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Pak–Afghan Border Dispute

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: BS

Context: Tensions have sharply escalated between Pakistan and Afghanistan after cross-border airstrikes and retaliatory fire along the Durand Line, reviving one of South Asia’s oldest border disputes.

About Pak–Afghan Border Dispute:

What it is?

• The Durand Line is a 2,640 km-long border demarcated in 1893 between British India and Afghanistan by Sir Mortimer Durand and Emir Abdur Rahman Khan.

• Intended as an administrative boundary, it split the Pashtun tribal heartland, dividing families, ethnic communities, and trade routes that had existed for centuries without borders.

Origin of the Clash:

• The line was accepted by Abdur Rahman under British pressure but was never recognised as a permanent international boundary by later Afghan governments.

• When Pakistan was created in 1947, Afghanistan rejected the Durand Line, claiming the right to unify Pashtun regions within Pakistan’s northwest.

• Afghanistan even voted against Pakistan’s admission to the United Nations, marking the start of a long-standing territorial and ethnic dispute.

Historical Timeline:

1947–61: Repeated breakdowns of diplomatic ties over the “Pashtunistan” issue.

1979–89: The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan turned the border into a Cold War battleground, with Pakistan hosting millions of Afghan refugees and mujahideen.

1990s: Pakistan-backed Taliban rise to power, worsening Afghan suspicions of Pakistani interference.

2001–2021: post – 9/11, both sides accused each other of harbouring terrorists — Pakistan sheltering the Afghan Taliban, and Afghanistan hosting the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

2017 onwards: Pakistan built a border fence, which Kabul protested as a violation of sovereignty.

2025: The dispute reignited after Pakistan’s airstrikes on Afghan provinces targeting TTP militants, followed by Afghan retaliation.

Key Features of the Dispute:

• The Durand Line divides Pashtun tribes, creating deep ethnic and cultural fault lines.

• Frequent border skirmishes, refugee influx, and militant movements make the area volatile.

• Both nations use cross-border militancy as leverage, complicating peace efforts.

• The issue symbolizes colonial legacy and mutual mistrust, with no formal border agreement post-1947.

Implications for India:

Strategic Leverage: India gains diplomatic space as the Pakistan–Afghanistan standoff weakens Islamabad’s influence in the region.

Regional Stability: Instability along the Durand Line threatens broader South Asian security, affecting India’s outreach to Central Asia via Chabahar Port and INSTC routes.

Counterterrorism: A destabilized frontier risks spillover of extremist networks, including those hostiles to India.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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