India Is Embracing the Taliban
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India strengthens ties with Taliban-led Afghanistan, navigating complex geopolitics and humanitarian aid while facing regional challenges.
The Taliban rulers of Afghanistan are international pariahs. But after a visit to India and the promise of normalised relations, that may be about to change.
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Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir has issued a direct nuclear warning to India, claiming that the country’s “geographical immunity” would be shattered if war breaks out. In a fiery speech, Munir described India’s security as a “misconception,
Although India has not extended diplomatic recognition to the Kabul regime, the upgrade of the bilateral relationship opens a new chapter in its ties with Afghanistan, and comes at a time when relations between the Taliban regime and Pakistan, which supported and sustained the Taliban for decades, have deteriorated significantly.
India on Friday upgraded ties with Afghanistan's Taliban administration, giving a boost to the diplomatically isolated group, by announcing it would reopen its embassy in Kabul that was shut after the Taliban seized power in 2021.
SRINAGAR, India (AP) — India is upgrading its technical mission in Kabul to a full embassy, India’s foreign minister announced Friday after meeting his Afghanistan counterpart in New Delhi. The announcement was made during the first high-level diplomatic engagement since the Taliban seized power in 2021 after two decades of U.S. military presence.
Taliban’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Amir Khan Muttaqi visiting India was seen as a regional security threat by Pakistan, earlier reports had claimed
India is hosting the Taliban minister during a high profile but controversial visit as it seeks to upgrade its diplomatic ties with Afghanistan’s hardline Islamist regime
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has said the Taliban regime in Afghanistan recently launched an unprovoked attack on Pakistan at India’s behest as the neighbouring countries faced
A men-only press conference with the Taliban foreign minister in New Delhi drew sharp rebuke from Indian media, forcing the religious hardline group to also invite female journalists.
Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khwaja Asif said that India "could play dirty at the border" and claimed Pakistan was ready for a "two-front war" amid border tensions with Afghanistan. He made the remarks in an interview with Samaa Tv while responding to a question about the possibility of Indian provocations along the border.