Operation Ghazab Lil Haq (Pakistan - Afghanistan War)

Yes we can bomb afghanistan properly.. infact we lit up 300 Taliban in 2 days is testament to that fact


The problem is there is 0 Political Will to do so.. and there is 100% an afghan lobby in GHQ
It’s not really about “political will.” It’s about the political cost.

A large, sustained bombing campaign in Afghanistan isn’t something Pakistan can do in a vacuum, because even our friends would push back hard, each for their own strategic reasons.

China, for example, worries about the endgame. Beijing’s fear is that if a hostile or NRF-aligned setup ever gains ground, it could open the door for the Americans to re-enter Afghanistan in some form, using bases for surveillance and THAAD infrastructure aimed at monitoring China’s western regions.

For KSA, Qatar, and Turkey, Afghanistan is seen as a place where influence, networks, and future proxy manpower can be cultivated.

Its a slippery slope.
 
Patience is a virtue bro ....NRF guys , all of a sudden , are not perking up for no reason... something is cooking , keep the popcorns handy.

Good observation!!

Oh, here is a pic of the Afghanistan national flag. Never seen such a richly symbolic flag of a nation so bereft of human and natural resources, of a land where even the universities find volunteer suicide bombers, of a land where the rulers think women should not educate beyond primary education...

The grandiose symbology of the Afghan flag is reflected in the delusions of the current Taliban leadership: "We are the graveyard of the Empires'. Yes, 'graveyard' is all you are, rich flag notwithstanding.
Maybe change the flag to skeletons in a graveyard! More appropriate.


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The Balochistan Diaries (TBD)
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UPDATE :
Afghan Taliban forces initiated unprovoked firing on Pakistani border posts in the Jarobi Sector of Landi Kotal, prompting a strong and effective response from the Pakistani side. In the retaliatory action, two Afghan border posts and one tank were completely destroyed.

Reports indicate that at least 11 Taliban personnel were killed and several others injured. Pakistan Armed Forces remain on high alert and continue to closely monitor the situation along the Pak-Afghan border.
 
The average Tajik/farsiwan hates Pakistan. I wouldn't keep my hopes up. Talibs or NRF, they both have their own interests, for now NRF's align with ours. If history's our guide, they'll be the same if not worse than Talibs in power.

Maybe the Tajiks hate Pakistan because Pakistan had always favored the Pashtuns? Cause and effect?
I posted a video of Pakistan's Pashtun analyst Hassan Khan above. He is generally sympathetic to the Pashtun causes but even he is conceding that the Tajiks and Uzbeks are generally more progressive in their policies.
Perhaps Pakistan should work to form a coalition of the saner elements of Afghan Pashtun with the Tajiks/Uzbeks etc; the non Pashtuns are a majority anyway.
 
Who is "you"?

The Pathan part of the establishment pushed them into power, keeping the border wide open for them, culiminating in their poster child Imran Khan begging the world for them.
This is all KP's fault and now they are hiding away from responsibility playing victim and identity politics.

The re-incarnation of Mujib ur Rehman, due to geographical reasons, just can't find another Indira Gandhi!
 
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Maybe the Tajiks hate Pakistan because Pakistan had always favored the Pashtuns? Cause and effect?
I posted a video of Pakistan's Pashtun analyst Hassan Khan above. He is generally sympathetic to the Pashtun causes but even he is conceding that the Tajiks and Uzbeks are generally more progressive in their policies.
Perhaps Pakistan should work to form a coalition of the saner elements of Afghan Pashtun with the Tajiks/Uzbeks etc; the non Pashtuns are a majority anyway.

wakkan-e1613367539745.webp

If Pakistan were to align with the NRF, the Wakhan Corridor would likely be the most strategically significant approach. The area is largely non-Pashtun and sits at a junction bordering Tajikistan on one side and Pakistan on the other.

With Tajik cooperation, it could become a key channel for coordination , training supply and support. It also offers terrain and positioning that would make it harder for the TTA to outflank NRF elements compared to other routes.
 
I am from Balochistan. I know better than most here how easy it is to cross the border. If locals can do it, then insurgents can do it much easily.
70 saal say border hi nahi control ho paya? Smuggling to ruki nahi abhi tk.
Drones are dirt cheap these days.

The border is impossible to seal. Impossible! You and others could benefit from studying the US-Mexico border and the Pakistan-Afghan border is far more difficult to control even if angels were guarding the border from both sides. Look at the terrain, the geography, the ravines, the forests, the mountains, the streams, the houses straddling, the length of the border...
There is no fence in the world unless it is 3 feet concrete thick, goes 10 feet into the ground, 20 feet above ground, manned every 1 KM is going to stop people. Human beings are incredible in finding their ways around obstacles and all it would take would be a few hundreds every month from Afghanistan to manage to cross into Pakistan to blow themselves up.
 
We cant even bomb Afghanistan properly
Bomb "properly" means what? You always want to keep a door open so both sides can climb down the escalation ladder. Our purpose is not to kill Afghans at random. We targeted TTP on their soil. There are only so many targets of opportunity available at any given time.

TTP have made a self-admission that they were training on the Afghan soil.
 
Maybe the Tajiks hate Pakistan because Pakistan had always favored the Pashtuns? Cause and effect?

Usually it's just ingrained racism deep down on a societal level, even with the highly educated one's. I have been close with some those lot to know that very well. And ofcourse Pakistan favouring Pashtuns does play a part.

Perhaps Pakistan should work to form a coalition of the saner elements of Afghan Pashtun with the Tajiks/Uzbeks etc; the non Pashtuns are a majority anyway.

Seems to be going that route. Nonetheless we would have to work with the Pashtuns. They are very dominant in Afg and we happen to share our second largest ethnic group with them.
 
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If Pakistan were to align with the NRF, the Wakhan Corridor would likely be the most strategically significant approach. The area is largely non-Pashtun and sits at a junction bordering Tajikistan on one side and Pakistan on the other.

With Tajik cooperation, it could become a key channel for coordination , training supply and support. It also offers terrain and positioning that would make it harder for the TTA to outflank NRF elements compared to other routes.
NRF ? The same people you undermined for 20 years by supporting the Taliban ? I will give you a hint how it will end. The NRF will use Pakistan to achieve its goals then tell Pakistan to get lost, just like all the other Afghans.
 

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