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World News Updated Jul 18, 2026

Pakistan's ISKP Patronage: A Global Security Threat Uncovered

A new report from the Middle East Media Research Institute reveals Pakistan's military is extending patronage to the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP) as a calculated tool to pressure the Afghan Taliban and Baloch insurgents. The report details that Pakistan has conducted cross-border airstrikes inside Afghanistan, targeting civilian populations under the pretext of counterterrorism operations. It highlights that Pakistan's relations with the Afghan Taliban have collapsed since August 2021, leading to increased cross-border skirmishes and over a thousand attacks by Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan in 2025. The report warns that the international community must condition aid to Pakistan on verifiable, independently monitored action against ISKP networks to prevent growing instability with global implications.

Pakistan's patronage of terror groups warrants global attention

Washington, July 18

Having harboured terror group Islamic State Khorasan Province, Pakistan's military has recently carried out airstrikes inside Afghanistan under the pretext of counterterrorism. These strikes targeting civilian populations are masked as security operations aimed at exerting pressure on the Taliban government, while projecting resolve to Western audiences, a report has detailed.

"On June 30, 2026, there were reports of cross-border drone activity between Afghanistan, which is under Taliban control, and Pakistan, centred on the alleged hideouts of the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), also known as ISIS-K or Daesh Khorasan. Such incidents have become more frequent in recent years as Pakistan has reportedly devised a strategy to counter the Taliban through other terror proxies in the region," a report in US-based Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) detailed.

"These emerging links between the Pakistan military establishment and ISKP are also leading to increasing instability in the South Asia region. For four decades, Pakistan has been described by analysts as using the same playbook against India and in Afghanistan: Cultivate terror proxies, deploy them selectively, and then perform just enough counterterrorism theatre to retain international legitimacy," it added.

According to the report, the available evidence indicates that Pakistan is extending patronage to ISKP - not out of ideological affinity, but as a calculated tool to pressure both the Afghan Taliban and Baloch insurgents. It warned that the development warrants international attention due to its potential global implications.

"To understand why Pakistan's military would cultivate ISKP, it is important to understand Islamabad's failure to maintain relations with the Afghan Taliban, which have collapsed since August 2021. Cross-border skirmishes between Pakistani and Afghan forces have grown in frequency and intensity. Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) launched over a thousand attacks in 2025 alone, inflicting casualties on Pakistani security forces across Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. All efforts of mediation between the two countries, including the involvement of Qatar, Turkey, and China, have yielded no progress," the report noted.

"Simultaneously, Baloch armed groups have stepped up attacks against security forces and major infrastructure projects in Balochistan, including the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Chinese concerns about the vulnerability of their personnel and projects have been conveyed at the highest levels in Pakistan, placing Army Chief Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir under serious pressure to deliver results," it added.

In response to rising militancy, the report said that Munir has adopted a "hard state" policy of coercion in both Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, further alienating Pashtun and Baloch populations and deepening the crisis rather than resolving it.

"Facing these converging pressures, the Pakistan security establishment resorted to the old playbook by ignoring legitimate political grievances and counterbalancing through new ties with international terrorist outfits like the Islamic State," it stated.

Highlighting Pakistan's backing to terror group ISKP, the report said, "The convergence of these patterns demands a clear-eyed response from the international community. Western governments that channel military and economic assistance to Islamabad must condition that aid on verifiable, independently monitored action against ISKP networks in Pakistan to control growing instability in the South Asia region, which could also have wider consequences for global security."

— IANS

Reader Comments

Vikram M

Great reporting. But I'm skeptical - will the West really condition aid on Pakistan's actions? They've been saying similar things since the 1990s, yet billions keep flowing. The real issue is that Pakistan's military establishment is too entrenched, and no amount of international pressure seems to work. India needs to bolster its own counter-terror capabilities regardless.

Priya S

Shocking but not surprising 😔 Pakistan's military thinks it can control these monsters, but ISIS-K is not like their usual proxies. This could backfire badly, even for their own security. The Taliban and Pakistan are now locked in a dangerous dance, and civilians on both sides of the border will suffer. India must stay vigilant.

Rohit P

The report rightly points out China's role too. CPEC is a huge investment, and if it's vulnerable, Beijing will push Islamabad to act. But Pakistan's "hard state" policy is only alienating Pashtuns and Baloch further. Real peace comes from addressing political grievances, not more bombs. India should engage with both communities diplomatically.

Ananya R

I appreciate the detailed analysis, but we must be careful not to paint all Pakistanis with the same brush. The common people there are also victims of their military's policies. That said, India cannot afford complacency - these terror networks have indirect links to our own soil. The world needs stronger UN mechanisms to dismantle state-sponsored terror.

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

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