HomeWorldShared opposition, divergent motives: India and Pakistan both rejected Trump’s Bagram bid, but for very different reasons

Shared opposition, divergent motives: India and Pakistan both rejected Trump’s Bagram bid, but for very different reasons

The rare consensus came under the Moscow Format consultations, where India found itself aligned with countries that usually stand on opposing sides of global issues.

October 08, 2025 / 15:15 IST
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Taliban military helicopters fly to celebrate the third anniversary of Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan, at the Bagram Air Base, in Bagram, Parwan province on August 14, 2024.
Taliban military helicopters fly to celebrate the third anniversary of Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan, at the Bagram Air Base, in Bagram, Parwan province on August 14, 2024.

When US President Donald Trump began hinting at reclaiming control of the Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, the proposal drew immediate resistance from regional powers. India, Pakistan, China and Russia jointly rejected the idea, calling any renewed foreign military presence in Afghanistan “unacceptable.” The rare consensus came under the Moscow Format consultations, where India found itself aligned with countries that usually stand on opposing sides of global issues.

Meanwhile, the Taliban warned that any state assisting the United States in retaking Bagram, explicitly naming Pakistan, would be treated as an enemy. This development has not only raised tensions but also highlighted the deep strategic anxieties surrounding Afghanistan’s future.

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Why India opposed Trump’s Bagram bid

India’s opposition to the US plan is rooted in its long-held position that Afghanistan’s sovereignty must be respected and that no foreign power should use the country to advance its strategic goals. Delhi fears that a US return to Bagram could destabilise the fragile regional balance, reigniting the kind of foreign intervention that once fueled extremism across the region. The joint Moscow Format statement reflected this concern, calling foreign attempts to deploy military infrastructure in Afghanistan or neighboring countries “unacceptable.”