Pakistan says ‘disappointed’ as Israeli warplanes resume pounding of Gaza

Smoke rises above buildings during an Israeli strike on Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on December 1, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 01 December 2023
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Pakistan says ‘disappointed’ as Israeli warplanes resume pounding of Gaza

  • War restarts in Gaza Strip after a week-long truce collapsed with no deal to extend it
  • 32 killed in airstrikes barely two hours after truce expired, Gaza health ministry says

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani foreign office said on Friday it was “disappointed” that Israel had started bombing Gaza again as war resumed after a week-long truce collapsed with no deal to extend it.

The Israeli military announced it had "resumed combat operations", accusing Hamas which controls the Gaza strip, of violating the truce first by firing rockets. 

Hamas said Israel bore responsibility for the end of the truce, accusing it of rejecting all offers to release more of the hostages the group is holding in the Gaza enclave.

Barely two hours after the truce expired, Gaza's health ministry reported that 32 people had already been killed in air strikes.

“We are disappointed that after a brief pause, Israel has restarted bombing the Palestinian people,” the foreign office said, calling for a “durable and sustainable ceasefire.”

“The temporary pause offered a crucial respite to the suffering people of Gaza and allowed exchange of prisoners.”

“We are deeply concerned at the escalating Israeli aggression against the West Bank and the escalation of hostile acts against the Palestinian population,” the FO added. “We strongly condemn the Israeli raid in the Jenin refugee camp and acts of violence and repression against the returning prisoners and their families.”

Pakistan called on the international community to enable the “supply of extensive and robust humanitarian assistance; urgent medical aid to the injured; and shelter to those who have been displaced as a result of indiscriminate and inhumane bombing campaign by Israeli occupation forces.”

“Pakistan supports the call for a comprehensive investigation into attacks against medical facilities, schools, mosques, churches, residential buildings and water facilities and urges full accountability for the war crimes being perpetrated in occupied Palestine.”


How do Pakistan and Taliban Afghan militaries stack up as tensions flare?

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How do Pakistan and Taliban Afghan militaries stack up as tensions flare?

  • Pakistan fields 660,000 active troops, 465 combat aircraft and 170 nuclear warheads, dwarfing Taliban forces
  • Afghan Taliban command about 172,000 personnel with limited air capability and no nuclear arsenal

Cross-border fighting between Pakistan and Afghanistan intensified ‌overnight, with both sides claiming heavy losses and the Pakistani defense minister saying his country was in an “open war” with its neighbor.

As tensions ​persist, here is a look at how Pakistan dwarfs Afghanistan’s military forces and arsenals, according to data from the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies.

OVERVIEW
Pakistan’s armed forces benefit from good recruitment and retention, bolstered by equipment from its main defense partner China. Islamabad continues to invest in its military nuclear programs and is also modernizing its navy and air ‌force.

The capability of ‌the Afghan Taliban’s armed forces, meanwhile, ​is ‌declining, ⁠with ​a fall ⁠in their ability to use foreign equipment that the Islamist group seized when it returned to power in the landlocked country in 2021.
A lack of international recognition for the Taliban administration has also hurt military modernization.

PERSONNEL
Pakistan has 660,000 active personnel in its defense forces, of whom 560,000 are in the ⁠army, 70,000 are in the air force, and 30,000 ‌are in the navy.

The ‌strength of the Afghan Taliban’s military ​is thinner, with only 172,000 active ‌personnel. The group has, however, announced plans to expand ‌its armed forces to 200,000 personnel.

FIGHTING VEHICLES AND ARTILLERY
Pakistan has more than 6,000 armored fighting vehicles, and over 4,600 pieces of artillery.

The Afghan forces also possess armored fighting vehicles, including Soviet-era main battle tanks, ‌armored personnel carriers and autonomous underwater vehicles, but their exact number is unknown.

The precise number of ⁠artillery they ⁠possess, which is of at least three different types, is similarly not known.

AIR FORCE
Pakistan has a fleet of 465 combat aircraft and more than 260 helicopters that include multi-role, attack and transport choppers.

Afghanistan has no fighter jets and no real air force to speak of. It is known to possess at least six aircraft — some of them dating back again to the Soviet era — and 23 helicopters, although it is not possible to assess how many are ​in flying condition.

NUCLEAR ARSENAL
While Pakistan ​is a nuclear-armed country and has 170 warheads, Afghanistan does not have a nuclear arsenal.