Operation Ghazab Lil Haq (Pakistan - Afghanistan War)

I have said this before and will repeat. Pashtunistan , Durand Line , "Pakhtun ultra-nationalist" are mirages. They don't have any traction among Pakistani Pashtuns and never have.

To be frank these things are Punjabi establishment paranoia/machinations. Do you remember "Jinnahpur" ?
With respect

I've come across a few pathaans here in the UK who are traitors.

One even visited Pakistan....on his return I asked him how his trip to Pakistan was. He said you know what brother these borders are all made up by the British we don't accept them bla bla bla...I didn't really make much of it at the time.

Over the years his true colours came out, a proper namak haraami even supported suicide bombings all over Pakistan.
 
I have said this before and will repeat. Pashtunistan , Durand Line , "Pakhtun ultra-nationalist" are mirages. They don't have any traction among Pakistani Pashtuns and never have.

To be frank these things are Punjabi establishment paranoia/machinations. Do you remember "Jinnahpur" ?

I beg to differ... The things you cite such as Pashtun ultranationalism are tangible political realities, whereas the notion of a monolithic "Punjabi establishment" is often more rhetorical than factual....

Yes, the military’s ranks are numerically dominated by Punjabis, largely because Punjabis constitute the country’s largest demographic share.... But institutional power in Pakistan has never operated as an ethnic project in any coherent sense... The establishment functions as a corporate entity, not a provincial or ethnic one...

And Pashtuns have historically been represented in the armed forces in numbers that exceed their proportion of the population, and have played a significant role in its command structures and strategic machinery... Reducing the state’s power dynamics to a single ethnic lens oversimplifies a far more complex institutional reality...
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
@Oscar @Panzerkiel of this gets dragged on wouldn't it give indians funny ideas.

We are not really using most of our military

Our military is still aimed and focused towards India

Most of the conflict against Afghan is being conducted by FC, Drones, PGs, Mirages etc

The idea is FC will take care of the majority of issues on our western border and over time they are very more and more trained and armed


Overall this is a good exercise to get our second army ready for war
 
A message attributed to the T*liban’s intelligence agency has been widely circulated across Afghan groups and numerous online posts. In the message, the public is warned not to share any news or videos related to attacks inside Afghanistan. It further cautions that strict action will be taken against anyone who violates this directive.


lmao we literally share the drone footage
 
That is quite a large military complex. So, something specific about those two buildings ?
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Mujahideen are now begging for ceasefire... bus itna hi keera tha jihad ka

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 

Pakistan bombs targets in Afghan cities, minister calls it ‘open war’​


Pakistan bombs targets in Afghan cities, minister calls it ‘open war’​

Previous










Update
Pakistan bombs targets in Afghan cities, minister calls it ‘open war’

Residents stand on the roof of a mosque damaged during overnight cross-border fighting between Pakistan and Afghanistan in Bajaur, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on Feb. 27, 2026. (AFP)
Next
Short Url
Updated 14 min 28 sec ago
Agencies
February 27, 202613:46






Follow
  • Spokesperson: Afghanistan wants to resolve its latest ‌conflict ‌with Pakistan ‌through ⁠dialogue
  • Major nations concerned ⁠by ⁠the sharp military escalation between the two neighbors
KABUL/ISLAMABAD: Pakistan bombed Taliban government forces in Afghanistan’s major cities overnight, the first time it has directly targeted its former allies, and described the situation as “open war,” raising tensions in a volatile, nuclear-armed region.

The Pakistani strikes hit the capital Kabul and the city of Kandahar, where Taliban leaders are based. It was the first time Islamabad has attacked the Taliban rather than militants allegedly backed by them, a stark rupture in ties between the Islamic neighbors.

Security sources in Pakistan said the strikes involved air-to-ground missile attacks on Taliban military offices and posts in Kabul, Kandahar as well as Paktia province. There were ground clashes in multiple sectors along the border between the Islamic nations.

The Taliban said it launched what it described as retaliatory attacks on Pakistani military installations.

Afghanistan wants to resolve its latest ‌conflict ‌with Pakistan ‌through ⁠dialogue, Afghan Taliban spokesperson ⁠Zabihullah Mujahid ⁠told ‌reporters ‌on Friday, amid ‌intense fighting ‌between the ‌neighbors this week.

Both sides reported heavy losses, issuing sharply differing figures that Reuters could not independently verify.

“Our cup of patience has overflowed. Now it is open war between us and you (Afghanistan),” Pakistani Defense Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif said on Friday.




Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan ‌discussed ‌the conflict ‌between ⁠Afghanistan and Pakistan in ⁠separate calls on ⁠Friday ‌with ‌counterparts from Pakistan, ‌Afghanistan, ‌Qatar, and ‌Saudi Arabia, a Turkish diplomatic ⁠source ⁠said.

The source provided no further details.

Britain also expressed deep concern “by the significant escalation in tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan,” UK Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper said Friday.

“We urge both sides to take immediate steps toward de-escalation, avoid further harm to civilians, and re-engage in mediated dialogue,” Britain’s top diplomat said on X.

Russia also urged Afghanistan and Pakistan to halt cross-border attacks immediately and resolve their differences by diplomatic means.

Russia is the only country to officially recognize the Taliban government of Afghanistan, ‌and also ‌has good relations with Pakistan.

“Of ‌course, ⁠the direct military ⁠clashes that have taken place do not bode well. Therefore we hope that they will cease as soon as possible … Like everyone else, we are ⁠closely monitoring this situation,” Kremlin ‌spokesman Dmitry ‌Peskov told reporters.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said Moscow was concerned ⁠by ⁠the sharp military escalation between the two neighbors.

“We call on our friends Afghanistan and Pakistan to abandon this dangerous confrontation and return to the negotiating table to resolve all differences through political and diplomatic means,” she wrote on Telegram.

Protracted conflict

The strikes threaten to unleash a protracted conflict along the 2,600-kilometer frontier with relations between Kabul and Islamabad ‌shattered by a long-running ‌dispute over Pakistan’s accusation that Afghanistan harbors militants carrying out attacks across the border.

The Taliban have denied ‌the ⁠charge and said ⁠Pakistan’s security is an internal problem.

Pakistan is nuclear-armed and its military capabilities are vastly superior to Afghanistan. However, the Taliban are adept at guerrilla warfare, hardened by decades of fighting with US-led forces, before returning to power in 2021.

Saudi Arabia, Russia, China, and Turkiye were trying to mediate, diplomats and news reports said.

Iran, which borders both Afghanistan and Pakistan, has also offered to help, according to its foreign ministry. The offer came as Tehran holds crucial talks with Washington on resolving their longstanding nuclear dispute and averting new US strikes.

Drone strikes

Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid confirmed Pakistani forces carried out air strikes in parts of Kabul, Kandahar and Paktia but did not give details.

On Friday, the Taliban defense ministry said it “successfully conducted” air strikes using drones to hit military targets in Pakistan. Pakistan’s Information ⁠Minister Attaullah Tarar said the strikes were carried out by Pakistani Taliban militants and all the drones brought ‌down by anti-drone systems with “no damage to life.”

Videos shared by Pakistani security officials showed flashes of ‌light in the night from firing along the border and the sound of heavy artillery. A video of strikes on Kabul, for which Reuters was able ‌to verify the location, showed thick plumes of black smoke rising from two sites and a massive blaze in part of the capital.

Kabul ‌taxi driver Tamim said he was asleep when he heard the sound of an aircraft, which was followed by strikes on what appeared to be a weapons depot.

“We woke up, and the plane came and dropped two bombs, then flew away again. After that, we heard explosions,” he said.

“Everyone, in panic, ran down from the second floor of the house. The ammunition inside the depot kept exploding on its own.”

Reuters witnesses in Kabul said many ambulance sirens could be heard following loud ‌blasts and the sound of jets.

Mosharraf Zaidi, a Pakistani government spokesperson, said in a post on X that the action as a response to “unprovoked Afghan attacks,” adding 133 Afghan Taliban fighters were killed and ⁠more than 200 wounded, with ⁠27 posts destroyed and nine captured.

Mujahid, the Taliban spokesperson, said 55 Pakistani soldiers were killed and 19 posts seized, while eight Taliban fighters were killed, 11 wounded and 13 civilians injured in Nangarhar province.

High security

Clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan in October killed dozens of soldiers until negotiations facilitated by Turkiye, Qatar and Saudi Arabia brought an end to the hostilities.

Pakistan has been on high security alert since it launched air strikes earlier this week that Islamabad said targeted camps of Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP), or Pakistani Taliban, and Daesh militants in eastern Afghanistan.

Kabul and the United Nations said the strikes killed 13 civilians and reiterated it does not allow militants to operate from its territory. The Taliban also warned there would be a strong response.

The government of Pakistan’s Punjab province said it was on high alert for militant attacks on Friday and had conducted a series of security operations, taking 90 Afghan nationals to holding centers for deportation.

A state-run media outlet from Afghanistan’s Nangarhar, Bakhtar News Agency, shared an image of what it said was a battalion of suicide attackers, and quoted an Afghan security source as saying the bombers were equipped with explosive vests and car bombs and were prepared to strike major targets.

Pakistani officials have said in recent days they feared an escalation of militant strikes in urban centers.
 
You are wrong. I am also Pashtun, but Pakistan comes first. The majority of Pashtuns in Peshawar, Mardan, Swabi, Mansehra, Abbottabad, and Swat love Pakistan and are proud of their Pakistani identity. Only a small minority of Pashtuns think the way you described. I leave the PTI from the time when Imran Khan accusing our Army institute and COAS Asim Muneer now he is Field Marshall..so please be careful
Hear hear! We stand as one iron wall. Let the devils to our east and west even dare to approach it.
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
With respect

I've come across a few pathaans here in the UK who are traitors.

One even visited Pakistan....on his return I asked him how his trip to Pakistan was. He said you know what brother these borders are all made up by the British we don't accept them bla bla bla...I didn't really make much of it at the time.

Over the years his true colours came out, a proper namak haraami even supported suicide bombings all over Pakistan.

There are also many pro taliban Pakistanis abroad too.

This is because they are children of Bin Laden worshippers.

An ideological enemy of Pakistan.

What Pakistan is doing now should have been done in 2005 but KP and Pakistan in general was not ready. We got there in the end. A long bloody road.
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

this will burn the butts of Moeed Pirzada and Adil Raja while sitting in West barking at Pakistan.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Pakistan Defence Latest

Back
Top