Foreign office disputes US media reports linking Delaware gun suspect to Pakistan

The collage of images shows suspect Luqmaan Khan and the firearms confiscated by the New Castle County Police Department on December 2, 2025. (New Castle County Police Department)
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Updated 04 December 2025
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Foreign office disputes US media reports linking Delaware gun suspect to Pakistan

  • FO says Wilmington man charged with illegal machine-gun possession is Afghan, not Pakistani
  • US media had described him as Pakistan-origin, case follows separate fatal attack blamed on Afghan asylee

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office said Thursday that a man charged in the US with illegally possessing firearms and carrying a notebook describing attack methods and a layout of a police station was Afghan, disputing US media reports linking him to Pakistan.

Luqmaan Khan, 25, was arrested on November 24 after police in New Castle County found him parked after hours in Canby Park West and later discovered multiple loaded Glock magazines, an armored ballistic plate and a handwritten notebook discussing attack methods and entry points to a University of Delaware police facility, according to a statement from the US Attorney’s Office for Delaware this week. 

Several US media outlets described Khan as “Pakistan-origin.” 

“According to our investigations he is Afghan national. He stayed in Pakistan as a refugee for a few years with his family before leaving for the US,” Pakistan Foreign Office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi told Arab News.




The image released by the New Castle County Police Department on December 2, 2025, shows firearms possessed by Luqman Khan, who was arrested on November 24, 2025, following a traffic stop in Wilmington, Delaware. (New Castle County Police Department)

Afghan authorities have not yet commented publicly on Khan’s nationality.

The arrest comes less than two weeks after a separate case involving Rahmanullah Lakanwal, an Afghan asylee accused of shooting two US National Guard soldiers on November 26. One of the injured officers later died.

Following that incident, the US Citizenship and Immigration Services halted asylum decisions for migrants from 19 “high-risk” countries, including Afghanistan, a policy shift announced after the shooting and signed off by the Trump administration.

Pakistan has repeatedly argued that militancy linked to Afghan networks is often incorrectly attributed to Pakistan due to decades of refugee movement, and Islamabad last year began a controversial nationwide expulsion of undocumented Afghans.

Pakistan has long warned of rising militancy and radicalization linked to Afghanistan since the Taliban takeover in 2021. Kabul denies responsibility for attacks outside its territory.


Pakistan military says 13 militants killed in counterterror operations across northwest

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Pakistan military says 13 militants killed in counterterror operations across northwest

  • Military says counterterror operations launched in Bajaur, Bannu, Dera Ismail Khan, Khyber and South Waziristan districts
  • The counterterror operations take place as Afghanistan and Pakistan remain locked in conflict since late last month 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces this week killed 13 militants in five separate counterterror operations in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, the military’s media wing said on Sunday, vowing to eliminate militancy from the country. 

The counterterror operations were conducted on Mar. 6-7, with Pakistani troops killing five militants in the northwestern Bajaur district in the first operation. In two other encounters in Bannu and Dera Ismail Khan district, security forces killed three militants belonging to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said. 

Meanwhile, five other militants were killed in two separate counterterror operations in Khyber and South Waziristan districts in which five more militants were slain. 

“Weapons and ammunition were also recovered from Indian-sponsored killed khwarij, who remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities in the area,” ISPR said in a statement. 

Pakistan’s military frequently uses the term “Fitna al Khwarij” to describe TTP militants. The militant outfit has carried out some of the deadliest attacks against Pakistani civilians and security forces since 2007 in a bid to impose their strict brand of Islamic law across the country. 

Islamabad accuses Afghanistan of sheltering the TTP and facilitating their attacks against Pakistan, a charge Kabul has denied. Pakistan also accuses India of supporting these militant groups, which New Delhi has repeatedly rejected. 

The counterterror operations take place as Pakistan remains locked in conflict with Afghanistan since late February. 

The worst fighting between the two sides began late last month when Afghan forces launched a surprise attack on Pakistani military installations along their shared border. Afghanistan said the assault was in retaliation for Pakistan’s earlier airstrikes in February on what Islamabad described as militant camps inside Afghanistan.

Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said on Saturday that Islamabad has killed 527 Afghan Taliban fighters and injured more than 755 since clashes began.

Afghanistan has also claimed attacking multiple Pakistani military bases and killing several Pakistani soldiers. Arab News has not independently verified the claims by both sides. 

Pakistan has ruled out talks with Afghanistan and said it will continue its military operations in the country till it withdraws support for militant groups that Islamabad says operate from Afghanistan.