of Afghanistan. To exclude or eject such
influence the Government of India has frequently subsidized
and otherwise assisted the Amirs of Kabul. It
has also, more than once, taken up arms against
them. But it has never interfered, for any
other purpose, in the affairs of their kingdom.
Regulating on this principle and limiting to this object
the conduct of our relations with the rulers of
Kabul, it was our long-continued endeavour to
find in their friendship and their strength the
requisite guarantees for the security of our own frontier.
Failing in that endeavour, we were compelled to seek
the attainment of the object to which our Afghan
policy was, and is still, exclusively directed,
by rendering the permanent security of our frontier
as much as possible independent of such conditions.
This obligation was not accepted without reluctance. Not even when forced into hostilities by the late Amir Sher Ali Khan’s espousal of a Russian alliance, proposed by Russia in contemplation of a rupture with the British Government, did we relinquish our desire for the renewal of relations with a strong and friendly Afghan Power, and, when the son of Sher Ali subsequently sought our alliance and protection, they were at once accorded to him, on conditions of which His Highness professed to appreciate the generosity. The crime, however, which dissolved the Treaty of Gandamak, and the disclosures which followed that event, finally convinced the Government of India that the interests committed to its care could not but be gravely imperilled by further adhesion to a policy dependent for its fruition on the gratitude, the good faith, the assumed self-interest, or the personal character of any Afghan Prince.
When, therefore, Her Majesty’s troops re-entered Afghanistan in September last, it was with two well-defined and plainly-avowed objects. The first was to avenge the treacherous massacre of the British Mission at Kabul; the second was to maintain the safeguards sought through the Treaty of Gandamak, by providing for their maintenance guarantees of a more substantial and less precarious character.
These two objects have been
maintained: the first by the capture
of Kabul and the punishment
of the crime committed there, the
second by the severance of
Kandahar from the Kabul power.
Satisfied with their attainment, the Government of India has no longer any motive or desire to enter into fresh treaty engagements with the Rulers of Kabul. The arrangements and exchange of friendly assurances with the Amir Sher Ali, though supplemented on the part of the Government of India by subsidies and favours of various kinds, wholly failed to secure the object of them, which was, nevertheless, a thoroughly friendly one, and no less conducive to the security and advantage of the Afghan than to those of the British Power. The treaty with Yakub Khan, which secured to him