New York:Pakistan backs the Afghan Taliban as a reliably anti-India element in Afghanistan to counter New Delhi's influence there, according to a background document produced for the US Congress.
Pakistan is also impeding India's efforts to establish stronger and more direct commercial and political relations with Central Asia through Afghanistan, the policy brief produced by the Congressional Research Service said.
Pakistan's security establishment is motivated by its fear of strategic encirclement by India if its influence grows in Afghanistan, the brief said.
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This fear has been exacerbated by US rhetorical support for India's diplomatic and commercial presence in Afghanistan, it added.
The rhetorical support that the brief referred to was a statement by US President Donald Trump. "We want India to help us more with Afghanistan, especially in the area of economic assistance and development," Trump said.
The brief spoke of Pakistan's role in fomenting trouble in Afghanistan because it may view a weak and destabilized Afghanistan as preferable to a strong, unified Afghan state.
It said that Afghan leaders along with US military commanders, attribute much of the insurgency's power and longevity either directly or indirectly to Pakistani support; President Trump has accused Pakistan of housing the very terrorists that we are fighting.
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The US has been holding negotiations with the Afghan Taliban to facilitate a peace settlement in Afghanistan that would enable Trump to eventually bring home most of the 14,000 troops deployed there and bring a semblance of an end to the 17-year war.
But the talks got stalled after a US soldier was killed in a Taliban attack in September.
President Ashraf Ghani has expressed reservations about a settlement as the democratically elected government has been sidelined in the negotiations.