Since 2001, Afghanistan has allowed New Delhi an opportunity to
underscore its role as a regional power. India has growing stakes
in peace and stability in Afghanistan, and the 2011 India-Afghan
strategic partnership agreement underlines India's commitment to
ensure that a positive momentum in Delhi-Kabul ties is maintained.
The changing trajectory of Indian policy towards Afghanistan since
2001 is examined, and it is argued that New Delhi has been
responding to a strategic environment shaped by other actors in the
region. U.S.-led North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces are
preparing to leave Afghanistan in 2014, and India stands at a
crossroads as it remains keen to preserve its interests in
Afghanistan. The ever-evolving Indian policy in Afghanistan is
examined in three phases before implications of this change for the
region and the United States are drawn. There has been a broader
maturing of the U.S.-India defense ties, and Afghanistan is likely
to be a beneficiary of this trend.
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