Up Front

Hope in ‘A Deadly Triangle’ of Afghanistan, Pakistan and India

I’d like to offer a brief response to William Dalrymple’s Brookings Essay, “A Deadly Triangle:  Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India.”  There is clearly much wisdom in the essay, and my concerns and critiques relate as much to how the essay might be misinterpreted as to what it actually says.  But still, the subject matter at hand is so delicate, relations in the region so fragile and frayed, that I think it important to be sure that such an essay not be allowed inadvertently to pour fuel on the fire. And several of us at Brookings have been working with enough hopefulness on matters pertaining to Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the broader region that it would be regrettable if the Institution were incorrectly seen as resigning itself to fatalism about South and Central Asia.

Specifically, I would offer several observations:

None of this is to predict an easy path ahead or to argue for a simple continuation of current policy by key nations.  There is lots of room for improvement on many sides.  Indeed, Bruce Riedel and I argued two years ago for a new U.S. policy that would support Pakistan’s army less and its civilian government and economy more.  We would have further counseled the United States to increase aid and trade benefits for Pakistan additionally if it worked harder to curtail the activities of Afghan insurgents based on its soil. I would also admire greatly any Indian willingness to reopen negotiations with Pakistan on the Kashmir issue, should that prove possible. Indo-Pakistani détente would be a tremendous boon for the region and the international community and should be encouraged and incentivized at all turns. 

But in the meantime, it is important that we not succumb to the temptation to predict fatalistically that the future in this crucial part of the world will automatically resemble the past, or to view Afghanistan as nothing more than the playground of neighboring powers.  In fact, the situation is considerably more hopeful than such an image would suggest.



Watch my video Q&A on the India-Pakistan rivalry and its consequences for Afghanistan »



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