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Afghanistan under the Taliban regime discussion

There is nothing as 'Even though'. Stop supporting Taliban terrorists and for heaven's sake speak up for the women in Afghanistan.

I have. What the Taliban are doing is way out of order.

But you trying to score cheep points, by comparing this to the awful brutality the Palastanians facing
 
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Suicide bomb kills Taliban minister in Kabul

Taliban refugee minister Khalil Haqqani has been killed in a suicide bombing inside the interior ministry in Kabul, the movement's most high profile casualty since it returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021.

Six others died in the blast as Haqqani was leaving his office, interior ministry sources said.

Khalil Haqqani was a top member of a powerful faction in the Taliban called the Haqqani network, and was designated a global terrorist by the US.

The Islamic State group (IS) later claimed responsibility for the attack.

According to a report issued by IS's "news agency" Amaq, an IS militant waited outside the minister's office and detonated explosives as he walked out.

A Taliban spokesperson confirmed that Haqqani was killed by IS, Reuters news agency reported.

Khalil Haqqani's brother Jalaluddin was a famous guerrilla leader who fought Soviet troops in Afghanistan in the 1980s, and founded the Haqqani network which was behind many attacks during the Taliban's 20-year insurgency.

Sirajuddin Haqqani, the minister's nephew and son of Jalaluddin, is the current interior minister in the Taliban government.

While the overall security situation in Afghanistan has improved since the Taliban gained complete control with the full withdrawal of foreign troops in 2021, there continue to be dozens of bombings and suicide attacks in the country each year.

Many have been claimed by Islamic State Khorasan Province, or ISKP, the regional affiliate of the so-called Islamic State group, a major rival of the Taliban.

BBC
 
Suicide bomb kills Taliban minister in Kabul

Taliban refugee minister Khalil Haqqani has been killed in a suicide bombing inside the interior ministry in Kabul, the movement's most high profile casualty since it returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021.

Six others died in the blast as Haqqani was leaving his office, interior ministry sources said.

Khalil Haqqani was a top member of a powerful faction in the Taliban called the Haqqani network, and was designated a global terrorist by the US.

The Islamic State group (IS) later claimed responsibility for the attack.

According to a report issued by IS's "news agency" Amaq, an IS militant waited outside the minister's office and detonated explosives as he walked out.

A Taliban spokesperson confirmed that Haqqani was killed by IS, Reuters news agency reported.

Khalil Haqqani's brother Jalaluddin was a famous guerrilla leader who fought Soviet troops in Afghanistan in the 1980s, and founded the Haqqani network which was behind many attacks during the Taliban's 20-year insurgency.

Sirajuddin Haqqani, the minister's nephew and son of Jalaluddin, is the current interior minister in the Taliban government.

While the overall security situation in Afghanistan has improved since the Taliban gained complete control with the full withdrawal of foreign troops in 2021, there continue to be dozens of bombings and suicide attacks in the country each year.

Many have been claimed by Islamic State Khorasan Province, or ISKP, the regional affiliate of the so-called Islamic State group, a major rival of the Taliban.

BBC

I take anything BBC says as a pinch of salt.
 
Suicide bomb kills Taliban minister in Kabul

Taliban refugee minister Khalil Haqqani has been killed in a suicide bombing inside the interior ministry in Kabul, the movement's most high profile casualty since it returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021.

Six others died in the blast as Haqqani was leaving his office, interior ministry sources said.

Khalil Haqqani was a top member of a powerful faction in the Taliban called the Haqqani network, and was designated a global terrorist by the US.

The Islamic State group (IS) later claimed responsibility for the attack.

According to a report issued by IS's "news agency" Amaq, an IS militant waited outside the minister's office and detonated explosives as he walked out.

A Taliban spokesperson confirmed that Haqqani was killed by IS, Reuters news agency reported.

Khalil Haqqani's brother Jalaluddin was a famous guerrilla leader who fought Soviet troops in Afghanistan in the 1980s, and founded the Haqqani network which was behind many attacks during the Taliban's 20-year insurgency.

Sirajuddin Haqqani, the minister's nephew and son of Jalaluddin, is the current interior minister in the Taliban government.

While the overall security situation in Afghanistan has improved since the Taliban gained complete control with the full withdrawal of foreign troops in 2021, there continue to be dozens of bombings and suicide attacks in the country each year.

Many have been claimed by Islamic State Khorasan Province, or ISKP, the regional affiliate of the so-called Islamic State group, a major rival of the Taliban.

BBC

So even Taliban is not safe in Afghanistan. :yk
 

Chinese mine worker killed in ISIS attack in Afghanistan​

Police said on Wednesday a Chinese mine worker was killed in an attack in Afghanistan which the banned militant Islamic State (ISIS) group later claimed responsibility for, as the Taliban government attempts to project an image of security to encourage investment from Beijing.

The Chinese citizen was travelling the previous evening in northern Takhar province bordering Tajikistan when he was killed by “unknown armed men”, provincial police spokesman Mohammad Akbar Haqqani told AFP.

He said the man was travelling “for an unknown reason” and without informing security officials, who typically accompany Chinese nationals on trips in the country. A translator travelling with the man was unharmed, Haqqani added.

ISIS’s regional chapter claimed responsibility for the attack later today, according to monitor SITE.

“The IS (Islamic State) issued a communique … reporting that fighters fired at a vehicle carrying a ‘communist Chinese’ in Takhar, a province in which the group was last active in 2022,” the monitor said.

Interior Ministry Spokesperson Abdul Mateen Qani confirmed the details of the killing and said the Chinese citizen was a business owner with a contract to mine in Afghanistan.

China’s embassy in Kabul did not immediately respond to a request for comment by AFP.

The Taliban government are touting Afghanistan’s vast natural resources, largely untapped during two decades of war, as a lifeline for the ravaged economy and a lucrative opportunity for foreign speculators.

Despite lingering security concerns, neighbouring China is emerging as a potential investment partner.

Chinese and Afghan officials gathered in Kabul a day ago for an event marking 70 years of diplomatic ties.

“I would like to assure my Chinese friends that there is peace and security in Afghanistan,” Deputy Foreign Minister Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai told attendees.

“We invite Chinese businessmen and investors to come and invest in Afghanistan with confidence,” he said.

Security has drastically improved in Afghanistan since foreign troops withdrew in 2021 and the Taliban ended their insurgency as they swept back to power.

But the regional chapter of ISIS regularly stages attacks on civilians, security forces, Taliban government officials and foreigners in Afghanistan.

At least five Chinese nationals were wounded when gunmen stormed a Kabul hotel popular with Beijing businessmen in a 2022 attack claimed by IS.

Source: DAWN
 
ICC prosecutor seeks arrest of Taliban leaders for 'persecuting Afghan girls and women'

The top prosecutor at the International Criminal Court (ICC) says he will seek arrest warrants against senior leaders of the Taliban government in Afghanistan over the persecution of women and girls.

Karim Khan said there were reasonable grounds to suspect Supreme Leader Haibatullah Akhundzada and chief justice Abdul Hakim Haqqani bore criminal responsibility for crimes against humanity on gender grounds.

ICC judges will now decide whether to issue an arrest warrant.

The ICC investigates and brings to justice those responsible for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes, intervening when national authorities cannot or will not prosecute.

In a statement, Mr Khan said the two men were "criminally responsible for persecuting Afghan girls and women, as well as persons whom the Taliban perceived as not conforming with their ideological expectations of gender identity or expression, and persons whom the Taliban perceived as allies of girls and women".

Opposition to the Taliban government is "brutally repressed through the commission of crimes including murder, imprisonment, torture, rape and other forms of sexual violence, enforced disappearance, and other inhumane acts", he added.


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Wonder why don't we discuss much on this topic. It seems to be posters here are more busy with Kangana Ranawat and don't want to discuss the like minded topics.
 
Wonder why don't we discuss much on this topic. It seems to be posters here are more busy with Kangana Ranawat and don't want to discuss the like minded topics.

Just like you avoided Indian call center scam thread? :qdkcheeky

People can focus on any thread they want. This is a big forum. Hundreds of threads. Not possible to be active on all threads.
 
Just like you avoided Indian call center scam thread? :qdkcheeky

People can focus on any thread they want. This is a big forum. Hundreds of threads. Not possible to be active on all threads.

When did I avoid scam call centre thread? I have already posted there saying scammers are scum to the society and they do exist in several countries. Generalizing it with Indians is wrong as not even 0.01% of hard working Indians are scammers. I was defending my country India against that allegation.

Are you saying like I defended India in that thread as my own, you won't speak out against Taliban since they are your own? Holy hell...
 

Afghan Taliban reject ICC arrest warrant as ‘politically motivated’​

Afghanistan’s Taliban government said on Friday an arrest warrant sought by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for its leaders was “politically motivated”.

It comes a day after the ICC chief prosecutor said he was seeking warrants against senior Taliban leaders in Afghanistan over the persecution of women — a crime against humanity.

“Like many other decisions of the (ICC), it is devoid of a fair legal basis, is a matter of double standards and is politically motivated,” said a statement from the Afghan Foreign Ministry posted on social media platform X.

“It is regrettable that this institution has turned a blind eye to war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by foreign forces and their domestic allies during the twenty-year occupation of Afghanistan.”

It said the court should “not attempt to impose a particular interpretation of human rights on the entire world and ignore the religious and national values of people of the rest of the world”.

The Taliban swept back to power in 2021 after ousting the American-backed government in a rapid but largely bloodless military takeover, imposing a severe interpretation of Islamic law on the population and heavily restricting all aspects of women’s lives.

Afghanistan’s deputy interior minister Mohammad Nabi Omari, a former Guantanamo Bay detainee, said the ICC “can’t scare us”.

“If these were fair and true courts, they should have brought America to the court, because it is America that has caused wars, the issues of the world are caused by America,” he said at an event in eastern Khost city attended by an AFP journalist.

He said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should also be prosecuted over the country’s military offensive in Gaza, which was sparked by Hamas’ attacks in October 2023.

“They should have brought Israel’s prime minister to the court, because (the government) has martyred tens of thousands of innocent Palestinians, they martyred children and women, but he is walking free because the world’s power is standing beside them,” Omari said.

Source: DAWN
 

Afghanistan’s Taliban govt makes first diplomatic trip to Japan​


A Taliban delegation arrived in Japan on Sunday, marking the first time that the rulers of Afghanistan have made a diplomatic trip outside the region since regaining control of the country in 2021.

The delegation, which includes officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Higher Education, Ministry of Economy, and Ministry of Health, is expected to stay in Japan for a week.

This rare trip comes as part of the Taliban’s efforts to engage with the global community and build diplomatic ties.

While the Taliban has frequently made visits to neighbouring countries such as China, Russia, and nations in Central Asia, its diplomatic outreach to countries outside the region has been limited. The group has only made formal visits to Europe for diplomacy summits in Norway in 2022 and 2023.

Latif Nazari, the Deputy Minister at Afghanistan's Ministry of Economy, shared the delegation's objectives in a tweet, stating that the visit was part of the group’s goal to foster "dignified interaction with the world" and to establish Afghanistan as a "strong, united, advanced, prosperous, and developed" nation. He further added that the Taliban aims to become an active member of the international community.

The Afghan delegation plans to exchange views with Japanese government officials during their visit. They are also expected to discuss potential diplomatic relations and seek humanitarian support, according to Japan's public broadcaster NHK.

Japan's embassy in Kabul had temporarily relocated to Qatar after the Taliban's takeover in 2021. However, the embassy has since reopened and resumed diplomatic and humanitarian activities in Afghanistan.

The Taliban’s visit to Japan comes just days after a deadly suicide bombing in Kabul, for which Daesh claimed responsibility. The attack took place outside the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing and has been part of a growing series of security challenges in the country. Japan's embassy in Kabul condemned the attack, calling for an immediate halt to such acts of terrorism.

This diplomatic trip to Japan is seen as an important step in the Taliban’s efforts to gain international recognition and secure support as it works to rebuild Afghanistan.

Source: The Express Tribune
 
Taliban must think of changing its name. The name carries a negative image worldwide and reminds people of their extremist past.
 
Time for Pakistan to follow suit
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Russia recognises the Taliban: Which other countries may follow?

From China to Iran, several countries have already been engaging with the Taliban. Experts say they could be next.

This handout photograph taken on July 3, 2025 and released by Afghanistan's Ministry of foreign Affairs shows Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi (R) shaking hands with Russia’s ambassador to Afghanistan Dmitry Zhirnov during their meeting at the foreign ministry in Kabul.

Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, right, shakes hands with Russia’s ambassador to Afghanistan Dmitry Zhirnov during their meeting at the Foreign Ministry in Kabul [File: Handout: Afghanistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs via AFP]

Russia has become the first country to accept the Taliban government in Afghanistan since the group took power in 2021, building on years of quieter engagement and marking a dramatic about-turn from the deep hostilities that marked their ties during the group’s first stint in power.

Since the Taliban stormed Kabul in August four years ago, taking over from the government of then-President Ashraf Ghani, several nations – including some that have historically viewed the group as enemies – have reached out to them. Yet until Thursday, no one has formally recognised the Taliban.

So what exactly did Russia do, and will Moscow’s move pave the way for others to also start full-fledged diplomatic relations with the Taliban?

What did Russia say?
The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs released a statement saying that Moscow’s recognition of the Taliban government will pave the way for bilateral cooperation with Afghanistan.

“We believe that the act of official recognition of the government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan will give impetus to the development of productive bilateral cooperation between our countries in various fields,” the statement said.

The Foreign Ministry said it would seek cooperation in energy, transport, agriculture and infrastructure.

How did the Taliban respond?
Afghanistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs wrote in an X post on Thursday that Russian ambassador to Kabul Dmitry Zhirnov met Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi and conveyed the Kremlin’s decision to recognise the Taliban government in Afghanistan.

Muttaqi said in a video posted on X: “We value this courageous step taken by Russia, and, God willing, it will serve as an example for others as well.”

What is the history between Russia and Afghanistan?
In 1979, troops from the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan to establish a communist government. This triggered a 10-year war with the Afghan mujahideen fighters backed by US forces. About 15,000 Soviet soldiers died in this war.

In 1992, after rockets launched by rebel groups hit the Russian embassy in Kabul, Moscow closed its diplomatic mission to Afghanistan.

The Russian-backed former president, Mohammad Najibullah, who had been seeking refuge in a United Nations compound in Kabul since 1992, was killed by the Taliban in 1996, when the group first came to power.

During the late 1990s, Russia backed anti-Taliban forces in Afghanistan, including the Northern Alliance led by former mujahideen commander Ahmad Shah Massoud.

Then, on September 11, 2001, suicide attackers, affiliated with the armed group al-Qaeda, seized United States passenger planes and crashed into two skyscrapers in New York City, killing nearly 3,000 people. This triggered the so-called “war on terror” by then-US President George W Bush.

In the aftermath of the attack, Russian President Vladimir Putin was one of the first foreign leaders to call Bush and express his sympathy and pledge support. Putin provided the US with assistance to attack Afghanistan. Russia cooperated with the US by sharing intelligence, opening Russian airspace for US flights and collaborating with Russia’s Central Asian allies to establish bases and provide airspace access to flights from the US.

In 2003, after the Taliban had been ousted from power by the US-led coalition, Russia designated the group as a terrorist movement.

 
When Hindustanis recognized and legitimized Taliban in the name Afghan-Sanatani brotherhood it was a huge moment which is now leading to all this new good will for Afghanistan.

Once you become a friend of India, prosperity comes. Soon Afghanistan will be blessed by Lakshmi - The Goddess of Wealth creation.
 
British couple held by Taliban 'may die in prison,' son warns

The son of a British couple detained by the Taliban five months ago has told the BBC that he fears they may die in prison.

Peter Reynolds, 80, and Barbie, 76, were arrested on 1 February while returning to their home in central Bamiyan province, Afghanistan. It is not known exactly why they were detained.

Their son Jonathan Reynolds said their health was rapidly deteriorating, with his father suffering serious convulsions and his mother "numb" from anaemia and malnutrition.

The Taliban's foreign minister said they were receiving medical care and that "efforts are under way to secure their release, but the process is not complete".


 
Men celebrate fourth anniversary of Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan

Thousands of men gathered across Kabul on Friday to watch flowers being scattered from helicopters to mark the fourth anniversary of the Taliban’s return to power – a celebration that women were barred from attending.

Three of the six “flower shower” locations were already off-limits to women, who have been prohibited from entering parks and recreational areas since November 2022.

The Taliban seized Afghanistan on 15 August 2021 as the US and Nato withdrew their forces at the end of a two-decade war. Since then, they have imposed their interpretation of Islamic law on daily life, including sweeping restrictions on women and girls, based on edicts from their leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada.

Friday’s anniversary programme, which also included speeches from cabinet members, was only for men. An outdoor sports performance, initially expected to feature Afghan athletes, did not take place.

Rights groups, foreign governments and the UN have condemned the Taliban for their treatment of women and girls, who remain barred from many jobs, education beyond sixth grade and most public spaces.


 
Afghanistan telecom blackout as Taliban shuts off internet

The Taliban in Afghanistan have imposed a nationwide shut down of telecommunications, weeks after they began severing fibre-optic internet connections to prevent what they call immorality.

The country is currently experiencing a total connectivity blackout, internet watchdog, Netblocks reports.

International news agency AFP says it lost contact with its office in the capital Kabul, including mobile phone service. Mobile internet and satellite TV has also been severely disrupted across Afghanistan.

Since seizing power in 2021, the Taliban have imposed numerous restrictions in accordance with their interpretation of Islamic Sharia law.


 

Afghanistan's cellphone, internet services down after Taliban ordered cut, say sources​


The Taliban have ordered internet and mobile phone data services to be cut across Afghanistan, diplomatic and industry sources said on Tuesday, as residents and monitoring services reported no connectivity and disruption to flights and financial services.

The Taliban administration offered no immediate explanation for the outage and could not be reached for comment. The United Nations called on authorities to fully restore connections.

In the past, the Taliban have voiced concern about online pornography, and authorities cut fibre optic links to some provinces in recent weeks, with officials citing morality concerns.

"The cut in access has left Afghanistan almost completely cut off from the outside world, and risks inflicting significant harm on the Afghan people," the UN said in a statement.

Afghanistan is grappling with the aftermath of an earthquake that hit the east of the country, the return of millions of refugees expelled from neighbouring countries, and a drought in the north.

Taliban directives​

An Afghan cell phone services provider, which did not want to be named, said it was working alongside other providers "to manage this sensitive and complex situation".

"We are following directives from the authorities and we hope that all telcos in the country will be authorised to recommence services as soon as possible," the company said.

Internet connectivity in Afghanistan was flatlining around the 1% mark, said NetBlocks, an international internet access monitoring organisation.

Connectivity was cut in phases on Monday, with the final stage affecting telephone services, which share infrastructure with the internet, NetBlocks said in an email to Reuters.

Private channel Tolo News, which warned viewers of a disruption to its services, said authorities had set a one-week deadline for the shutdown of 3G and 4G internet services for cell phones, leaving only the older 2G standard active.

The channel also reported disruption for private banks and the central bank, while Kabul's currency market was working off yesterday's exchange rates.

"We cannot communicate"​

Shabeer, who gave only his first name, said that his job at a private internet service provider had been suspended.

"People today rely on technology, it is the main way to stay connected with the outside world," he said. "No one knows about the condition of their relatives, and even within Afghanistan, we cannot communicate."

Arafat Jamal, country representative for the UN refugee agency, told reporters via satellite link from Kabul that it could no longer reach its frontline aid workers, including those helping with the earthquake response.

"It is another crisis on top of the existing crisis. It is utterly unnecessary for this kind of interruption to take place, and the impact is going to be on the lives of Afghan people," he said, adding that it was seeking a waiver from the blackout from authorities.

Strictures ordered by the Taliban leadership, based in Kandahar, have grown increasingly hardline.

This month, authorities stopped women working for the UN from entering its offices. Earlier, women were banned from many lines of employment and girls from attending high school.

Women's rights activist Sanam Kabiri said the Taliban had already closed schools, universities, recreation, and sports facilities for women.

"The Taliban are using every tool at their disposal to suppress the people," Kabiri, who is based outside of Afghanistan, told journalists in a video posting.

"What else do these ignorant men of another century want from our oppressed people?"

Women faced with curbs on leaving their homes to work had turned to the internet for an economic lifeline that allowed some to work from home.

In recent weeks, the Taliban have engaged with US officials, especially regarding American citizens detained in Afghanistan, one of whom they released on Sunday.

 
Social media content restricted in Afghanistan, Taliban sources confirm

Restrictions have been placed on content on some social media platforms in Afghanistan, Taliban government sources told BBC Afghan.

Filters have been applied to restrict certain types of content on sites including Facebook, Instagram and X, the sources at the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology said.

It is not clear exactly what sort of posts are subject to filtering. Some social media users in Kabul told the BBC that videos on their Facebook accounts are no longer viewable, while access to Instagram has also been restricted.

These restrictions on social media content come a week after internet and telecommunications services were cut off across the country for two days.

The move caused widespread problems for citizens and its end was greeted with celebration.

The 48-hour blackout disrupted businesses and flights, limited access to emergency services and raised fears about further isolating women and girls whose rights have been severely eroded since the hardline Islamist group swept back to power in 2021.

Social media users in Afghanistan have been complaining about limited access to different platforms in various provinces since Tuesday.

A Taliban government source said: "Some sort of controls have been applied to restrict certain types of content on platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, and X.

"We hope this time there wouldn't be any full ban on internet.

"The filtering is almost applied for the whole county and most provinces are covered now."

There is no formal explanation from Taliban government officials for the restrictions.

Cybersecurity organisation NetBlocks said "restrictions are now confirmed on multiple providers, the pattern shows an intentional restriction". Social sites have been intermittently accessible on smartphones, according to news agency AFP.

A man who works in a government office in eastern Nangarhar province told the BBC he could open Facebook but could not see pictures or play videos.

He said the "internet is very slow as a whole".

Another user in southern Kandahar province, who runs a private business, said his fibre optic internet had been cut off since Tuesday but mobile phone data was working, with Facebook and Instagram being "severely slow".

The Taliban government has not given an explanation for the total shutdown last week. However, last month, a spokesperson for the Taliban governor in the northern province of Balkh said internet access was being blocked "for the prevention of vices".

Since returning to power, the Taliban have imposed numerous restrictions in accordance with their interpretation of Islamic Sharia law.

Afghan women have told the BBC that the internet was a lifeline to the outside world since the Taliban banned girls over the age of 12 from receiving an education.

Women's job options have also been severely restricted and in September, books written by women were removed from universities.

BBC
 
Loud explosions heard in capital of Afghanistan

KABUL, Oct. 9 (Xinhua) -- Two loud explosions were heard in downtown Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, at around 9:50 p.m. local time (1720 GMT) on Thursday.

Shockwaves from the explosions were felt inside the Xinhua reporter's residence. Many Kabul residents posted on social media saying they heard blasts, and some local citizens and foreigners took shelter in secure areas.

So far, Afghan authorities have not released any official statement, and there have been no immediate reports of casualties.

Source: Xinhua News
 
Loud explosions heard in capital of Afghanistan

KABUL, Oct. 9 (Xinhua) -- Two loud explosions were heard in downtown Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, at around 9:50 p.m. local time (1720 GMT) on Thursday.

Shockwaves from the explosions were felt inside the Xinhua reporter's residence. Many Kabul residents posted on social media saying they heard blasts, and some local citizens and foreigners took shelter in secure areas.

So far, Afghan authorities have not released any official statement, and there have been no immediate reports of casualties.

Source: Xinhua News
Some random social media accounts attributing it to Pakistan armed forces.
 
Loud explosions heard in capital of Afghanistan

KABUL, Oct. 9 (Xinhua) -- Two loud explosions were heard in downtown Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, at around 9:50 p.m. local time (1720 GMT) on Thursday.

Shockwaves from the explosions were felt inside the Xinhua reporter's residence. Many Kabul residents posted on social media saying they heard blasts, and some local citizens and foreigners took shelter in secure areas.

So far, Afghan authorities have not released any official statement, and there have been no immediate reports of casualties.

Source: Xinhua News
According to sources - a drone Target a land cruiser in kabul belongs to TTP .


:kp
 
When Taliban takeover in Afghanistan, Pakistan posters were doing bhangra over it and talked about "Strategic Depth".

What Went Wrong with Pakistan’s “Strategic Depth” Policy?

Pakistan and the Taliban: A Strategic Asset Turned Strategic Predicament

@The Bald Eagle @HalBass9 did you know the answer

:klopp :kp
 
Ohhh please update the latest situation in Balochistan . Mod will not post anything to show the incompetent of pakistan army.

Ok lets update me about balgatar . Kya ho gya vha pta hai kuch ?

:klopp :kp

Why would I update you with anything? PAF does it for every Pakistani.
 
When Taliban takeover in Afghanistan, Pakistan posters were doing bhangra over it and talked about "Strategic Depth".

What Went Wrong with Pakistan’s “Strategic Depth” Policy?

Pakistan and the Taliban: A Strategic Asset Turned Strategic Predicament

@The Bald Eagle @HalBass9 did you know the answer

:klopp :kp
Imran Khan was jailed Einstein. And then Asim Munir gave Modi a slap 😆
 
@Devadwal probably scouring the internet right now, desperately hunting for a headline that fits his talking point narrative just to debunk something. Relax, bud, give it about five more months before you start trying to counter facts with freshly minted alternative facts. Remember, you’ve got to follow Indian Standard Time for the propaganda to sync properly with your audience.
 
Whether Noorwali is killed or not, I am very interested to know what DG ISPR will say tomorrow in the press conference.

I hope that this animal is dispatched by CENTCOM or PAF or anyone...
 
@Devadwal probably scouring the internet right now, desperately hunting for a headline that fits his talking point narrative just to debunk something. Relax, bud, give it about five more months before you start trying to counter facts with freshly minted alternative facts. Remember, you’ve got to follow Indian Standard Time for the propaganda to sync properly with your audience.
Trusting Pakistan sources is last thing a person can do Even his last moment of Life. Pakistan is fake propaganda factory @Rana is prime example.

:klopp :kp
 
Looks like not a great year for Pakistan so far. India hammering them from Eastern front and Afghanis doing the same from west. Question is how long they can resist.
 
Looks like not a great year for Pakistan so far. India hammering them from Eastern front and Afghanis doing the same from west. Question is how long they can resist.
In coming day's Pakistan will be pounded by Afghanistan. Wait for some news I'll give updates how Pakistan soldier's leave the Check Post from KPK border along with Afghanistan.

:klopp :kp
 
Trusting Pakistan sources is last thing a person can do Even his last moment of Life. Pakistan is fake propaganda factory @Rana is prime example.

:klopp :kp

I don’t think anyone is trying to convince a Hindutva on this forum or any other forum.

Those who matter already believe it.
 
Btw @Rana how Many times Pakistan has killed terrorist Noor wali ? Im hearing This news more than 10th Times.

I hope finally they get rid of These terrorist instead fake propaganda but looking at Pakistan forces incompetent I'm not sure about it.

:kp

:
 
Looks like not a great year for Pakistan so far. India hammering them from Eastern front and Afghanis doing the same from west. Question is how long they can resist.
Nobody is afraid of India or Indians.

TTP are a bigger threat, the state has gone easy on them and Taliban for a long time.
 
I don’t think anyone is trying to convince a Hindutva on this forum or any other forum.

Those who matter already believe it.
This is also for you :klopp :kp
Btw @Rana how Many times Pakistan has killed terrorist Noor wali ? Im hearing This news more than 10th Times.

I hope finally they get rid of These terrorist instead fake propaganda but looking at Pakistan forces incompetent I'm not sure about it.

:kp

:
 
Let’s see if the Taliban take this personally. Will be a bit rich if they do. They don’t have many options other than the usual militancy.
 
I hope the news of the ttp commander being killed is true.

At the same time, i hope the country stays protected, especially kpk. These ttp dogs love to launch attacks in kpk when things go south.
 
I hope the news of the ttp commander being killed is true.

At the same time, i hope the country stays protected, especially kpk. These ttp dogs love to launch attacks in kpk when things go south.
I don't think any high value target was killed

Attacks were mainly to send a message and to test a new type of weaponry, where bomb can be dropped one place, but backsides explode in another place.
 
I hope the news of the ttp commander being killed is true.

At the same time, i hope the country stays protected, especially kpk. These ttp dogs love to launch attacks in kpk when things go south.
This time the gloves are off.... they will be hunted down in Afghanistan.
 
@Rajdeep is an attack on Afghanistan similar to an attack on India? Is this the reason why the Taliban minister is in Delhi? To sign a defence pact?
 
Nobody is afraid of India or Indians.

TTP are a bigger threat, the state has gone easy on them and Taliban for a long time.
Buhahaha yes, especially how they begged for ceasefire on the 10th having their ears clapped through the hypersonic missiles :ROFLMAO:
 
This time the gloves are off.... they will be hunted down in Afghanistan.
Good job.

Time to put these Taliban on a leash.
Confirmation of Mufti Noor Wali Mehsud killing by one of the best Journalists of Afghanistan


Unmanned aircraft or unidentified drones, which were highly likely launched from Pakistan, targeted four areas of Kabul and killed Mufti Noor Wali Mehsud, the leader of the Pakistani Taliban, in the heart of Taliban governance—and at a time when Amir Khan Muttaqi was staying in India—while he was passing by the Imperial Hotel in a Land Cruiser. Internal factional disputes within the Taliban led to the exposure of his location and paved the way for the precise attack.

 
Looks like @Devadwal and his PR department just clocked in for a night shift gotta craft the next Hindutva government masterstroke headline before sunrise.

Until then, please continue your group meditation chant, 71, 71, 71 maybe it’ll summon credibility this time.
 
The Pakistani airstrikes in Kabul speak less of tactical brilliance and more of political theatre, carefully timed and richly layered.

So it begins with a deadly ambush near the Afghan border that kills several Pakistani soldiers. And within hours, Islamabad carries out airstrikes inside Afghanistan, with surgical precision and near-instant intelligence. The immediacy of this response invites scrutiny. If such accurate intelligence on Noor Wali Mehsud’s movement existed, why was it not acted upon earlier? The swiftness suggests less a moment of opportunity and more a premeditated display of intent.

The timing is too perfect to be incidental. Amir Khan Muttaqi, the Taliban foreign minister, is currently in New Delhi, engaged in a high-profile outreach to India. For Islamabad, that alone is provocation. A cross-border strike that hits Kabul while a senior Taliban envoy is hosted by India is a warning shot across both borders, reminding Kabul of its subordination in Pakistan’s regional imagination and signalling to New Delhi that Pakistan remains capable of unpredictable, high-risk manoeuvres.

In essence, it is Islamabad telling the Taliban that friendship with India comes with consequences.

At home, the politics are equally combustible. The resignation of Ali Amin Gandapur as Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s chief minister and his replacement with a hard-line PTI loyalist have deepened tensions between the provincial government and the military. The army views PTI’s control of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa as an irritant that complicates its grip over the border regions. A sudden spike in violence, followed by retaliatory airstrikes, conveniently strengthens the narrative for central intervention.

For weeks, pro-Imran commentators have warned that the establishment could use security incidents in the northwest to justify governor’s rule, a move that would in practice hand indirect control back to Rawalpindi. The Orakzai ambush and the subsequent Kabul strike seem to provide the ideal pretext. It is a familiar Pakistani choreography where military necessity merges seamlessly with political convenience.

At the centre of this drama stands General Asim Munir, whose public posture towards Afghanistan has been marked by unambiguous hostility. He has repeatedly described the Taliban government as duplicitous and blamed Kabul for sheltering anti-Pakistan militants.

Munir’s worldview is rooted in control. He sees Afghanistan not as a sovereign neighbour but as a volatile extension of Pakistan’s security map, one that must be managed, not engaged. In this worldview, the Taliban’s diplomatic overtures to India are intolerable provocations. That perception alone may explain the timing of the strike more convincingly than any claim of actionable intelligence.

What emerges is a convergence of three arenas. First, a domestic one, where the army’s authority is challenged by a restive PTI leadership in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Second, a regional one, where the Taliban seek legitimacy by engaging India. Third, a personal one, where a general intent on projecting strength turns each crisis into a canvas for assertion.

As so often before, the airstrike is less about the enemy in Kabul and more about the anxieties in Rawalpindi.

Interestingly, reports now suggest that an audio message, allegedly from Mufti Noor Wali Mehsud himself, is circulating online in which he claims to be alive and healthy, even as Pakistani media continues to report his death.

Interesting times ahead.

:kp
 
The Pakistani airstrikes in Kabul speak less of tactical brilliance and more of political theatre, carefully timed and richly layered.

So it begins with a deadly ambush near the Afghan border that kills several Pakistani soldiers. And within hours, Islamabad carries out airstrikes inside Afghanistan, with surgical precision and near-instant intelligence. The immediacy of this response invites scrutiny. If such accurate intelligence on Noor Wali Mehsud’s movement existed, why was it not acted upon earlier? The swiftness suggests less a moment of opportunity and more a premeditated display of intent.

The timing is too perfect to be incidental. Amir Khan Muttaqi, the Taliban foreign minister, is currently in New Delhi, engaged in a high-profile outreach to India. For Islamabad, that alone is provocation. A cross-border strike that hits Kabul while a senior Taliban envoy is hosted by India is a warning shot across both borders, reminding Kabul of its subordination in Pakistan’s regional imagination and signalling to New Delhi that Pakistan remains capable of unpredictable, high-risk manoeuvres.

In essence, it is Islamabad telling the Taliban that friendship with India comes with consequences.

At home, the politics are equally combustible. The resignation of Ali Amin Gandapur as Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s chief minister and his replacement with a hard-line PTI loyalist have deepened tensions between the provincial government and the military. The army views PTI’s control of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa as an irritant that complicates its grip over the border regions. A sudden spike in violence, followed by retaliatory airstrikes, conveniently strengthens the narrative for central intervention.

For weeks, pro-Imran commentators have warned that the establishment could use security incidents in the northwest to justify governor’s rule, a move that would in practice hand indirect control back to Rawalpindi. The Orakzai ambush and the subsequent Kabul strike seem to provide the ideal pretext. It is a familiar Pakistani choreography where military necessity merges seamlessly with political convenience.

At the centre of this drama stands General Asim Munir, whose public posture towards Afghanistan has been marked by unambiguous hostility. He has repeatedly described the Taliban government as duplicitous and blamed Kabul for sheltering anti-Pakistan militants.

Munir’s worldview is rooted in control. He sees Afghanistan not as a sovereign neighbour but as a volatile extension of Pakistan’s security map, one that must be managed, not engaged. In this worldview, the Taliban’s diplomatic overtures to India are intolerable provocations. That perception alone may explain the timing of the strike more convincingly than any claim of actionable intelligence.

What emerges is a convergence of three arenas. First, a domestic one, where the army’s authority is challenged by a restive PTI leadership in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Second, a regional one, where the Taliban seek legitimacy by engaging India. Third, a personal one, where a general intent on projecting strength turns each crisis into a canvas for assertion.

As so often before, the airstrike is less about the enemy in Kabul and more about the anxieties in Rawalpindi.

Interestingly, reports now suggest that an audio message, allegedly from Mufti Noor Wali Mehsud himself, is circulating online in which he claims to be alive and healthy, even as Pakistani media continues to report his death.

Interesting times ahead.

:kp

So you know how to use prompts to get what you want from ChatGPT. Well done, you can put that on your CV now.
 
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