tea Party is “Not a Political Movement,” It’s “Irrational”…
-
Funding for the Iraq War and U.S. Borders
-
Bee's injure every soccer player on field.Watch the Dives
-
Curveball: 'I Am Not To Blame' for U.S. War in Iraq
-
Afghanistan: Just a few Memories of things gained and friends Lost
-
Liz Cheney: ‘A Gift for Reading a Teleprompter Is Not the Same As Leadership’
-
Obama’s Nuke Summit: “He Put on a Clinic for World’s Worst Dictators in How to Circumvent a Free Press”
-
Geert Wilders is Not a Hero
-
Descendents - I'm Not A Loser
-
Saddam Hussein is not a threat
-
Managing Tehran continues to be a headache for the US
-
Tearful Actor Insists He Is Not A Paedophile.





and lemme guess....No one saw this coming.
Posted May-31-2012 Byabsu69 (2171.84) absu69 View Channel Send Message
(2)
India should blow Pakistan off the face of the earth
Posted May-31-2012 ByGulf Flyer (1946.04)

Gulf Flyer View Channel Send Message
(1)
where have these morons been for the last 10 years?
Posted May-31-2012 Byalexandreedumbass (10.60) 
alexandreedumbass View Channel Send Message
(0)
Kill cavemen wherever they are found.
Posted May-31-2012 ByBawbag (794.80) 
Bawbag View Channel Send Message
(0)
LOL. Poor India trying to flex its musclec - amazingly enough not against indians but Afghanistan, witch i behinde Pakistan. No worries. Weak India dont even rule it self.
Posted May-31-2012 ByAfganMountaneer (21.10) 
AfganMountaneer View Channel Send Message
(-3)
@AfganMountaneer weak india?
take china's support away form pakistan, we'll see whos weak/strong...
Posted May-31-2012 Bytjobtj0btj0b (40.20) 
tjobtj0btj0b View Channel Send Message
(2)
@AfganMountaneer Good to see muslims who see through nationalism and racism their are good muslim people in pakistan and in all muslim countries its the treachrous leaders and their cronies who are helping destroy muslim land and people and these people need to be crushed. I think also we need to not forget that a many muslims in these countries are poor and uneducated etc so we must sympathise and understand their conditions.
Posted May-31-2012 Bymammon (84.24) mammon View Channel Send Message
(0)
@AfganMountaneer
Maybe next time you can spell your own name correctly AfghanMountaineer.
Posted May-31-2012 ByKafirindareelharb (920.66) 
Kafirindareelharb View Channel Send Message
(1)
@tjobtj0btj0b Don't confuse the poor soul...he represents an Afghan flag...he must have a second grade education.
Posted May-31-2012 ByGulf Flyer (1946.04)

Gulf Flyer View Channel Send Message
(1)