Thursday, July 2, 2026
ADVT 
India

India says no troop deployment in Afghanistan

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Sep, 2017 12:13 PM
  • India says no troop deployment in Afghanistan
India on Tuesday made it clear to the US that it won't deploy troops in war-torn Afghanistan even as New Delhi and Washington pledged to eradicate the "scourge" of terrorism and to hold to account those who use it as an instrument of state policy, an apparent reference to Pakistan.
 
"There shall not be boots from India on the ground (in Afghanistan)," Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said at a joint media conference after talks with visiting US Defence Secretary James Mattis. 
 
She was replying to a question about India's contribution in Afghanistan and whether it would deploy its troops there.
 
Mattis is the first high ranking official of the Trump administration to visit India amidst expectation from the US that India could change its stand on a possible military presence in Afghanistan.
 
US President Donald Trump, while unveiling his new policy on Afghanistan last month, asked India to help more with the troubled country, battling decades of Islamist insurgency.
 
Sitharaman said India's contribution to Afghanistan had been there for a very long time in development activities like building dams, schools, hospitals, roads and any institution which the country may require.
 
"We are also at the moment training their officials in good governance... India's contribution has been there and we shall expand if necessary," she said.
 
"We also exchanged views on regional and international issues of mutual interest. The situation in our neighbourhood and the growing menace of cross-border terrorism were discussed in depth. There is growing convergence in the approaches of both our countries on this issue. We both recognise the importance of holding those who use terrorism as an instrument of state policy to account and to dismantle the infrastructure that supports terrorism," Sitharaman said.
 
She said India welcomed Trump's new Afghan strategy and added she had "useful discussions" with Mattis on "how we can strengthen our cooperation bilaterally as well as with the government of Afghanistan in pursuit of our common objective of a peaceful, democratic, stable and prosperous Afghanistan".
 
Mattis lauded India's efforts in Afghanistan. 
 
"In particular, we applaud India's invaluable contributions to Afghanistan and welcome further efforts to promote Afghanistan's democracy, stability and security. We seek to expand our cooperation in building partnership across the region."
 
He said the two countries recognized the threat global terrorism posed to people throughout the world. "There can be no tolerance of terrorist safe havens. As global leaders, India and the US resolve to work together to eradicate this scourge."
 
The Defence Secretary said both India and the US had suffered losses due to terrorism and "one aspect of this is universally shared by all responsible nations that there shall be no safe havens for terror".
 
He did not name Pakistan but Sitharaman minced no words in saying that terror attacks in Mumbai or in New York originated from Pakistan.
 
"The very same forces which did find safe haven in Pakistan were the forces that hit New York as well as Mumbai," she said. 
 
She urged the US Defence Secretary to "speak out and raise this issue" on his next visit to Pakistan.
 
Replying to a question, Mattis appreciated India's efforts for increasing pressure on North Korea over nuclear activities.
 
India and the US also discussed maritime security in the Indian Ocean and Indo-Pacific region where China has become increasingly aggressive in the South China Sea.

MORE India ARTICLES

Gurdaspur Terror Strike: CCTV Footage Shows Well Armed Terrorists

Gurdaspur Terror Strike: CCTV Footage Shows Well Armed Terrorists
The three terrorists who unleashed terror in Dinanagar town of Punjab's Gurdaspur district were heavily armed and moving around in army fatigues, CCTV footage that emerged on Tuesday showed.

Gurdaspur Terror Strike: CCTV Footage Shows Well Armed Terrorists

Slain SP Baljit Singh's Family Demands Jobs, Badal To Meet Families

The family of Superintendent of Police Baljit Singh, who died in the terror attack in Gurdaspur in Punjab, on Tuesday demanded government jobs for his three children.

Slain SP Baljit Singh's Family Demands Jobs, Badal To Meet Families

Kalam Was Worried About Gurdaspur Attack, Parliament Disruption

Kalam Was Worried About Gurdaspur Attack, Parliament Disruption
Kalam's advisor Srijan Pal Singh, who was with him throughout Monday till the end, in a touching post on Facebook, said he joined Kalam at noon on Monday for the flight to Guwahati.

Kalam Was Worried About Gurdaspur Attack, Parliament Disruption

Everything You Wanted To Know About Gurdaspur Attack: All 3 Terrorists Among 10 Killed

Everything You Wanted To Know About Gurdaspur Attack: All 3 Terrorists Among 10 Killed
Three civilians and four security personnel, including a superintendent of police, were killed early Monday when terrorists went on a killing spree here, shattering two decades of calm in Punjab 

Everything You Wanted To Know About Gurdaspur Attack: All 3 Terrorists Among 10 Killed

Former Indian President APJ Abdul Kalam Passes Away After Collapsing During Lecture In Shillong

Former Indian President APJ Abdul Kalam Passes Away After Collapsing During Lecture In Shillong
Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam, who won popular acclaim as India's president from 2002 to 2007, died here on Monday evening after collapsing during a lecture at the IIM-Shillong.

Former Indian President APJ Abdul Kalam Passes Away After Collapsing During Lecture In Shillong

President Urged To Reconsider Yakub's Mercy Plea

President Urged To Reconsider Yakub's Mercy Plea
Eminent lawyer Ram Jethmalani and leaders from four political parties were among around 200 people who on Sunday urged President Pranab Mukherjee to reconsider the mercy plea of the 1993 Mumbai blasts convict Yakub Memon

President Urged To Reconsider Yakub's Mercy Plea