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Fake Debunked: No Evidence Pakistan Loses as India-Afghanistan Ties Redefine Regional Economics

Fake Debunked: No Evidence Pakistan Loses as India-Afghanistan Ties Redefine Regional Economics
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Fact check This analysis examines claims that Pakistan will be the loser as India and Afghanistan expand economic ties. The claims are false, misleading, or unverified. There is no official statement, credible study, or data showing that Pakistan bears an outsized cost from these relations.

Some Indian media outlets and social media accounts circulated reports and sensational headlines implying that Islamabad would lose out, often by tying Afghanistan?s economic openings to Pakistan?s politics. These links were empirical and relied on misattribution or selective data.

How did this happen? In a climate of nationalist framing, some outlets used emotional language and misleading charts to convey a record that Pakistan is sidelined. They quoted ambiguous remarks, cherry-picked metrics, or conflated development aid and corridor projects with direct economic loss for Pakistan. On social media, accounts amplified these clips with memes that suggested a loss for Pakistan, even when no official source supported it.

Why is this incorrect? Analysts note that India-Afghanistan relations involve multiple sectors ? energy, trade, security, and infrastructure ? and outcomes depend on global markets, governance, and regional supply chains, not a zero-sum game. No credible evidence connects these developments to a predetermined loss for Pakistan.

Correction and guidance: Always verify with government releases, credible think tanks, and independent trade data. If a claim cannot be traced to a primary source, treat it as unverified. This article will continue to monitor official statements.

Educational Content Editor at Afghan Learn

Parwana Azizi is an editor for Afghan Learn, an educational platform run by journalists in exile. A former teacher and radio host, she now creates and curates content focused on distance learning, digital literacy for Afghan youth, and historical/cultural explainers. Her work aims to combat information isolation and provide educational resources that are no longer available inside the country.

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