Abstract
The trajectory of Pakistan-Afghanistan relations has been inert for the last seventy years. The two neighbors, incidentally Muslims, have not been able to develop a paradigm for a friendly conduct of their bilateral relationship despite the fact that the two countries share a number of potent similarities. This article identifies Afghanistan’s status as multi-ethnic, landlocked and Parentier state, inter alia, contributory factors in shaping the trajectory of Pak-Afghan relations as they have served a determinant in introducing the preponderant role of the third party in Afghanistan’s policy matrix. The two countries need to revisit the traditional trajectory of their interaction and seek a mechanism for developing good relations. Certain provisions of the Geneva Accords 1988 could provide a theoretical framework to this effect. Balancing of internal contradictions approach has been employed to explain theoretically the third party role.
Author(s):
Details:
Type: | Article |
Volume: | 40 |
Issue: | 1 |
Language: | English |
Id: | 63aaf3d35e092 |
Published | December 27, 2022 |
Copyrights
Department of Political Science, Government College University Lahore |
---|
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.