Afghanistan Retaliates with Drone Strikes on Pakistan's Kohat Military Fort

Afghanistan conducted retaliatory drone strikes targeting Pakistan's strategic Kohat Military Fort, causing significant damage. The strikes were a response to Pakistani artillery fire in Afghanistan's Khost province that killed four family members. This escalation occurs amid heightened tensions along the disputed Durand Line since the Taliban's return to power in 2021. Pakistan accuses the Afghan Taliban of harboring the Pakistan Taliban (TTP), which has been behind a surge of armed attacks.

Key Points: Afghanistan Drone Strikes Target Pakistan Military Fort

  • Retaliatory drone strikes on Kohat Fort
  • Strikes follow Pakistani artillery fire in Khost
  • Pakistan also targeted Kam Air fuel depots
  • Tensions fueled by Durand Line and Taliban rule
2 min read

Afghanistan launches retaliatory drone strikes on Pakistan, strucks Kohat Military Fort

Afghanistan launches retaliatory drone strikes on Pakistan's Kohat Military Fort after cross-border shelling, escalating tensions along the Durand Line.

"The fort's military installations, the command centre, depots, and soldiers' residential quarters were destroyed - Afghanistan's Ministry of Defence"

Kabul, March 13

Afghanistan conducted retaliatory drone strikes on strategic military centres and installations of the Pakistan army in the Kohath area of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Afghanistan's Ministry of Defence said on Friday.

Pakistan's Kohat Military Fort, a war command centre along the Durand Line, and the office of the fort's commander sustained significant damage during the retaliatory strikes.

In a post on X, Afghanistan's Ministry of Defence said, "The fort's military installations, the command centre, depots, and soldiers' residential quarters were destroyed, resulting in significant human and material losses."

The strikes came after the military targeted various areas of the Alisher-Terezai district of Khost province, near the hypothetical Durand Line, with artillery fire, as per TOLO News. Four members of one family were killed, and three others were injured as a result of the shelling.

The Pakistan Air Force also struck the fuel depots belonging to the private airline Kam Air near Kandahar Airport in Afghanistan.

In a post on X, Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said that this company provides fuel materials for domestic airlines as well as for United Nations aircraft. Zabihullah Mujahid also accused Pakistan of previously attacking the fuel storage of a national trader named Haji Khan Zadah.

This comes amid an increasing exchange of airstrikes between Pakistan and Afghanistan along the Durand Line in February. Pakistan launched air strikes on Afghanistan's capital, Kabul, and other cities as clashes escalate along the two countries' shared border.

The Durand Line dispute and the Taliban's return to power in 2021 have fuelled tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan, with frequent clashes reported.

In particular, Pakistan wants the Taliban to rein in armed groups such as the Pakistan Taliban, known by its acronym TTP, which it says Afghanistan is harbouring. The TTP emerged in Pakistan in 2007 and is separate from the Taliban in Afghanistan but shares deep ideological, social and linguistic ties with the group, as per Al Jazeera.

Armed attacks in Pakistan by the TTP and the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), which operates in the resource-rich Balochistan province, have surged in recent years. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, which border Afghanistan, have borne the brunt of the violence.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The report about civilian casualties in Khost is heartbreaking. Four members of one family? 😔 These tit-for-tat strikes always hurt ordinary people the most. Both governments need to show restraint.
A
Arjun K
Pakistan's policy of supporting non-state actors has come back to haunt them. For decades they used proxies, now the TTP is their own creation causing trouble. Karma is a bitter pill. India must stay vigilant and secure our borders.
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Priyanka N
Striking a fuel depot for a private airline, especially one that services UN aircraft, seems like a reckless move by Pakistan. It shows a disregard for humanitarian operations in an already troubled region.
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David E
While the geopolitical angle is important, let's not forget the human cost. The people of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan have suffered for years. This new chapter of state-on-state strikes will only add to their misery. A peaceful resolution is urgently needed.
K
Karthik V
The Taliban government is showing it won't be pushed around. Pakistan thought they had leverage after helping them return to power, but it's not that simple. Interesting times for regional dynamics. India's diplomatic channels with Kabul need to be active.
N
Neha E
Respectfully, some comments here seem to celebrate the violence

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