Abstract
The Treaty of Rawalpindi concluded in August 1919 between the British India
and Afghanistan, in the aftermath of the brief Anglo-Afghan war earlier that
year, was a watershed moment in the British India’s “frontier question” and
emergence of an independent Afghanistan. The Treaty holds immense legal
and political value in the development of Afghanistan and its relations with
Pakistan after 1947. However, only a scant attention has been devoted to this
landmark Treaty by the academics and practitioners alike. In addition to
explicitly recognizing Afghanistan’s independence, the Treaty, once and for
all, settled the question of British India’s western boundary with Afghanistan,
which was earlier established in 1893 in Durand Line Agreement. This
working paper fills the gap in existing literature by shedding light on the
circumstances that led to the Treaty of Rawalpindi and its legal and political
significance for Afghanistan and Pakistan and their bilateral relations.