Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban say Pakistan strikes kill, injure dozens

Afghan men search for victims after an overnight Pakistani airstrike hit a residential area in the Girdi Kas village of Bihsud district, Nangarhar province on Feb. 22, 2026. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 22 February 2026
Follow

Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban say Pakistan strikes kill, injure dozens

  • Women and children were among the dozens killed and injured in Saturday’s attacks
  • Kabul has repeatedly denied allowing ‌militants to use Afghan territory to stage ‌attacks in Pakistan

KARACHI: ‌Pakistan said it launched strikes on militant targets in Afghanistan after blaming recent suicide bombings, including assaults during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, on fighters it ​said were operating from its neighbor’s territory.

Women and children were among the dozens killed and injured in Saturday’s attacks, the South Asian nation’s ruling Taliban said, in remarks Reuters could not verify, while its defense ministry vowed an appropriate response at a suitable time.

The strikes bring a sharp escalation in tension just days after Kabul released three Pakistani soldiers in a Saudi-mediated move to ratchet down worries ‌following months ‌of clashes along the rugged frontier.

The attacks featured “intelligence-based ​selective ‌targeting of ⁠seven ​terrorist camps ⁠and hideouts” belonging to the Pakistani Taliban as well as Islamic State Khorasan Province along the Afghan border, Pakistan’s information ministry said.

In a statement, it added that it had “conclusive evidence” the attacks were carried out by Khwarij, employing a term by which it refers to the Pakistani Taliban.

They were acting on instructions from “their Afghanistan-based leadership and handlers,” the ⁠ministry said in Saturday’s statement.

Kabul has repeatedly denied allowing ‌militants to use Afghan territory to stage ‌attacks in Pakistan.

A Taliban spokesperson said ​the attacks had killed and injured ‌dozens of people, including women and children, but Reuters was unable ‌to independently verify the remarks.

Afghanistan’s defense ministry condemned what it called the blatant violation of national sovereignty as a “breach of international law, the principles of good neighborliness and Islamic values.”

It added in its statement, “An appropriate and measured response will ‌be taken at a suitable time.”

Among the incidents of strike Pakistan listed were a mosque bombing in ⁠Islamabad and ⁠violence in the northwestern border districts of Bajaur and Bannu.

On Saturday, the military said a suicide bomber in these districts targeted a convoy of security forces, killing five militants in a gunbattle and two soldiers when an explosives-laden vehicle rammed into a military vehicle.

Tension has forced repeated closures of key border crossings, disrupting trade and activity along the 2,600-km (1,600-mile) frontier.

Clashes in October killed dozens before a fragile ceasefire was agreed, but Pakistan continues to accuse Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers of harboring militants who stage attacks inside its territory — a claim ​Kabul denies.


US NATO envoy says allies must ‘pull weight’ after Czech defense cut

Updated 13 March 2026
Follow

US NATO envoy says allies must ‘pull weight’ after Czech defense cut

PRAGUE, March 12 : The United States’ ambassador to ‌NATO said on Thursday that all allies must “pull their weight,” after Czech lawmakers approved a 2026 budget that cuts defense outlays.
Czech Prime Minister ​Andrej Babis’ government, in power since December, pushed a revamped budget through the lower house on Wednesday evening which cut the defense ministry’s allocation versus a previous proposal to 154.8 billion crowns ($7.31 billion), or 1.73 percent of gross domestic product.
That is below a NATO target of 2 percent of GDP already expected before alliance members pledged last year in the Hague ‌to raise defense spending ‌to 3.5 percent of GDP plus ​1.5 percent ‌on ⁠other defense-relevant investments ​over ⁠the next decade.
The Czech Finance Ministry says total defense spending in the budget will reach 2.07 percent of GDP, but the country’s budget watchdog has warned that includes money earmarked elsewhere, like for the transport ministry for road projects, that may not be recognized by NATO.
“All Allies must pull their weight and ⁠honor The Hague Defense Commitment,” US Ambassador to ‌NATO Matthew Whitaker said on X ‌on Thursday with a picture of ​a news headline on the Czech ‌budget approval.
“These numbers are not arbitrary. They are about ‌meeting the moment — and the moment requires 5 percent as the standard. No excuses, no opt-outs.”
European NATO countries are under pressure to raise defense spending amid the Ukraine-Russia war ‌and at US President Donald Trump’s urging.
Babis, whose populist ANO party won elections last year, said ⁠in February ⁠the country was “certainly not” on the path to raising core defense spending to the 3.5 percent target, saying there was a different focus, like on health care.
The budget watchdog on Thursday reiterated “strong doubts” that some spending deemed defense in this year’s budget would meet NATO’s definition.
President Petr Pavel, a former NATO official, has also said defense cuts risked a loss of trust from allies — but has signalled he would not veto the budget.
US Ambassador to Prague Nicholas Merrick said last ​week the Czech Republic may ​slip to the bottom of NATO’s defense-spending ranks.