New Delhi: Afghanistan is pressing India to supply military helicopters, tanks and artillery as it tries to shore up security through regional alliances before the withdrawal of most NATO (National Atlantic Treaty Organisation) -led foreign troops by the end of 2014.
President Hamid Karzai will use a visit to India at the end of this week to push for progress on a "wish list" of military equipment he handed New Delhi in May.
India has invested INR 12,000 crore in aid and reconstruction and trained scores of Afghan officers, but has so far stopped short of arms transfers for fear of provoking Pakistan, as well as armed groups in Afghanistan.
Pakistan and India have been locked in a long struggle for influence in Afghanistan, both fearing an unstable state on their doorsteps.
Kabul wants India to deliver on a strategic partnership agreement signed in 2011 that allowed for the transfer of "war-like stores", or lethal equipment. It argues that India's security is tied to a stable Afghanistan.
"Indian investment in Afghanistan, be it in the security or development sectors, is an investment in the security and development of India," M. Ashraf Haidari, deputy chief of mission at the Afghan embassy in New Delhi, told Reuters.
Karzai, who will hold talks with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Friday, has been seeking to bolster regional ties while he remains at loggerheads with his Western backers in the run-up to the withdrawal of NATO forces.
On Sunday, he struck a cooperation agreement with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani during a visit to Tehran. Karzai is meanwhile resisting signing up to a long-term security arrangement with the United States.
The U.S. security pact is a decade-long agreement that would provide a legal basis for about 8,000 U.S. troops to stay on after the NATO-led combat mission ends next year.
Under that plan, the remaining U.S. force would continue to train, advise and equip the roughly 350,000 Afghan soldiers, police and airmen who will take over the fight against the Taliban-led insurgency. The remaining force would also conduct limited counter-terrorism activities.
Afghanistan wants tanks and artillery to boost land-based firepower and air support, including helicopters, for medical evacuation, Haidari said. Haidari was formerly a member of Afghanistan's National Security Council.
Afghanistan's security forces have also asked India for equipment to counter homemade bombs, the biggest killers of soldiers and civilians in Afghanistan.
Gurmeet Kanwal, a retired Indian army brigadier who tracks India's ties with Afghanistan, said New Delhi is unwilling to provide heavy equipment to Afghan forces for fear of getting drawn deeper into the conflict.
India's expansive diplomacy in Afghanistan since the 2001 ouster of the Taliban has already fanned Pakistani fears of encirclement, and its embassy in Kabul has been bombed twice.
Its consulate in the city of Jalalabad - near the border with Pakistan - was hit by suicide bombers earlier this year.
New Delhi may offer Afghanistan light helicopters for surveillance, field ambulances and trucks, Kanwal said. It may also increase the number of Afghan officers under training in India from the current level of 400.
President Hamid Karzai will use a visit to India at the end of this week to push for progress on a "wish list" of military equipment he handed New Delhi in May.
India has invested INR 12,000 crore in aid and reconstruction and trained scores of Afghan officers, but has so far stopped short of arms transfers for fear of provoking Pakistan, as well as armed groups in Afghanistan.
Kabul wants India to deliver on a strategic partnership agreement signed in 2011 that allowed for the transfer of "war-like stores", or lethal equipment. It argues that India's security is tied to a stable Afghanistan.
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Karzai, who will hold talks with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Friday, has been seeking to bolster regional ties while he remains at loggerheads with his Western backers in the run-up to the withdrawal of NATO forces.
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The U.S. security pact is a decade-long agreement that would provide a legal basis for about 8,000 U.S. troops to stay on after the NATO-led combat mission ends next year.
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Afghanistan wants tanks and artillery to boost land-based firepower and air support, including helicopters, for medical evacuation, Haidari said. Haidari was formerly a member of Afghanistan's National Security Council.
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Gurmeet Kanwal, a retired Indian army brigadier who tracks India's ties with Afghanistan, said New Delhi is unwilling to provide heavy equipment to Afghan forces for fear of getting drawn deeper into the conflict.
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Its consulate in the city of Jalalabad - near the border with Pakistan - was hit by suicide bombers earlier this year.
New Delhi may offer Afghanistan light helicopters for surveillance, field ambulances and trucks, Kanwal said. It may also increase the number of Afghan officers under training in India from the current level of 400.
© Thomson Reuters 2013
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