Wednesday, March 27, 2013

This Is What I'm Talking About

India is helping Afghanistan avoid reliance on Pakistan for an outlet to the sea. But giving mullah-led Iran leverage, too, isn't ideal.

This is the right idea, but the execution is bad:

Afghanistan now has another way to reach the ocean. Iran has made a deal with India whereby India will spend $100 million to upgrade the Iranian port of Chabahar and allow Indian ships to move cargo in and out of Afghanistan via Iranian roads, railroads and the port of Chabahar.

I long hoped to have the advantage of a route to Afghanistan through Iran. But I wanted it through a pro-American (or at least non-nutball) Iran:

One of the benefits of overthrowing the mullah regime in Iran and replacing it with a government that reflects the pro-American sentiment of the people of Iran will be the land corridor it will open to Afghanistan.

Now, our access to Afghanistan is from the north through the unstable "Stans" and back through an increasingly unfriendly Russia; or through Pakistan which we have to coddle to keep land-locked Afghanistan from being cut off from us.

Open up a supply route through Iran to Afghanistan and suddenly we don't need to be quite so reliant on our Central Asian bases or so careful with a Pakistan that will not crack down on the Taliban who hide and organize inside Pakistan. We won't have to be so shy when it comes to hunting bin Laden there, either.

Oh well. So close. But perhaps after the Indians build this supply line we can address the nutball factor.

One can hope. This is an era of hope and change, isn't it?