Pakistan Today

US wants ‘more active’ India in Afghanistan

US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta encouraged India to play a “more active role” in Afghanistan during talks Tuesday in New Delhi, US officials said.
Washington has previously worried about India antagonising its arch-foe Pakistan and preferred New Delhi retain a modest profile in the Afghan conflict, restricted to troop training and infrastructure development. But officials briefing reporters before Panetta arrived on a two-day visit to New Delhi said US policy has evolved as the NATO-led force prepares to withdraw combat troops by the end of 2014. “Over the last 10 years, for a variety of reasons, India has not played a particularly active role in Afghanistan,” a senior defence official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told reporters aboard Panetta’s plane.
“We welcome India playing a more active role in Afghanistan, a more active political and economic role,” the official said, adding that the US hoped India would expand its training of Afghan security forces. India has “trained army and police before but on a relatively small scale.” Panetta discussed the issue, as well as a new US strategic tilt towards Asia and expanding military ties, when he met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and National Security Adviser Shiv Shankar Menon on Tuesday, officials said.
“In both meetings, Secretary Panetta discussed the US rebalance to the Asia-Pacific region and the importance the United States places on India,” his spokesman George Little said in a statement. In October, India and Afghanistan signed a “strategic partnership” deal aiming at deepening their security and economic links, with Afghan President Hamid Karzai also keen to elevate India’s involvement. New Delhi, fearful of the return of an Islamist regime in Kabul, has ploughed about $2.0 billion of aid into the country to gain influence, but is extremely wary of over-stepping. The US official acknowledged the hostility and distrust between India and Pakistan, but said both countries had a common interest in seeing peace take root in Afghanistan. Apart from the Afghanistan war, Tuesday’s talks touched on America’s much-publicised “rebalance” towards Asia as well as expanding US defence ties between the two countries, officials said. After Panetta’s meeting, officials said India agreed to allow US teams to resume a search for the remains of missing American service members at crash sites from World War II in the country’s northeast.

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