Pakistan's Afghan Strikes Risk Regional War as Global Focus Diverts

A Washington-based analyst warns that Pakistan's aggressive military operations in Afghanistan, including a deadly airstrike on a Kabul facility, mark a dramatic escalation that risks a prolonged regional war. The conflict is compounded by one of history's largest forced repatriation campaigns, expelling millions of Afghan refugees back to a collapsing economy under Taliban rule. This combination of intensifying cross-border violence and mass displacement is creating a severe humanitarian crisis that threatens broader regional stability. With global attention fixed on the Middle East, the escalating confrontation risks transforming a bilateral dispute into a wider crisis with consequences extending to Europe and beyond.

Key Points: Pakistan-Afghanistan Conflict Escalates, Risking Regional War

  • Pakistani airstrike killed 400 in Kabul
  • Massive Afghan refugee expulsion underway
  • Conflict shifts South Asia's volatile fault line
  • Risks triggering wider regional migration crisis
3 min read

Pakistan's aggressive military operations in Afghanistan risk severe regional consequences

Pakistani airstrikes and refugee expulsions create a severe humanitarian crisis, threatening to ignite a prolonged regional conflict as global attention is diverted.

"If Western governments continue to treat this conflict as peripheral, they risk overlooking a war that could fundamentally reshape regional stability - Siddhant Kishore"

Washington, March 21

Pakistan's pursuit of aggressive military operations in Afghanistan, if unchecked by meaningful diplomatic pressure, could turn the conflict into a prolonged war with severe regional consequences. This would not only destabilise Afghanistan but also entrench a pattern of coercion that undermines international norms, a report said on Saturday.

"As global attention remains fixed on US-Israeli joint military operations in the Middle East, a far more destabilising conflict is quietly unfolding elsewhere. On March 16, a Pakistani airstrike struck a drug rehabilitation centre in Kabul that reportedly killed nearly 400 civilians, marking a dramatic escalation in weeks of intensifying military confrontation between Pakistan and Afghanistan along the 2,600-kilometre Durand Line," Siddhant Kishore, a Washington-based national security and foreign policy analyst, wrote in 'The Cipher Brief'.

"This is not an isolated incident but part of a broader shift in South Asia's security landscape. The region's most volatile fault line no longer lies along the Line of Control in Kashmir but along the increasingly militarised frontier separating Pakistan and Afghanistan. If Western governments continue to treat this conflict as peripheral, they risk overlooking a war that could fundamentally reshape regional stability and generate consequences far beyond the subcontinent," he added.

The impact of the conflict, the report states, extends far beyond the battlefield as Pakistan's actions towards Afghanistan are now triggering a severe humanitarian crisis that threatens broader regional stability.

"Over the past two years, Pakistan has carried out one of the largest forced repatriation campaigns in recent history, expelling millions of Afghan refugees who had lived in the country for decades. In many cases, Afghan families were forced to leave behind homes, businesses, and property accumulated over generations. These deportations are taking place at the same time as cross-border violence is intensifying, creating a dangerous combination of displacement and instability," the expert detailed.

"Refugees expelled from Pakistan are returning to a country already suffering from economic collapse, international isolation, and fragile governance under the hardliner Taliban government. The sudden influx of returnees is placing immense pressure on Afghanistan's limited resources while fuelling resentment toward Islamabad," he stressed.

The report emphasised that large-scale displacement from Afghanistan has far-reaching consequences historically, resulting in migration to the Middle East and Europe - giving Western governments a direct interest in preventing further escalation.

"More broadly, Pakistan's escalating confrontation with Afghanistan risks transforming a bilateral dispute into a wider regional crisis. The timing of the conflict makes it particularly dangerous. With global attention concentrated on the Middle East, South Asia's shifting security landscape is receiving relatively little scrutiny. This distraction creates an environment in which Islamabad's aggressive policies can proceed with minimal international oversight," it noted.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priyanka N
The forced deportation of Afghan refugees is creating a humanitarian disaster. Where is the international outcry? These families built lives over decades. Sending them back to a broken economy under the Taliban is cruel. Pakistan's actions are making an already volatile region worse. My heart goes out to the innocent people caught in this.
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Rahul R
While the report highlights valid concerns, I feel it somewhat downplays the complex history. The Durand Line has always been a problem. Pakistan's security concerns regarding militant sanctuaries in Afghanistan are also a reality. A balanced solution needs dialogue, not just blaming one side. The West's selective attention is the bigger issue here.
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Sarah B
Living in Delhi, regional stability directly impacts us. If this escalates, we could see another refugee crisis, increased terrorism, and economic disruption. SAARC is already dysfunctional. We need proactive diplomacy from our government to engage with Central Asian nations and ensure India's interests are secure.
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Aman W
The timing is indeed dangerous. With global powers distracted, there's no check on aggression. This could easily spiral. India has always advocated for a stable, peaceful Afghanistan. We must lead the call for international mediation before it's too late. Jai Hind.
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Kavya N
Nearly 400 civilians in one strike? This is horrifying. The report says the most volatile fault line is now there, not Kashmir. That's a significant shift. It shows Pakistan's priorities and methods. The world needs to pay attention and hold them accountable for these actions.

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