HomeWorldChina courts Taliban, Pakistan plays middleman: Why India should be on guard as CPEC game unfolds | Explained

China courts Taliban, Pakistan plays middleman: Why India should be on guard as CPEC game unfolds | Explained

New Delhi also cannot ignore the optics: Wang Yi visiting Kabul after a stop in New Delhi to meet Prime Minister Modi, and then flying on to Islamabad for three days of talks with Pakistan’s deputy prime minister.

August 20, 2025 / 19:20 IST
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Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi - File Photo
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi - File Photo

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s surprise trip to Kabul this week is more than routine diplomacy. It is Beijing’s clearest signal yet that it intends to pull Afghanistan into its strategic orbit through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), with Pakistan acting as the bridge. Wang’s visit -- the first by a Chinese foreign minister to Afghanistan in over three years -- comes just days before he travels on to Islamabad, underscoring how China and Pakistan are working in tandem to shape Kabul’s economic and security future.

For India, this development raises red flags. Not only does it risk formalising Afghanistan’s entry into CPEC at a time when Pakistan is preparing to launch “CPEC-II” with fresh Chinese investment, but it also cements a China-Pakistan-Taliban axis that could deliberately sideline New Delhi’s role in the region. The timing is equally telling: Wang Yi stopped in New Delhi to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi before heading to Kabul, signalling Beijing’s double game -- projecting a thaw with India while doubling down on its Pakistan strategy.

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Beijing’s calculated move

At the heart of Wang’s visit is the plan to extend the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) into Afghanistan. CPEC, part of Xi Jinping’s flagship Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), has been the bedrock of Beijing’s partnership with Islamabad for the past decade. Now, by roping in Kabul, China wants to anchor Afghanistan into its trade and infrastructure network, while ensuring that India remains sidelined.