The 'charge' is not the issue as much as Afghan government support for terrorists (as established by leaked US diplomatic cables detailing Karzai's support for BLA/BLF/BRA terrorists) is. Ghani is perceived to be rolling back Afghan support for terrorism in Pakistan, and so long as he sticks to that policy Pakistan will reciprocate and support him, which is why Pakistan is trying to increase Afghan-Pakistan military and intelligence cooperation.
Actually, Ghani is under pressure from his opposition for being soft with a country whose ex-President actively admits to trying to destabilize Afghanistan.
Afghan backlash over security deal with Pakistan | World news | The Guardian
The statement of 'undeclared war' was a reaction to that pressure and those concerns as we can see are very real.
The war is being waged by Afghanistan against Pakistan, as Musharraf and various other Pakistani civilian and military leaders have argued over the years. An end to support for terrorism in Pakistan by Afghanistan (as Ghani is trying to do) will be welcomed by Pakistan with increased military and intelligence cooperation to combat the Afghan Taliban and associated groups.
Pakistan has demonstrated her commitment to supporting Afghanistan through the military ops in North Waziristan, which have severely restricted the space and resources that were available to the Afghan Taliban and Haqqanis. The Afghan government and NDS have themselves recognized this fact by stating that the Pakistani offensive has pushed thousands of Afghan Taliban and Haqqani fighters into Afghanistan. Such a large scale displacement of Taliban fighters would not be possible were the Pakistani military offensives not targeting them.
Your ex-President admitted to trying to destabilize another country, there is no way around that no matter how many little gestures you try to claim now.
The reservation against Pak very much resides in Afghanistan, and its very real. People don't trust Pak and they very right not to considering the belligerent past behavior.
I agree, this attitude makes perfect sense when attributed to the current Indian government - they have the most to gain from such high profile Taliban assaults, Pakistan does not.
Ghani was under pressure from his opposition to not rush into a silly deal with a country that was actively working against Afghanistan.
This is to try to silence that opposition.
The kind of Indian support for the Taliban we are talking about would not require Indian agents to directly interface with the attackers. Support would be in the form of intelligence and cash, with an assortment of criminal and tribal elements available to act as mediators. Heck, by using Indians who speak Urdu/Pushto this kind of support could be carried out by Indians pretending to be ISI/PA representatives.
Its not about agents, its about money and RoI. We are spending about $125M on that new parliament of theirs. India has some ground level info gathering sources, not resources that can carry this out.
Makes no sense to attack our infrastructure and endanger our investments.
I have yet to see any significant risk here that India would have to take into account - the party with the most to lose here is Pakistan, and the party with the most to gain, by sabotaging Afghan-Pakistan rapprochement, is India.
I have outlined them repeatedly. Destroying infrastructure, endangering investments, risk of capture etc.
There is no evidence linking Pakistan to the recent spate of terrorist attacks in Afghanistan either, but the fact remains that the party with the biggest motive here is India.
Taliban has claimed responsibility. Your ex-President bragged about cultivating them. It does not get better than that, unless one of those attackers had been caught and put through the mill to make them confess.
Now, Ghani and Afghani establishment needs to revisit the wisdom in a pact with a nation that was/is a 'mortal enemy' as some have put in - reference the article I linked.
Anyway, the points are getting repeated here. Thus far, its Taliban. At best for Pak, they are out of your control, else all fingers point to you.
Lets wait and see how this develops. I am sure we will have an opportunity to revisit this.
These articles become very relevant now, in light of what has transpired:
‘On intelligence deal with ISI, Ghani has lost to Pak’
Afghan Senate chairman attacks intelligence sharing MoU with Pakistan (Secong lead) | Business Standard News
Afghan President Under Pressure to Scrap Intel-Sharing Deal With Pakistan
Now, this emoroyonic deal needs to be scrutinized and options weighed:
Amid criticism: Afghan spy agency says MoU with ISI embryonic - The Express Tribune