Intense clashes erupted alongside the Pakistan-Afghanistan border on Saturday night time after an assault by the Taliban on Pakistani army posts.
This escalation comes after a Pakistani airstrike in Kabul this week, as reported by safety officers from each nations.
Taliban forces launched armed reprisals in opposition to Pakistani troops, alleging that Islamabad had carried out airstrikes on Afghan territory, based on senior Taliban officers from numerous provinces. They claimed to have seized two Pakistani border posts within the southern province of Helmand, which was confirmed by native authorities.
Pakistani safety officers acknowledged clashes at a number of border areas, stating they have been responding forcefully. “Tonight, Taliban forces started firing at a number of border factors. We retaliated with artillery at 4 areas alongside the border,” a Pakistani authorities official advised the Guardian.
“We won’t tolerate any aggression from the Afghan Taliban inside our territory. Pakistani forces responded with heavy fireplace, successfully focusing on a number of Afghan border posts,” the official added.
The Pakistan military used artillery, tanks and each gentle and heavy weaponry of their counterattacks.
On Thursday, two explosions have been reported within the Afghan capital and one other in southeastern Afghanistan. The Taliban-run defence ministry subsequently accused Pakistan of “violating its sovereignty” in reference to the assaults.
Analysts stated current days confirmed simply how deep the border tensions run.
Michael Kugelman, a South Asia analyst based mostly in Washington DC, stated: “Intensifying cross-border assaults on Pakistani forces, unusually intense Pakistani strikes in Afghanistan, and Taliban retaliations have created an ideal storm for bother. Should you throw in the truth that Afghanistan doesn’t recognise the border, in addition to the proliferation of disinformation concerning the disaster, all of it makes for a precarious state of affairs.”
Islamabad has expressed rising impatience with Kabul, refraining from confirming or denying involvement within the airstrikes.
Whereas Islamabad has not explicitly claimed accountability for the assaults, it has known as on Kabul to stop harbouring the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which is accused of killing tons of of Pakistani troopers since 2021 and is believed to have obtained fight coaching in Afghanistan, sharing ideological ties with the Afghan Taliban.
“Fortuitously this disaster, critical as it’s, is poised to de-escalate sooner moderately than later. The Taliban lack the capability to battle the Pakistani army head-on, and as soon as the retaliations appease public anger, they’re prone to recede,” stated Kugelman.
Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, the Pakistani army spokesperson, acknowledged stories of the strikes, and stated: “To guard the lives of the individuals of Pakistan, we’re doing, and can proceed to do, no matter is critical.” He urged Afghanistan to forestall its territory from getting used for terrorism in opposition to Pakistan.
Imtiaz Gul, a safety analyst based mostly in Islamabad, stated: “I believe what we have now seen in these few hours is a logical conclusion of the tensions that had been brewing up between the 2 nations, notably after the kinetic assaults on TTP hideouts and the continual refusal of the Afghan regime to take demonstrable conclusive motion in opposition to the TTP, which is spearheading the terrorist assaults in Pakistan.”
Relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan have been strained in current months as a result of Islamabad’s accusations that Kabul is harbouring TTP, which carried out assaults on Pakistan.
Kugelman believes for Pakistan “the danger is that its current strikes in Afghanistan will galvanise TTP to hold out reprisals, which might invite additional and maybe extra intense Pakistani operations in Afghanistan.” He stated: “After which the cycle might play out once more. There aren’t any winners or straightforward long-term options right here.
“If we see de-escalation now, we’re nowhere close to being out of the woods.”
The 2 nations share a virtually 2,600km (1,600 miles) rugged and mountainous border often called the Durand Line.
Gul stated: “I believe Pakistan’s persistence had been sporting skinny. And that’s why they principally determined to take direct motion themselves in opposition to TTP leaders. And now, clearly, the Taliban would say that it was a retaliatory assault, retaliatory motion.”

