Pakistan’s decision to halt the attempted import of Afghan-origin fresh fruits through Iran has thrown a fresh spotlight on the fragility of regional trade and the growing strain placed on Afghanistan’s already overstretched logistics. The episode, though technical on paper, speaks to a much larger story unfolding along Pakistan’s western borders: a region where political mistrust, security anxieties and administrative bottlenecks now shape the daily reality of trade more than any formal agreement ever could. For Afghanistan, a landlocked nation whose farms produce some of the region’s finest fruits and perishables, these disruptions are not abstract policy disputes; they threaten livelihoods, empty pockets and erode whatever fragile stability its rural economy can still muster.
The consignment that triggered the dispute arrived at Taftan, the dusty crossing point along Pakistan’s border with Iran, on 8 November. It consisted of around 23 million tons of fresh fruits — a large volume by any measure, particularly for produce that spoils quickly. The importer argued that the shipment qualified under Pakistan’s Early Harvest Program, a scheme launched in July to increase reciprocal agricultural trade between the two countries. On paper, the documentation appeared sufficient: certification from the Department of Plant Protection, records confirming Afghan origin, and a claim that the program offered legal cover for the import despite the closure of the main border routes.
However, the officials at Customs saw something different. The Early Harvest Program, they pointed out, was intended to operate only when bilateral trade was functional and transparent. With Torkham and Chaman closed and formal trade suspended, any attempt to divert Afghan produce through Iran amounted to a workaround — one that challenged both the spirit and the legality of the program. The rejection was swift but not surprising. It reflected Pakistan’s growing caution, shaped by months of border tensions and a sense that trade mechanisms are being increasingly stretched, if not exploited, in search of economic relief on the Afghan side.
To understand why the incident matters, one only has to look at the current backlog. More than 5,500 containers bound for Afghanistan remain stranded inside Pakistan, most of them stalled by the border closures triggered by escalating security concerns. It is a backlog vast enough to clog ports, gum up Customs processes and leave supply chains in disarray. The numbers alone tell a story of economic distress: more than 4,650 containers marooned at ports or in transit, 729 waiting at Chaman, and 142 stuck at Torkham. Each container represents produce, investment, and the hopes of traders who depend on access to Pakistan’s short, affordable trade routes. With borders closed, those hopes sit gathering dust.
For Afghan exporters, particularly those dealing in perishable goods, the situation is dire. The closure of the Chaman and Torkham crossings has forced them to consider longer, riskier and far more expensive alternatives. Fruits and vegetables that would ordinarily reach Pakistani markets within hours are now being redirected through Iran or Central Asia, adding hundreds — sometimes more than a thousand — kilometers to the journey. Every added kilometer is a risk: the risk that refrigerated trucks will fail, that produce will rot, that buyers will cancel orders, that farmers will sink further into debt. Afghan exporters are discovering what traders across developing economies know all too well — that in the world of perishables, time is not just money; it is survival.
Geography offers Afghanistan few favors. Kandahar and Helmand, two of its agricultural heartlands, lie only 150–300 kilometers from Pakistan’s Chaman-Spin Boldak border — a convenient hop for any trader. However, Iran’s Zaranj or Delaram crossings are four times farther away, stretching more than 1,200 kilometers across desert and mountain routes that exhaust both produce and transporters. Northern provinces like Balkh and Baghlan face similar constraints: the nearest viable Iranian routes are almost twice the distance of Torkham, pushing transport costs up by as much as 50%, a steep and often unbearable price for exporters operating on razor-thin margins.
Compounding the logistical nightmare are the US sanctions that restrict Afghanistan’s formal trade through Iran, making even the expensive options fraught with legal and financial risk. Central Asian routes through Uzbekistan or Turkmenistan offer partial relief, but they are limited, costly, and too slow to accommodate Afghanistan’s peak fruit seasons. As the options shrink, exporters find themselves boxed in by geography, geopolitics and the vulnerabilities of an agricultural economy deeply reliant on predictable access to Pakistani markets.
Pakistan, for its part, has tried to create limited openings to ease the worst of the bottlenecks. Officials confirmed that Uzbekistan will airlift five consignments of essential goods, while another 29 containers will travel under the Customs Convention on the International Transport of Goods, rerouted through China after Islamabad completed procedural requirements. These measures offer some respite, though they do little to address the scale of the problem. They serve more as gestures of goodwill — or perhaps gestures of realism — from a neighbour attempting to balance uncompromising border security with the undeniable fact that Afghanistan’s economy is deeply intertwined with Pakistan’s infrastructure.
The domestic impact inside Pakistan has been far less dramatic. Weekly inflation eased by 0.6% in early November, aided by sharp declines in the prices of tomatoes, onions and garlic. Markets adjusted quickly, suggesting that the temporary suspension of Afghan imports has not yet unsettled Pakistan’s food supply in any meaningful way. If anything, the data hints that domestic crops and supply chains are carrying the slack with relative ease.
The incident at Taftan, then, offers a window into the broader uncertainty surrounding regional trade. It exposes both the ingenuity and desperation of Afghan traders navigating a collapsing logistical landscape. It highlights the regulatory dilemmas Pakistan faces as it attempts to prevent program misuse without severing economic arteries that neighboring populations depend on. And it reveals the uncomfortable truth at the heart of the crisis: for all the talk of alternative routes and new partnerships, Afghanistan’s agricultural exports remain tethered — geographically, economically, and strategically — to Pakistan’s gateways.
