After
showing reluctance for number of years to hand over to Afghanistan
any military supplies of strategic value, India has finally decided
to give to Afghanistan a set of three military transport choppers -
between March and May 2014. This will be the first tranche of defence
equipments supplied to that country. The three 'Dhruva' choppers are
being configured and constructed as per Afghan request at the
Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) in Bengaluru. Initially the
Afghanistan government wanted to have Russian-made helicopters.
However, Indians managed to convince them to take India manufactured
'Dhruva' helicopters. This was announced by India's foreign minister
while inaugurating jointly with President Karzai of Afghanistan, a
new agricultural university, Afghan National Agricultural Sciences
and Technology University (ANASTU) in Kandahar built with India's
assistance.
In the
month of October 2012, India and Afghanistan signed a “Strategic
Partnership Agreement,” during visit of Afghan President Hamid
Karzai to New Delhi. According to the prime minister of India, this
strategic partnership between the two countries will create an
"institutional framework" so that India can help in Afghan
"capacity building" in the areas of education, development
and people-to-people contacts. Perhaps, what was also included in the
agreement but not told by the prime minister were some clauses about
substantial increase in Indian commitments in training of Afghan
security forces, including the police.
India
has been one of Afghanistan's biggest donors, having pledged money
for projects ranging from road construction to the building of the
Afghan parliament. However India has scrupulously avoided any
involvement of Indian military personnel in the Afghan conflict
except perhaps a small contingent of Indo-Tibet border police
deployed their for protection of Indian engineers and workers working
on various projects. India's policy towards Afghanistan has always
been the extension of soft power and good will and has so far managed
it rather well much to the chagrin of Pakistan, who keeps on viewing
this increasingly close relationship between Kabul and Delhi with
suspicion and accuses India that India’s intelligence services are
using Afghanistan to back secessionists in Balochistan, as well as
Jihadists fighting the Pakistani state.
India
had managed so far to keep away from any military partnership with
Afghanistan, not to give any excuse to Pakistan to start trouble on
its eastern border with India. On the other side, Pakistan has been
having serious trouble with Afghanistan along its western border; the
Durand line. This 2640 Km long border was drawn by British
administrator Mortimer Durand of British India and Afghan Amir Abdur
Rahman Khan in 1893. However Afghanistan never ratified it. Ever
since terrorist strike in US on 9/11, sporadic fighting has continued
along the border. In the summer of 2003, according to the Afghan
government, Pakistan established bases up to 600 meters inside its
territory, along the Yaqubi Kandao pass. There were border skirmishes
at local level. In 2007, the Pakistan army sought to erect fences
inside Afghan territory in the Angoor Adda area, along the border
with South Waziristan and clashes broke out. Both sides exchanged
artillery fire.
Fierce
fighting was reported from July to September 2012, along
Pakistan-Afghanistan border, in which both sides used light
artillery. These clashes were sparked off by a series of attacks by
Jihadist groups operating in the Kunar area, including the
Lashkar-e-Taiba, which are alleged to have the backing of local
Pakistan army units.
Afghan
military commanders and intelligence officials then started
requesting India to provide direct military assistance under
“Strategic Partnership Agreement” signed between the two
countries in October. The requests were for 2.5 to 7 Ton cargo
capability medium trucks, light mountain artillery, along with
ordnance, bridge-laying equipment and engineering facilities.
Afghanistan also wants India to help build close air-support
capabilities for its troops, as there would be drastic scaling-down
of western forces in 2014. Afghanistan also has to face presidential
election in 2014 and its armed forces might find it tough to hold
together in the face of renewed Jihadist assaults in the run-up to
the elections.
These
requests are being put forward under clause 5 of the “Strategic
Partnership Agreement,” which states “India agrees to assist as
mutually determined, in the training, equipping and capacity building
programmes for the Afghanistan security forces or ANSF,” now
estimated at 3,52,000-strong. The cost of maintaining such a large
force is over $4 billion to support, an amount beyond Afghan
Government resources. NATO has agreed to support this force up to
2017, but wants a cut back in strength after that. Afghanistan is not
willing to reduce the number as they expect that there would be worst
social consequences.
India
is thus facing the first real test of its Afghan policy after having
managed so far to remain militarily aloof. New Delhi might be worried
now about getting sucked into Afghan imbroglio, if it starts
supplying military hardware to Afghan forces. There is a feeling in
New Delhi that this assistance to Afghan forces could create tensions
with Pakistan. Perhaps India never expected that it would have to
start helping Afghanistan militarily so soon after signing the
agreement.
Whatever
may be the dilemma, India has finally decided to bite the bullet and
has agreed to supply for the first time, helicopters for the
Afghanistan armed forces.
20th
February 2014
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