The escalation comes after Pakistan shut all major crossings along its roughly 1,600-mile border with Afghanistan in mid-October, amid clashes along the frontier. The sides eventually agreed to a ceasefire, but crossings remain closed to trade in what amounts to the longest border shutdown in living memory, according to locals.
The Afghan Taliban have denied harboring the group.
In the renewed round of conflict, Pakistan carried out strikes in Kabul and Kandahar, the base of Taliban leader Haibatullah Akhundzada, as well as in the eastern border region of Paktia, according to officials in both nations. On Friday, the Afghan Ministry of Defense said it launched strikes against military targets in Islamabad and Abbottabad, following an earlier announcement of strikes on Pakistani border positions. Both sides claimed their strikes were retaliatory.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said in a statement Friday that his country would crush any aggression. Pakistan’s information minister, Attaullah Tarar, said in a statement that 297 members of the Taliban had been killed and more than 450 wounded in strikes. In a statement, the Taliban accused Pakistan of targeting civilians, killing 19 people and injuring 26.
U.N. Special Rapporteur Richard Bennett called for calm and the two nations to respect international law and civilian rights after the tensions “regrettably flowed into violence.”
Earlier, Afghanistan’s Ministry of National Defense said it had carried out “retaliatory attacks” after the Pakistani military breached Afghan border positions.
It claimed 55 Pakistani soldiers were killed and their bodies were taken to Afghanistan, with two bases and 19 posts captured, in attacks in Paktia, Khost, Nangahar and Konar, among other places. Thirteen civilians were injured in a missile attack and eight fighters were killed, the Afghan Defense Ministry said.
The number of casualties could not be independently verified by The Washington Post.
Asked on Friday whether he would seek to stop the fighting, President Donald Trump did not answer directly, but said that he had a “great” relationship with Pakistani leaders. “I think that Pakistan is doing terrifically well,” he told reporters.
“The United States supports Pakistan’s right to defend itself against attacks from the Taliban,” the State Department said in a statement Friday.
“The Taliban have consistently failed to uphold their counterterrorism commitments, allowing violence to destabilize the region while terrorist groups use Afghanistan as a launching pad for their heinous attacks,” the statement said.
The clashes come as Afghanistan and Pakistan, along with others in the region, brace for potential ripple effects of any U.S. strikes on Iran, with which both countries share borders. The threat of U.S. strikes, amid nuclear talks set to resume next week, continued to build Friday with a State Department advisory to nonessential U.S. Embassy employees in Jerusalem to leave Israel, against which Iran has pledged strikes in response to a U.S. attack. The advisory did not mention Iran.
Craw reported from London and Hussain reported from Islamabad, Pakistan. Michael Birnbaum, Karen DeYoung and Adam Taylor in Washington contributed to this report.
Afghanistan Peace Campaign

