Operation Ghazab Lil Haq (Pakistan - Afghanistan War)

2026-27 KP police budget is 21% more than last years budget for police. And we are ready to take help from federal if Mohsin Naqvi can send that SHO if he is free from baluchistan now.

Leave the SHO... " YOU " rejected armored LCs that were later transferred to Balochistan and Sindh also asked for some of the vehicles to be redirected to them.


Here is your 21 percent increase in budget in the hands of Talibans.. KP police lost this equipment in a week was most probably stolen.

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There is a lot work that needs to be done and many parameters and protocols set within KP police to ensure better performance and stability.

This isn't a political problem but a law and order problem.. It should be treated as such and provincial govt should not hesitate to ask for necessary aid where required and rather demand it as a right... Instead of boasting about crossing his legs when he's sitting with the " form 47 pm ", he should be advocating for his province... First save the people from ishq e Taliban so that they can die in ishq e Imran later...
 

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Pakistani strikes kill dozens in Afghanistan​


BBC Pashto and BBC Urdu


Getty Images File photo of a soldier standing along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border


Pakistan has long accused Afghanistan of harbouring terrorists who carry out attacks on its soil, a claim the Taliban government rejects.

Pakistan launched airstrikes and sent ground troops into Afghan provinces along its border on Sunday, killing dozens.

At least 36 civilians, including women and children, have been killed and more than 160 others wounded, says Afghanistan's Taliban government, and has condemned it as a "cowardly act" and "a crime and atrocity".

Pakistan's information minister Attaullah Tarar said 29 militants were killed in strikes targeted at their hideouts, adding that the strikes were a response to "recent terrorist attacks against innocent people".

Pakistan has long accused Afghanistan of harbouring terror groups that carry out cross-border attacks, a claim the Taliban government rejects.

A map of where the strikes happened

Kabul, in turn, has previously accused Islamabad of carrying out unprovoked attacks in which civilians were killed - though Pakistan says it only targets militants.
 

Pakistani strikes kill dozens in Afghanistan​


BBC Pashto and BBC Urdu


Getty Images File photo of a soldier standing along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border


Pakistan has long accused Afghanistan of harbouring terrorists who carry out attacks on its soil, a claim the Taliban government rejects.

Pakistan launched airstrikes and sent ground troops into Afghan provinces along its border on Sunday, killing dozens.

At least 36 civilians, including women and children, have been killed and more than 160 others wounded, says Afghanistan's Taliban government, and has condemned it as a "cowardly act" and "a crime and atrocity".

Pakistan's information minister Attaullah Tarar said 29 militants were killed in strikes targeted at their hideouts, adding that the strikes were a response to "recent terrorist attacks against innocent people".

Pakistan has long accused Afghanistan of harbouring terror groups that carry out cross-border attacks, a claim the Taliban government rejects.

A map of where the strikes happened

Kabul, in turn, has previously accused Islamabad of carrying out unprovoked attacks in which civilians were killed - though Pakistan says it only targets militants.
theyve already decided pakistan has to be weakened. Someone is not happy with pakistan's status in the world right now.
 
good to know.

may be you should have not let them in the first place?
we had to because zia ul haq thohught they were brathers. Completely forgetting what they did to us in 1961 and before that and didnt even recognise us in UN when even India did.
 
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Summoned & demaaarcheed? what? How did that help?
 
Leave the SHO... " YOU " rejected armored LCs that were later transferred to Balochistan and Sindh also asked for some of the vehicles to be redirected to them.

And why did they returned them ? Did you even read the article you shared ? Did you even read the stance of KP government upon return ? Or will that bust your bubble and prevent you from getting 2 minutes of pleasure out of this . ???

If you think police is the answer to terrorists armed with night vision goggles, M4 and M16 guns, and no regard for life. Then I can not help you.

Intelligence of police can never be as good as CTD or ISI etc. Police in all these missions will be going blind and will hence lose more men than they are losing today.

Here is your 21 percent increase in budget in the hands of Talibans.. KP police lost this equipment in a week was most probably stolen.

Hence proved my point. No ? Read above Mr. Lacking reading skills. What did i said ? I said NO police is trained and equipped enough to take TTP and other such terrorist elements who have active suppline lines of weapons from afghanistan and have moden fighting equipment left by USA and NATO...

I told you police cant help you much in that. But you were too busy finding something negative so didn't even bothered.
 

Pakistani strikes kill dozens in Afghanistan​


BBC Pashto and BBC Urdu


Getty Images File photo of a soldier standing along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border


Pakistan has long accused Afghanistan of harbouring terrorists who carry out attacks on its soil, a claim the Taliban government rejects.

Pakistan launched airstrikes and sent ground troops into Afghan provinces along its border on Sunday, killing dozens.

At least 36 civilians, including women and children, have been killed and more than 160 others wounded, says Afghanistan's Taliban government, and has condemned it as a "cowardly act" and "a crime and atrocity".

Pakistan's information minister Attaullah Tarar said 29 militants were killed in strikes targeted at their hideouts, adding that the strikes were a response to "recent terrorist attacks against innocent people".

Pakistan has long accused Afghanistan of harbouring terror groups that carry out cross-border attacks, a claim the Taliban government rejects.

A map of where the strikes happened

Kabul, in turn, has previously accused Islamabad of carrying out unprovoked attacks in which civilians were killed - though Pakistan says it only targets militants.
BBC is Indian facilitated. One should be cautious when posting from the BBC. Several articles of theirs have - without evidence - turned the events of our last attack on militant facilities into a de facto "attack on a rehabilitation hospital". No new evidence was brought by the BBC in this regard. Instead, the statement became embedded pseudo-fact in reports about all Pakistan-Afghanistan confrontations since then.

It is a fine example of how insidious weaponised fiction becomes "fossilised" through repetition of citation in unrelated articles.
 

Captured terrorist lifts lid on cross-border plot​

Our Correspondent
June 29, 20

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An injured terrorist arrested following the attack on a Pakistan Rangers, Sindh, camp in Karachi has claimed that he and his accomplices entered Pakistan from Afghanistan after receiving training there, admitting that the banned Jamaat-ul-Ahrar (JuA) planned and coordinated the operation from across the border.

According to sources, the suspect, during interrogation, identified himself as Usman Ali, and said he had travelled from the Jalalabad region of Afghanistan with three associates - Abdul Hadi, Janan and Umar Farooq - to carry out the attack.

Usman claimed Abdul Hadi was killed during the operation, while Janan threw the bomb at the Rangers camp. He also said the group crossed into Pakistan seven days before the attack and stayed with Abdul Hadi, whom he described as a resident of Bajaur.

They were allegedly sheltered in an under-construction building before carrying out the assault. Usman claimed the weapons used in the attack had been brought from Waziristan by Abdul Hadi, who was also familiar with the area and had previously operated in Karachi.

He told the interrogators that he was shot while attempting to flee during the security forces' retaliatory action. During interrogation, the suspect identified himself as a member of the banned JuA and claimed the group's commander based in Afghanistan was known as "Ahrar Maulvi Sahib".
 
According to the suspect, they were trained to manufacture suicide vests themselves and had received instruction from a trainer identified as Umar Qari. He also claimed that all logistical arrangements for the Karachi operation had been finalised in Afghanistan before the group's arrival in Pakistan.

Security analysts said the disclosures pointed to continued cross-border operational networks allegedly involving militants based in Afghanistan. They added that the interrogation supports Pakistan's longstanding position that militant groups continue to use Afghan territory to plan and facilitate attacks inside Pakistan.

They said Pakistan had repeatedly shared what it described as credible evidence of cross-border terrorism with the interim Afghan Taliban authorities and had consistently urged Kabul to take effective action against militant groups operating from Afghan soil.
 
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