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ID127663
Title ProperPakistani factor in the Afghan conflict
LanguageENG
AuthorIskandarov, Kosimsho
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In 1947, when Pakistan was established as an independent country, Afghanistan ceased to recognize the Durand Line, the border between India and Afghanistan drawn in 1893 under an agreement between Foreign Secretary of British India Sir Mortimer Durand and Afghan Amir Abdur Rahman Khan, and raised the question of the Pashtuns who found themselves in the newly established state. The Afghans demanded that the British either grant the Pashtuns and Balochi the right to elect their own government independent from the center or to join Afghanistan: as Afghans they should be free to decide whether they wanted to belong to any state or would prefer independence; deep at heart, however, the Afghan rulers expected that the British withdrawal from India would render the Durand Line agreement null and void. The relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan are burdened by countless problems; this explains why Pakistan keeps on interfering in its neighbor's domestic affairs.
`In' analytical NoteCentral Asia and the Caucasus Vol. 14, No.3; 2013: p.83-96
Journal SourceCentral Asia and the Caucasus Vol. 14, No.3; 2013: p.83-96
Key WordsPakistan ;  Afghanistan ;  Pashtunistan ;  Durand Line ;  Conflict ;  Tribal Areas ;  Right to Self - Determination