The ongoing military conflict in Afghanistan is an international effort, though the United States has taken the lead and shouldered the largest burden. That’s neither surprising nor controversial: we’re the world’s preeminent superpower with the world’s most dominant military. We were attacked on 9/11 and we initiated the war in Afghanistan. Obviously, the American commitment will be greater than our allies’.
But Donald Trump isn’t pleased with the imbalance. “I get along very well with India and Prime Minister Modi,” the president said at his cabinet meeting yesterday, “but he’s constantly telling me he built a library in Afghanistan. Okay, a library. That’s like — you know what that is? That’s like 5 hours of what we’ve spent. And he tells it. And he’s very smart. And we’re supposed to say, ‘Oh, thank you for the library.’ I don’t know who’s using it in Afghanistan.”
Trump added moments later, “I don’t like being taken advantage of.”
Take a moment to consider how the India Times covered the American president’s comments.
India has asserted that its projects worth $3 bn in Afghanistan speaks for itself and has regretted the ignorance of American officials after President Donald Trump mocked PM Narendra Modi over the utility of Delhi sponsored “library” in the landlocked country. […]
It was unclear which project Trump was referring to, but India has committed $3 billion in assistance to Afghanistan since 2001. An Afghan civil society member Parwiz Kawa said that Trump may have confused the Parliament building with the library. […]
“India has helped to build Parliament, if that is what he is referring to or Salma Dam, transmission lines, roads and over 400 high-impact community development projects. Delhi is probably third or fourth largest single country donor,” sources said, adding it appears that the US President’s statement is a matter of poor briefing by officials around him.
The article went on to list a series of investments India has made in Afghanistan — it was not brief — none of which included a library.









