Pakistan Airstrikes Kill 80+ in Afghanistan, Escalating Cross-Border Tensions

Pakistan has conducted a series of airstrikes inside Afghanistan, killing over 80 people in what it calls a retaliatory operation for recent suicide bombings on its soil. The strikes targeted multiple locations in Nangarhar, Paktika, and Khost provinces, focusing on camps of the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and Islamic State-Khorasan. Pakistani officials, including State Minister Talal Chaudhry, accused Afghanistan of harboring militants and failing to uphold its Doha Agreement commitments. The action marks a significant escalation in tensions between the two neighbors, with Kabul historically rejecting such allegations and calling Pakistan's security issues an internal matter.

Key Points: Pakistan Airstrikes in Afghanistan Kill Over 80

  • Retaliatory strikes for suicide attacks
  • Targeted 7 locations in 3 provinces
  • Focus on TTP and Daesh-Khorasan camps
  • Tensions high since Taliban 2021 return
3 min read

Over 80 people killed in Pakistan's cross-border airstrikes on Afghanistan

Pakistan conducts retaliatory airstrikes in Afghanistan, killing over 80 people and targeting militant camps, escalating regional tensions.

"Afghanistan had become a source of cross-border militancy. - Talal Chaudhry"

Islamabad, February 23

More than 80 people were killed in Pakistan's airstrikes at the seven locations in Afghanistan's Nangarhar, Paktika and Khost provinces, Geo News reported, citing Islamabad's security sources.

Pakistan has conducted multiple strikes in the region in response to recent suicide attacks for which they have blamed Afghanistan.

The targeted locations reportedly included "New Centre No. 1 and New Centre No. 2 in Nangarhar, Khwariji Maulvi Abbas Centre in Khost, Khwariji Islam Centre and Khwariji Ibrahim Centre in Nangarhar, and Khwariji Mullah Rahbar and Khwariji Mukhlis Yar in Paktika."

Earlier, Pakistan's State Minister for Interior, Talal Chaudhry, said nearly 70 militants had been "neutralised" in the cross-border operation.

The government stated that the strikes targeted camps belonging to Fitna al-Khawarij, a term used by Pakistani authorities for the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, its affiliates and Islamic State - Khorasan Province (Daesh-Khorasan).

Speaking to Geo News programme "Geo Pakistan," Chaudhry alleged that Afghanistan had become a source of cross-border militancy. He said Pakistan was taking necessary measures to safeguard its citizens and highlighted that around 70,000 intelligence-based operations had been conducted domestically, resulting in multiple arrests.

Pakistan's Ministry of Information and Broadcasting described the strikes as "precise and accurate," calling them a retaliatory response to recent suicide bombings in Islamabad, Bajaur and Bannu. Islamabad claimed that the attacks were orchestrated by handlers based in Afghanistan and linked to the TTP and Daesh elements.

The strikes reportedly targeted hideouts in the Barmal area of Paktika province, Khogyani district of Nangarhar province, as well as Ghani Khel, Behsud and Argoon areas.

Chaudhry also referred to the 2020 Doha Agreement, stating that the Afghan Taliban had pledged not to allow Afghan soil to be used for terrorism. He alleged that Kabul's interim administration had failed to curb militant activity.

He added that Pakistan had made diplomatic and military-level efforts to address its security concerns and urged political parties to unite against terrorism.

The latest strikes follow a surge in violence in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan provinces. Tensions between Islamabad and Kabul have escalated in recent years, particularly since the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021.

In October 2025, border clashes between Pakistani forces and Afghan Taliban fighters reportedly resulted in significant casualties on both sides. Despite multiple rounds of talks, both countries have struggled to achieve lasting de-escalation.

Meanwhile, Kabul has previously rejected Islamabad's allegations that militant groups operate from Afghan territory, maintaining that Pakistan's security challenges are an internal matter.

The situation along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border remains tense amid continued accusations and counter-accusations between the two neighbours.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Reading this from Delhi. The instability on our western frontier is a constant security headache for India too. These militant groups don't respect borders. Pakistan's actions, while severe, highlight the failure of the Taliban government to control its territory as promised in Doha. A stable Afghanistan is in everyone's interest.
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Rohit P
Frankly, Pakistan is reaping what it sowed. For decades they used extremist proxies as policy tools. Now the same groups have turned against them. It's a classic case of "blowback." My sympathy is with the innocent Afghans caught in the middle. Pakistan's "precise" strikes seem to have very imprecise, deadly consequences.
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Priya S
Over 80 lives lost... each one a son, a father, a brother. The numbers are just too high. Whether they were militants or not, such heavy-handed military action is not the answer. It will only create more orphans and widows who might seek revenge. The region needs peace, not more airstrikes. This is heartbreaking. 💔
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Aman W
As an Indian, our primary concern is that this instability doesn't spill over. The TTP and ISIS-K are threats to the whole region. While Pakistan's frustration is understandable, unilateral cross-border actions set a dangerous precedent. The UN or a regional forum needs to step in to mediate before this escalates further.
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Nikhil C
The report says the strikes targeted "Khawarij" centres. This is a complex theological and militant landscape that most news reports oversimplify. The Afghan Taliban's inability to control these factions, who see

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