Khaama Press
December 9, 2025
Pakistan has issued a sharp warning to Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities, urging them to choose between maintaining relations with Islamabad or continuing support for the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
The Associated Press reported on Monday, December 8, that Pakistan’s army chief, General Asim Munir, made the remarks during a meeting with military officers in Rawalpindi. He said the Taliban must decide whether they will support the TTP, which he described as responsible for a surge in deadly attacks, or preserve ties with Pakistan.
Munir’s warning comes amid growing security concerns, as Pakistan accuses the Taliban of allowing TTP fighters to operate freely from Afghanistan soil. He previously alleged that the Taliban were backing militants linked to India, a claim Kabul has strongly rejected.
The army chief stressed that Pakistan “will not allow cross-border terrorism” to threaten its security or stability. He added that recent attacks linked to the TTP had crossed what Pakistan considers an acceptable threshold.
Relations between Islamabad and the Kabul have deteriorated sharply in recent months, with both sides exchanging accusations over support for militant groups and responsibility for cross-border violence. The dispute has raised new concerns among regional powers about worsening instability along the Afghanistan-Pakistan frontier.
A Qatar-mediated ceasefire in October briefly eased tensions, but subsequent talks in Istanbul failed to produce progress. Analysts say the stalled negotiations and hardened rhetoric indicate further deterioration in bilateral ties.
Afghanistan Peace Campaign