Conflict: | 2024 Afghanistan–Pakistan skirmishes |
Partof: | Afghanistan-Pakistan skirmishes – Insurgency in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Insurgency in Balochistan |
Date: | 16 March – 19 March 2024[1] [2] |
Combatant1: | Afghanistan |
Combatant2: | Pakistan |
Combatant3: | Pakistani Taliban BLA (alleged)[3] |
Commander1: | Hibatullah Akhundzada Hasan Akhund |
Commander2: | Asif Ali Zardari Shehbaz Sharif General Asim Munir Zaheer Ahmad Babar Adm. Naveed Ashraf |
Commander3: | Noor Wali Mehsud Sehra alias Janan Abdullah Mehsud Bashir Zeb |
Units1: | Afghan Armed Forces
Pakistani Taliban militants
----- BLA militants
|
Units2: | Pakistan Armed Forces |
Units3: | TTP forces BLA forces |
Casualties1: | Total: 1 killed Border clashes: 1 Afghan army soldier killed |
Casualties2: | Total: 27 killed or wounded Border clashes: 1 Pakistani soldier killed 2 Pakistani soldiers injured Subsequent militant attacks: 8 Pakistani soldiers killed 7 Pakistani policemen killed 3 Pakistani soldiers wounded 6 Policemen wounded |
Casualties3: | Total Militant Casualties: 61 killed or wounded 14 BLA militants killed 37 TTP-affiliated militants killed (Pakistani claim) 10 TTP militants injured (Pakistani claim) Total Civilian Casualties: 62 killed or wounded 8 Afghan civilians killed (Afghan claim) 5 Chinese civilians killed 13 Pakistani civilians killed 36 Pakistani civilians wounded |
Place: | North Waziristan, South Waziristan, Wana, Dera Ismail Khan, Gwadar, Turbat, Shangla, Khost, Paktika, and along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border |
Result: | Status quo ante bellum |
The 2024 Afghanistan–Pakistan skirmishes were a series of armed clashes consisting of cross-border airstrikes and exchanges of gunfire between Afghanistan and Pakistan. The conflict also separately includes the BLA, and Pakistani Taliban. The skirmishes took place over many locations along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, including North Waziristan, South Waziristan, Wana, Dera Ismail Khan, Shangla, Khost, and Paktika.[4] Subsequent attacks were also launched in Turbat and Gwadar in Balochistan province, by the Balochistan Liberation Army. Militant attacks on CPEC and Pakistani military bases accommodating US aircraft pose a threat to Chinese and American interests in Pakistan.[5] [6] [7]
These skirmishes mark the second round of air strikes by Pakistan on the sovereign soil of Afghanistan in a period less than two years. The first similar Pakistani airstrikes on Afghan soil came in 2022.[8]
See main article: Afghanistan–Pakistan relations and International relations with the Taliban. While Pakistan has been accused of supporting the Afghan Taliban in the past, after the Taliban returned to power in 2021, Afghanistan and Pakistan have repeatedly broken out border conflicts.[9] The Pakistani government accuses the Afghan Taliban authorities of harboring the Pakistani Taliban rebels in its growing insurgency.[10]
On 16 March 2024, militants detonated a truck bomb and fired at Pakistani soldiers at a border checkpost. Five Pakistani soldiers were killed in the truck bombing, and two more were killed in the firing. Six attackers were also killed, according to Pakistan Army, who stated that the attackers used Afghanistan as a base for the attack. A militant group known as Jaish-e-Fursan-e-Muhammad took responsibility for the attack; Pakistani officials believe the members to be part of the Pakistani Taliban (TTP).[11] [12] Afghanistan led by the Taliban denied that the perpetrators were from their territory.[13] On 17 March 2024, President of Pakistan Asif Ali Zardari vowed strong retaliation against perpetrators of the attack.[14]
On 18 March 2024, in response to the attack from Afghanistan, Pakistan Air Force carried out two intelligence based airstrikes on Afghanistan's eastern border provinces of Khost and Paktika. The Afghan government claim that Pakistan killed five women and three children.[15] Pakistan denies this, claiming that it killed terrorists instead while targeting the Hafiz Gul Bahadur militant group, a splinter organization of the Pakistani Taliban, and that it had successfully killed Sehra alias Janan, a high-value target commander. Another commander, Abdullah Mehsud, was claimed to have been killed, but later released a video refuting the claim. It was also reported that Mehsud's house was targeted in which his wife and a minor son was killed. Pakistan went on to blame the Pakistani Taliban and its splinter militias for the deaths of hundreds of Pakistani civilians, and claimed that they used Afghanistan as a base and that they had support from within the Taliban.[16] [17]
In response to the airstrikes, the Afghan Defense Ministry stated it was targeting numerous Pakistani positions across the border. Mortar firing from the Afghan side injured more than four civilians and three military personnel in Kurram District.[18] A Pakistani captain was also killed and 2 other soldiers injured by the shelling.[19] Taliban officials did not disclose their losses, however, the local Afghans reported the death of a soldier of the Afghan army in the clashes. Skirmishes were also reported in the hilly areas surrounding the Angoor Adda border crossing of South Waziristan but no casualties were reported .[20] It was also reported that in the areas around Wanna, the artillery munitions struck close to the bunkers on both sides of the border but no casualties were reported.
On March 20, separatist militants belonging to Balochistan Liberation Army attacked the Gwadar port complex. The attack failed due to the rapid response of the Pakistani security forces. The clash killed eight BLA militants and two Pakistani soldiers. The Chief Minister of Balochistan claimed that the BLA attackers came from Afghanistan and were provided shelter by the Afghan government.[21]
On 22 March, a suicide bomber rammed his vehicle into a military convoy passing through Dera Ismail Khan; this attack resulted in the death of two Pakistani soldiers and wounding of 15 others.[22] In response to this attack Pakistan vowed a strong retaliation against terrorism.[23]
On 25 March, Balochistan Liberation Army's Majeed Brigade attacked Pakistan's second largest Naval Base PNS Siddique in Turbat which houses American as well as Chinese aircraft.[5] This attack was foiled by Pakistani Security forces.[24] In this attack, 6 BLA militants were killed by the Frontier Corps outside the perimeter of the base while one Pakistani soldier was killed.[25]
See main article: 2024 Shangla bombing. On 26 March 2024, in Shangla District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, a suicide bomber attacked a bus transporting five Chinese laborers and their Pakistani driver on their way to the Dasu Dam, killing all of them.[26] [27] [28] [29] [30] [31] [32] [33] Pakistan police detained more than 12 people, including some Afghan nationals. But the Taliban government in Afghanistan has repeatedly denied giving safe haven to militants.[34]