Its none of your concern.
When U.S. leaves Afghanistan will be under Pakistan control again or it will be an independent state free of Indian influence. Karzai is realizing this. Pakistan is too powerful now.
And do we own Afghanistan? Yaar be sensible before making such careless statements.
Pakistan does not control anything or anyone. Lets realize that Afghans have been on the receiving end for the past 3 decades. Pakistan should help them out rather than bossing them around as is evinced in posts such as the one above.
I am well aware of the ground realities and fully understand that Pakistan does not want to see an unfriendly Afghanistan being prodded by India on one end and then also having to fend off India on our Eastern borders. However the only way this situation will be resolved is by way of building confidence with the Afghans by helping them out, trying to get over the mistrust instead of making wild claims about getting them under our shackles after the US leaves.
I cringe as a Pakistani when I read such colonial-minded hubris being spouted by fellow Pakistanis and at the same time if I were an Afghan, I would give the middle finger to anyone who makes such callous remarks. (Please don't take this personally as its not meant that way, but hopefully you get the point and agree with it too given us Pakistanis hate being dictated to and being bossed around by no less than a superpower and here we are doing the exact same to others).
Pakistan's strength is in having a peaceful Afghanistan that is amicable to Pakistan. The case of our relations with Afghanistan has a lot to do with our own approach to this whole affair. I will leave this off for another day. I don't expect India to not try to undermine us, but we make it easy for them by trying to boss around Afghans who really don't like to be bossed around.
This is the reality and the sooner all of us come to terms with it, the easier it would be. Afghanistan is landlocked and we are their biggest trading partner. No amount of Indian help will change the fact that Pakistanis and Afghans have shared religious, cultural, social and economic interests and these are the pillars upon which this relation needs to move forward and when it does, the security considerations will take care of themselves. Right now the security considerations are dominant and this is to our own detriment.