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Updated Jun 29, 2026 · 08:25
World News Updated Jun 29, 2026

Pakistan Airstrikes Kill 29 in Afghanistan; Taliban Condemns "Cowardly Aggression"

Pakistani airstrikes on Sunday killed at least 29 people in eastern Afghanistan's Paktika, Paktia, and Kunar provinces. The Taliban government condemned the strikes as a "cowardly act of aggression" by Islamabad. Pakistan's Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said the operation was a retaliatory measure following recent terrorist attacks, including a Saturday attack on a paramilitary camp in Karachi. The strikes have shattered a fragile period of stability and undermined China-mediated peace efforts between the two nations.

"Cowardly act of aggression": Taliban Govt says Pakistani airstrikes kill and wound dozens in eastern Afghanistan

Kabul, June 29

Defending its territory and people, the Taliban administration has exposed the severe violence inflicted by Pakistan, asserting that Islamabad deployed its air force to carry out targeted airstrikes within eastern Afghanistan, causing significant devastation and resulting in dozens of civilian casualties.

According to Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, the aerial bombardment directly hit the eastern provinces of Paktika, Paktia, and Kunar. In a public statement issued on the social media platform X, Mujahid strongly censured the unprovoked military operation conducted by Islamabad.

Condemning the high-altitude assault on residential areas, Mujahid described the state-sponsored military action as a "cowardly act of aggression".

Further details emerging from the region indicate that Pakistan carried out these strikes along its border with Afghanistan on Sunday, resulting in the killing of 29 individuals, Dawn reported.

Seeking to justify the cross-border assault, Pakistan's Information Minister Attaullah Tarar stated on Sunday night that Islamabad's security forces had executed a "well planned intelligence based ground operation" alongside aerial strikes in the frontier zone.

The conversion of this border campaign into kinetic action was a retaliatory measure, the minister claimed, following multiple recent terrorist incidents inside Pakistan. He specifically cited attacks targeting security camps in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Balochistan, and a paramilitary camp in Karachi.

The regional friction had sharply intensified after a Saturday night assault on the provincial headquarters of the Pakistan Sindh Rangers in Karachi's Gulistan-i-Jauhar locality. The Sindh police chief told Dawn that three Pakistani paramilitary personnel and three attackers were killed after militants rammed the main gate with a vehicle, triggering heavy gunfire and explosions.

An affiliate of Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, a splinter faction of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), claimed responsibility for the Karachi garrison breach, Al Jazeera reported. However, rather than containing the local threat, Islamabad chose to project its military power externally into Afghanistan, hitting civilian pockets instead.

This latest unilateral move by Pakistan is projected to severely aggravate the deep-seated tensions persisting between Islamabad and Kabul.

The offensive was executed less than three weeks after Pakistan's military launched strikes targeting what it described as militant hideouts inside Afghan territory.

The deadly bombardment effectively shattered a fragile one-month period of relative stability, which had followed what Islamabad had previously characterised as an "open war" between the neighbouring nations, completely bypassing ongoing global efforts aimed at establishing a durable peace.

The current escalation marks the culmination of months of back-and-forth military engagements. Since February, border skirmishes have claimed hundreds of lives, a violent cycle that originally intensified after Afghanistan was forced to execute retaliatory strikes in response to those earlier air raids.

Multiple phases of internationally mediated peace negotiations have repeatedly failed to secure a sustainable ceasefire due to recurring hostilities.

Although China stepped in to host diplomatic talks between the two nations in April, subsequently announcing that Islamabad and Kabul had committed to curbing further military hostilities and exploring a peaceful resolution, Pakistan's latest assault has thoroughly shattered those bilateral understandings.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Is this really the solution to internal terrorist threats? Pakistan keeps blaming everyone else for its own security problems. First India, now Afghanistan. Maybe they should focus on their own backyard instead of bombing neighbors. The TTP is their creation after all - now they're facing the consequences! 🎯

Michael C

As someone who follows South Asian geopolitics, this is a textbook case of how NOT to handle cross-border terrorism. Pakistan's approach of unilaterally striking civilian areas will only push the Afghan Taliban closer to TTP. The regional stability we all hoped for after the US withdrawal is rapidly unraveling. 🤷‍♂️

Kavya N

China brokered peace talks and within weeks Pakistan violates the agreement? This shows who truly values diplomacy and who prefers violence. India should use this as an example of why we must stay vigilant - if they can attack Afghanistan without provocation, what stops them from doing the same elsewhere? 🚨

Emma D

Interesting how Islamabad calls this a "retaliatory measure" but Afghan civilians are the ones dying. The international community needs to step in and condemn these acts of aggression. Pakistan must understand that bombing your neighbor's territory won't solve your domestic terrorism problem - it only creates more enemies. 🌍

Vikram M

While I strongly condemn any civilian casualties, we must acknowledge that both sides have legitimate security concerns. Pakistan faces real threats from TTP hideouts in Afghanistan, but bombing villages is not the answer. This is why international mediation - perhaps involving India as a responsible regional power - is urgently needed. 🕊️

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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