US vows action if Pakistani Taliban, other militants regroup in Afghanistan

US State Department spokesman Ned Price speaks during a news conference at the State Department, March 10, 2022, in Washington, DC. (Photo courtesy: AFP/File)
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Updated 08 December 2022
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US vows action if Pakistani Taliban, other militants regroup in Afghanistan

  • The Pakistani Taliban last month announced an end to a months-long cease-fire with Islamabad
  • The group has since claimed attacks in northwestern and southwestern parts of the country

ISLAMABAD: The United States (US) will take action if it sees the Pakistani Taliban and other militants regrouping in Afghanistan and using it as a “launch pad for attacks on Pakistan,” a State Department spokesperson said on Wednesday, amid a rise in militant attacks in parts of Pakistan.

The statement came days after the Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), claimed responsibility for an attack that killed three police officers in Nowshera district of Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province last week.

This was the second attack claimed by the militant group after it announced an end to a months-long cease-fire with the government late last month, claiming a suicide attack in the southern Pakistani city of Quetta that killed four people and wounded more than 30.

The US said on Wednesday it believed the Afghan Taliban were either unable or unwilling to live up to the commitments that they had made in a number of areas, including counterterrorism.

“We also have capabilities when it comes to counterterrorism in the region that does not leave us entirely beholden to the Taliban,” State Department spokesperson Ned Price said during a press briefing on Wednesday.

“We will take action in a way that protects our interests.”

The TTP, which wants to impose its own brand of Islamic Shariah law in Pakistan, is not directly affiliated with the Afghan Taliban, but has pledged allegiance to them. The group has carried out some of the bloodiest attacks in the South Asian country since 2007, including a 2014 assault on a military-run school in Peshawar which killed at least 134 students.

Since late last year, the Afghan Taliban had been facilitating peace talks between Pakistani Taliban militants and the government in Islamabad until it collapsed in late November.

Pakistan’s army has also conducted in recent months several operations against the TTP in the restive districts along the country’s border with Afghanistan.

Price said the US had also demonstrated its counterterrorism capabilities in recent months with the killing of the now-deceased Al-Qaeda emir, Ayman Al-Zawahiri.

“It is, of course, our broader goal to see to it that terrorists and others aren’t able to use Afghanistan as a launch pad for attacks on Pakistan,” he said.

“We are determined to work with our partners in the region, including Pakistan, to do what we can to take on the threat of terrorism in the region, and certainly the threat of terrorism that extends well beyond the region.”


Pakistan reviews austerity measures amid Middle East crisis, urges strict nationwide implementation

Updated 11 March 2026
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Pakistan reviews austerity measures amid Middle East crisis, urges strict nationwide implementation

  • Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar chairs review meeting of austerity steps
  • Officials briefed on salary cuts, school closures, four‑day week, petrol conservation

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s government on Wednesday assessed progress on a sweeping set of austerity measures introduced to mitigate the country’s economic strain from sharply rising global oil prices and supply disruptions linked to the ongoing war in the Middle East.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif this week announced a series of austerity steps, including a four‑day work week for government offices, requiring 50  percent of staff to work from home, cutting fuel allowances for official vehicles by half, grounding up to 60  percent of the government fleet and closing all schools for two weeks to conserve fuel amid the global oil crisis.

The measures were unveiled in response to global oil market volatility triggered by the conflict involving the United States, Israel and Iran, which has disrupted supply routes such as the Strait of Hormuz and pushed crude prices sharply higher, straining Pakistan’s heavily import‑dependent energy sector.

“The meeting stressed the importance of strict and transparent adherence to the austerity measures, promoting fiscal responsibility and prudent use of public resources,” Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Senator Mohammad Ishaq Dar said in a statement.

He was chairing a meeting of the Committee for Monitoring and Implementation of Conservation and Additional Austerity Measures, constituted under the directions of the PM, bringing together federal and provincial officials to review execution of the broad cost‑cutting plan. 

Dar emphasized the government’s commitment to enforcing the PM’s austerity steps nationwide. The committee’s review also covered reductions in departmental expenditure, deductions from salaries of senior officials earning over Rs. 300,000 ($1,120), and coordination with provincial administrations to ensure uniform implementation of the plan.

Participants at the meeting reiterated that all ministries and divisions must continue strict monitoring and reporting, with transparent oversight mechanisms, as Pakistan navigates the economic pressures from the prolonged Middle East crisis and its fallout on global energy and trade markets.