HomeWorldTaliban minister heads to India: How New Delhi is gaining ground while Pakistan loses its Afghan grip | Explained

Taliban minister heads to India: How New Delhi is gaining ground while Pakistan loses its Afghan grip | Explained

If Muttaqi walks into Delhi next week, it will signal that Kabul has outgrown Pakistan’s suffocating embrace. Islamabad’s old claim of indispensability is a hollow echo.

October 03, 2025 / 15:09 IST
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Afghanistan's Minister of Foreign Affairs Amir Khan Muttaqi speaks during a press conference to present the ministry's annual achievements report, in Kabul on September 19, 2024. (Photo by Wakil KOHSAR / AFP)
Afghanistan's Minister of Foreign Affairs Amir Khan Muttaqi speaks during a press conference to present the ministry's annual achievements report, in Kabul on September 19, 2024. (Photo by Wakil KOHSAR / AFP)

Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi’s expected visit to India next week signals a quiet but decisive shift. It is the first high-level Taliban engagement with India since Kabul fell in August 2021, and it highlights how quickly regional alignments are redrawing themselves. Afghanistan, once treated as a client state by Islamabad, is recalibrating its foreign ties and seeking partners that can deliver legitimacy, trade and aid.

For India, this is an opportunity to shape policy pragmatically while safeguarding against terror spillovers. For Pakistan, it is a humiliation. The neighbour that claimed unrivalled influence in Kabul now finds itself sidelined, mistrusted, and scrambling for relevance. Afghanistan’s pivot to New Delhi is a diplomatic rupture Islamabad never thought it would face so soon.

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India’s cautious outreach, Pakistan’s strategic nightmare

Muttaqi’s visit, if cleared, underscores how Afghanistan is diversifying its foreign contacts. New Delhi has provided humanitarian aid, reopened a technical mission in Kabul, and kept alive people-to-people and development linkages, all without formally recognising the Taliban regime.