India strongly condemned Pakistan’s latest airstrike in Afghanistan’s Paktika province. The airstrike occurred amid escalating skirmishes between Pakistani forces and Taliban border guards.
India is yet to officially recognise the Taliban government but forging strong ties with Afghanistan seem to be the way forward, considering their common regional rival Pakistan. Both sides reviewed the security situaton in the region, with Misri saying New Delhi was ready to expand ties with Kabul in political and economic fields.
Justifying its recent airstrikes in Afghanistan's Paktika province, the Pakistan government on Monday stated that it would carry out more such attacks inside the Afghan territory to target Tehreek-e-T
As India deepens its ties with Taliban-led Afghanistan through development and diplomacy, Pakistan faces the unsettling reality of losing its long-held influence in Kabul
People celebrated Afghanistan's retaliation in the country's southeastern Khost province, according to the organizer, Rasheedullah Hamdard.
Pakistan had billed the air strikes in Afghanistan in the second fortnight of December as 'operations in border areas to protect the people of Pakistan from terrorist groups'
India’s MEA condemns Pakistan's airstrikes on Afghanistan that killed 46 people, including women and children, in Paktika province. The MEA urges Paki
To address its terrorism concerns, Pakistan is simultaneously pursuing diplomacy with the Taliban government in Afghanistan and cross-border attacks.
Pakistani military aircraft bombarded Afghanistan's eastern Paktika province on December 26th, killing at least 46 people, most of which were children and women.
After airstrikes in Afghanistan's Paktika province, Pakistan defended its counter-terrorism operations aimed at protecting citizens from threats like TTP. The Pakistani Foreign Office emphasized respect for Afghan sovereignty while highlighting intelligence-based operations.
Taliban claimed that 46 people including women and children were killed in the airstrikes carried out by Pakistan.
Pakistani leaders were once friends of the Taliban in Afghanistan. Now, cross-border violence has become alarmingly frequent.