Pragmatic outreach
The visit of Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi to India is not merely a diplomatic milestone, it is a quiet revolution in South Asian geopolitics. What was once unthinkable has become inevitable, as India and the Taliban cautiously explore a relationship built not on trust, but on necessity. Both sides have shed ideological rigidity to make space for a more pragmatic engagement, reflecting the shifting realities of a post-American Afghanistan and a more fragmented regional order.
For India, this outreach is rooted in strategic foresight. After two decades of backing the Western-supported Afghan Republic, Delhi has had to adapt to a drastically altered landscape. The Taliban are no longer a proxy confined to Pakistan’s influence; their fraying ties with Islamabad have created a narrow but crucial diplomatic opening. Pakistan’s confrontations with the Taliban over cross-border militancy and its air strikes inside Afghanistan have eroded the old........
© The Statesman
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 Toi Staff
Toi Staff Gideon Levy
Gideon Levy Tarik Cyril Amar
Tarik Cyril Amar Stefano Lusa
Stefano Lusa Mort Laitner
Mort Laitner Mark Travers Ph.d
Mark Travers Ph.d Ellen Ginsberg Simon
Ellen Ginsberg Simon Andrew Silow-Carroll
Andrew Silow-Carroll


 
                                                            
 
         
 