Pakistan Tops Global Terrorism Index Amid Worldwide Decline in Attacks

A new report analyzing the 2026 Global Terrorism Index reveals Pakistan as the world's most terrorism-affected country, marking a sharp reversal against a global trend of decline. The country suffered over 1,100 deaths and 1,000 attacks in 2025 alone, its deadliest year in over a decade. Violence remains heavily concentrated in the provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, which account for the majority of incidents. The report attributes this sustained crisis to decades of structural policy choices, permissive border conditions with Afghanistan, and fragmented governance that allows militant networks to thrive.

Key Points: Pakistan Ranked World's Most Terrorism-Affected Nation in 2026 Index

  • Recorded 1,139 deaths in 2025
  • 74% of attacks in two provinces
  • Above all nations with score of 8.574
  • Deadliest year since 2013
3 min read

Pakistan topping Global Terrorism Index amid worldwide decline reflects internal failures: Report

Report reveals Pakistan's sharp rise in terrorism deaths and attacks in 2025, ranking it highest globally despite an overall worldwide decline in terror incidents.

"Pakistan now ranks as the most terrorism-affected country in the world. The figures are not abstract. - Greek City Times report"

Athens, March 28

Pakistan's ranking as the worst affected country in the 2026 Global Terrorism Index, despite a global decline in terrorism, exposes its deep-rooted internal challenges. The data in the index underscores both the immediate impact of violence and the long-term repercussions of structural and strategic policy choices, a report has highlighted.

According to a report in Greek City Times, this represents a statistical reality positioning Pakistan at the centre of the global terrorism landscape, shaped by patterns that have evolved over the years and continue to influence its present.

"In a year when much of the world recorded a decline in terrorism, Pakistan moved sharply in the opposite direction. The Global Terrorism Index 2026 presents a stark statistical portrait: Pakistan now ranks as the most terrorism-affected country in the world. The figures are not abstract," the report detailed.

"In 2025 alone, the country recorded 1,139 deaths, 1,045 attacks, 1,595 injuries and 655 hostages. Its score of 8.574 places it above all other nations on the index, marking its deadliest year since 2013. This reversal stands out against a global backdrop of improvement," it added.

The report noted that violence in Pakistan remains geographically concentrated, with the provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan accounting for 74 per cent of all attacks and 67 per cent of total deaths in 2025.

These regions, it said, defined by persistent instability and limited state control, continue to serve as the epicentre of militant activity.

The analysis of the borderlands, the report said, attributes the pattern to decades of permissive conditions along the Afghanistan-Pakistan frontier.

The tribal belt in Pakistan, the report said, long partially governed, provided a safe haven for terror groups, including al-Qaeda, the Haqqani Network and, subsequently, domestic outfits.

"The continuity of ethnic and social networks across the Durand Line has further enabled cross-border movement, complicating enforcement and surveillance. These structural conditions, highlighted in the index, underscore a longstanding challenge: militant networks operating within environments where governance remains fragmented and contested," it mentioned.

The report highlighted that the Global Terrorism Index projects Pakistan's present situation as the cumulative impact of long-term structural and policy decisions.

The identified factors - ranging from permissive border regions to ideological networks and evolving militant ecosystems - reflect patterns that have evolved over decades.

Asserting that the findings are based on consistent trends rather than isolated incidents, the report said, "The rise in attacks, the concentration of violence in specific regions, and the prominence of particular groups all point to a system under sustained pressure. Pakistan's position at the top of the index is not presented as an anomaly but as the result of an extended trajectory. The data suggests that the drivers of this trajectory remain active, continuing to shape the country's security landscape."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The numbers are heartbreaking - over 1100 deaths in one year. These are real people, families destroyed. While the report talks about policy failures, my heart goes out to the ordinary citizens living in fear in KP and Balochistan. No one deserves that.
R
Rohit P
The report calls it "structural and policy decisions" over decades. It's a polite way of saying the state nurtured certain groups for strategic depth and is now reaping the whirlwind. The chickens have come home to roost, as they say. A tragic lesson for any nation.
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Aman W
While the focus is rightly on Pakistan's internal failures, we must also be careful. Some might use this report to justify overly broad generalizations or hate against common people. We should criticize the establishment and policies, not the populace who are suffering the most.
S
Sarah B
Reading this from a development perspective. The concentration of violence in specific provinces shows how lack of governance and economic opportunity fuels instability. It's a complex cycle - instability prevents development, and lack of development breeds more instability. A tough situation.
K
Karthik V
The Durand Line issue is key. A porous, disputed border that nobody properly controls is a recipe for disaster. Until there's a concerted effort by both Pakistan and Afghanistan, with international support, to properly govern these regions, militant groups will always find a safe haven. Tough truth.

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