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Afghanistan strikes targets in Pakistan, raising cross-border tension

Afghanistan has conducted air strikes targeting alleged hideouts and bases in Pakistan's Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, which are believed to be linked to 'hostile intelligence circles' planning attacks against Afghanistan. These strikes threaten the fragile ceasefire between the two countries and come amid ongoing tensions and failed mediation efforts by China.

The strikes are the latest threat to the fragile ceasefire between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Afghanistan has launched air strikes on what it called hideouts used by armed groups and “hostile intelligence circles” inside Pakistan, Kabul has announced.

The strikes, reported on Friday by Afghanistan’s defence ministry, were launched the previous day. The incident is the latest threat to the fragile ceasefire between the neighbours.

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end of list Hostilities have broken out several times over recent months, killing hundreds of people, and mediators led by China have so far failed to secure an agreement for a settled peace.

The hideouts, located in Pakistan’s Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, both of which share a border with Afghanistan, were targeted by the “air force” on Thursday night, Afghanistan’s defence ministry said in a social media post.

The ministry said that the “bases” had been “allegedly used in cooperation with certain hostile intelligence circles to plan and organise attacks against Afghanistan,” presumably referring to Pakistani intelligence.

Since the Taliban returned to power in 2021, Pakistan has regularly accused Kabul of harbouring armed groups that launch attacks across their shared border, and has carried out numerous air strikes it says are aimed at such forces. Afghanistan has refuted all accusations.

Kabul did not specify how the attack – the first major ‌offensive action claimed by Kabul in months – was carried out.

Afghanistan has no fighter jets but is known to possess at least six aircraft and 23 helicopters, according to data from the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies.

The Taliban forces are also known to have drones that have been used in fighting with Pakistan.

Pakistan’s Information Ministry has rejected Kabul’s report in a statement, according to an unverified report by Reuters news agency.

Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan  have been fraught since the Taliban took power for a second time. Fighting escalated sharply in late February after Afghanistan launched a cross-border attack on Pakistan in retaliation for its air raids.

Islamabad continues to believe that Kabul is harbouring fighters who carry out deadly attacks in Pakistan, especially the TTP. The Afghan government says the issue is Pakistan’s internal problem.

A  fragile ceasefire deal reached in March collapsed after both sides accused the other of violating it. Subsequent efforts to ease tensions, mediated by China, have yielded no results so far.

The  United Nations reported  in May that cross-border fighting had killed at least 372 Afghan civilians and injured 397 in the first three months of 2026.

Pakistan launched air strikes on Afghan provinces last week, which the Afghan Taliban said killed at least 13 people, including 11 children, and injured 14.

Islamabad ‌said the “calibrated strikes” killed 26 fighters and were a response to a recent spate of attacks in the country’s northwest.

“Afghanistan will no longer tolerate any threat to its security and stability. ‌It ‌will use all available means and capabilities to neutralise and eliminate any threat at its source,” the Afghan defence ministry said in its statement on Friday.

Read the full article at Al Jazeera English
Source document: Afghanistan's Defence Ministry Statement

1 reports

Al Jazeera EnglishState / PublicLeft2 days ago
Afghanistan strikes targets in Pakistan, raising cross-border tension

Afghanistan has conducted air strikes targeting alleged hideouts and bases in Pakistan's Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, which are believed to be linked to 'hostile intelligence circles' planning attacks against Afghanistan. These strikes threaten the fragile ceasefire between the two countries and come amid ongoing tensions and failed mediation efforts by China.

Bias read (Left): The article presents the actions of Afghanistan without overtly criticizing them, while emphasizing the fragility of the ceasefire and the failure of international mediation efforts. It uses terms like 'fragile ceasefire,' 'hostile intelligence circles,' and highlights the role of external actors (e

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