Not Just A Library, As Trump Says, India Has Built Dam, Parliament Building, Roads As Part Of $3-Billion Assistance To Afghanistan
Mumbai: Dams, transmission lines, the parliament building, roads, training assistance for security forces: These are some of the projects India has completed as part of its $3-billion commitment to Afghanistan over 17 years to 2018.
While defending his move to slash US investments overseas, US President Donald Trump on January 2, 2019, mocked Prime Minister Narendra Modi for funding a library in Afghanistan. The government countered this by pointing out that India’s investments in Afghanistan were on a much more massive scale than Trump believed.
“India may be building small libraries as part of the community development initiative, but most of its investments in Afghanistan were on mega infrastructure projects including the 218 km road from Zaranj to Delaram, the Salma Dam and the new Afghan Parliament building,” the Hindustan Times reported on January 3, 2019, citing government sources.
Claim:
Source: The White House (From 1:09:00)
Here’s all you need to know about India’s development assistance to Afghanistan:
Over the last four years, 2014-15 to 2017-18, India has given Rs 2,217 crore ($344 million) as development assistance to Afghanistan, a government reply to the Rajya Sabha (parliament’s upper house) said on August 9, 2018. The government further informed the house that since 2014, seven projects had been completed and 12 are ongoing.
Here’s list of completed/upcoming development projects and assistance by India to Afghanistan from government’s official releases:
Source: Lok Sabha, Twenty First Report of the Committee on External Affairs (2017-18) on Demands for Grants 2018-19 of the Ministry of External Affairs; March 9, 2018
Source: Lok Sabha; August 2, 2017
Source: Lok Sabha; March 16, 2016
The government of India highlighted the US government’s appreciation of India’s contribution towards stability and assistance in Afghanistan citing statements by President Trump and the then US secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, in a reply to the Rajya Sabha (parliament’s upper house) on March 8, 2018.
Source: Rajya Sabha, March 8, 2018
Afghanistan is crucial to India’s energy security because a critical gas pipeline from Turkmenistan to India will pass through the country (and Pakistan), IndiaSpend had reported in July 2015. This is commonly referred to as the TAPI (Turkmenistan–Afghanistan–Pakistan–India) project. Afghanistan also represents investment potential for Indian companies in several sectors.
Reactions on twitter over Trump’s jibe:
This is the “library” that president @realDonaldTrump is talking about. He has mixed the parliament building with a library in a conversation with @narendramodi.
— Parwiz Kawa (@parwizkawa) January 3, 2019
I am not sure if the right people get into this building, but I know that this building is already in use. pic.twitter.com/mB73Rq2wKC
May be Trump should know that while he is decrying every other help in Af, India has been building not only libraries, but roads, dams, schools n even parliament building. We are building lives, for which d Afghan people thank us, no matter what others do or don’t. https://t.co/VUOIm1nuQd
— Ram Madhav (@rammadhavbjp) January 3, 2019
1/2 The derisive comment by @realDonaldTrump on India building a library in Afghanistan is a stinging indictment of the BJP govt’s failure to convince the US of our bonafide credentials in Afghanistan. We've spent $3 billion (our largest aid programme anywhere)but US doesn't know
— Shashi Tharoor (@ShashiTharoor) January 3, 2019
2/2 We brought 24/7 electricity to Kabul, built the Zaranj-Delaram Highway, restored schools & hospitals, built the Selma Dam &the National parliament. And Modi tells Trump about a library? What a travesty& injustice. We should be proud of our role in Afghanistan&teach US abt it.
— Shashi Tharoor (@ShashiTharoor) January 3, 2019
Today Trump mocked #India, a key US non-NATO partner that’s done major development work in #Afghanistan, for building a library there. Sigh.
— Michael Kugelman (@MichaelKugelman) January 2, 2019
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