Taliban under fire for hosting designated terrorists in Kabul’s Diplomatic Hub

Express Tribune

March 09, 20265

 

Recent reports emerging from Kabul indicate that the Afghan Taliban may be adopting a tactic reminiscent of those used during their 1990s insurgency: positioning themselves or allied militants in areas considered too sensitive for opponents to strike, according to the Associated Press of Pakistan.

Security officials and regional analysts say high-ranking figures from globally proscribed militant organisations are allegedly being sheltered by the Taliban within Kabul’s tightly guarded diplomatic quarter, particularly in the Wazir Akbar Khan neighbourhood of the Green Zone.

Critics view this as a deliberate attempt to shield militant leaders from potential targeted operations by Pakistan or other neighbouring states.

The strategy echoes patterns seen during the Afghan civil war. In September 1995, Taliban fighters reportedly used the “German Club” — an international facility in Kabul — as overnight accommodation, knowing rival Afghan factions would avoid attacking the site due to the presence of foreign personnel.

Observers say the current situation appears to mirror that earlier tactic: positioning key militant figures in areas where military action could risk diplomatic fallout or civilian harm.

According to intelligence-based claims circulating in regional media and security circles, several individuals linked to Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other militant networks are believed to be operating from locations within or near Kabul’s diplomatic enclave. Among those reportedly present are TTP leader Noor Wali Mehsud, militant commander Hafiz Gul Bahadur, Baloch militant figure Bashir Zeb, as well as militants originating from Central Asian states.

The area of particular concern is Wazir Akbar Khan, a district that hosts embassies, international organisations and residences of diplomats and United Nations staff. The presence of militant figures in such a location would complicate any attempt by foreign governments to conduct targeted operations against them.

A prominent Pakistani journalist has also publicly referred to similar claims, stating that international organisations and diplomatic personnel working in Kabul have privately raised concerns with Taliban authorities about the presence of armed militants near diplomatic compounds..

Read More583 Afghan Taliban killed as Pakistan continues strikes under Operation Ghazab lil-Haq

According to the journalist, some UN personnel and international NGO staff have expressed security concerns and may consider relocating if the situation deteriorates further. The Afghan Taliban leadership has repeatedly denied that members of TTP operating in Afghanistan should be regarded as terrorists.

In a recent interview, Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob, Afghanistan’s acting defence minister and son of the late Taliban founder Mullah Omar, described TTP members as “refugees” rather than militants. “Who can explain to Pakistan that your terrorist is not our terrorist?” Yaqoob remarked, suggesting that the Taliban government does not share Islamabad’s designation of the group.

However, TTP is widely recognised internationally as a terrorist organisation. The United Nations Security Council, the United States and several other governments have designated the group as responsible for numerous attacks in Pakistan, including suicide bombings and assaults targeting civilians, security forces and educational institutions.

Yaqoob’s remarks effectively acknowledged that TTP members are present in Afghanistan, although he framed their presence as that of displaced individuals rather than organised militants.

Analysts have noted parallels between the Taliban’s current stance and the position adopted by the group prior to the United States-led intervention in Afghanistan in 2001.

Following the September 11 attacks, the international community demanded that the Taliban hand over Osama bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaeda accused of orchestrating the attacks. Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar — father of Mullah Yaqoob — refused, describing bin Laden as a “guest” protected under Afghan traditions of hospitality.

At the time, the Taliban government maintained that bin Laden had taken refuge in Afghanistan and would not be surrendered to the United States without evidence being presented in an Islamic court. The refusal ultimately led to the US-led military intervention in October 2001.

Under the banner of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), a coalition of more than 50 countries participated in the campaign against al-Qaeda and Taliban forces.

Nearly a quarter of a century later, critics argue that similar reasoning is again being used by the Taliban leadership to justify the presence of militant groups inside Afghanistan.

Multiple international reports indicate that Afghanistan continues to host a wide range of militant organisations with regional and global agendas.

According to the United Nations Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team, more than 20 militant groups are believed to be operating in Afghanistan, maintaining training facilities, logistical networks and safe havens across different provinces.

Groups frequently cited in UN and Western intelligence assessments include al-Qaeda, TTP, Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISIS-K), the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, the East Turkestan Islamic Movement — also known as the Turkistan Islamic Party — Katibat Imam al-Bukhari, the Islamic Jihad Group and Jamaat Ansarullah, a Tajik militant organisation.

Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Russia and China have also called on the Afghan Taliban to eliminate militant groups that they view as threats to Central Asia, China, Russia and Pakistan.

However, the Taliban have consistently denied hosting terrorists, arguing that some members of banned organisations have taken refuge in Afghanistan after being outlawed in their home countries, including China, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Russia and Pakistan.

The UN Security Council Monitoring Team’s 2023–2024 report noted that al-Qaeda continues to maintain ties with the Taliban and operates training facilities in several Afghan provinces. The report also stated that foreign fighters from Central Asia, the Middle East and South Asia remain active in the country.

Similarly, assessments by the US Department of Defence and the US intelligence community have warned that Afghanistan risks becoming a safe haven for transnational militant groups.

A 2023 US congressional report stated that while ISIS-K remains the most visible external threat, al-Qaeda affiliates and other regional jihadist organisations continue to maintain networks across Afghanistan.

According to the US Treasury Department, al-Qaeda leaders have been able to operate within Afghanistan under Taliban protection, maintaining communication networks and facilitating recruitment and training.

Security analysts warn that the presence of multiple militant organisations in Afghanistan could pose a wider regional threat extending beyond Pakistan.

Central Asian governments have also expressed concern about militant groups composed of Uzbek, Tajik and Uyghur fighters operating within Afghanistan. Russia, China and several Central Asian states have repeatedly raised the issue in international forums.

Observers say the situation presents a complex challenge for the international community.

Unlike the period following the 9/11 attacks, when a large multinational military coalition operated in Afghanistan, there is currently no unified global military presence in the country.

As a result, regional actors — particularly Pakistan — have increasingly found themselves on the frontline in confronting militant groups that operate across porous borders.

Analysts argue that enhanced counter-terrorism cooperation and international engagement will be essential in preventing Afghanistan from once again becoming a hub for transnational militancy.

Taliban under fire for hosting designated terrorists in Kabul’s Diplomatic Hub
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Pakistan Praised Trump. Now It Risks Being Caught Up in His War.

By Elian Peltier

Reporting from Islamabad, Pakistan

The New York Times

March 7, 2026

U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran have set off a crippling energy crisis and sparked deadly protests in one of the world’s most populous Muslim nations.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif of Pakistan stood beside President Trump last October in Egypt and effusively praised him for “saving millions of lives” in the Middle East and stopping eight wars, noting that Pakistan was nominating him for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Many in Pakistan now say that Mr. Sharif’s praise has aged poorly.

Since the United States and Israel began bombing Iran last week, videos of his comments have resurfaced online, highlighting the complications that the war has created for Pakistan — a nuclear-armed nation that has a border with Iran, ties to Gulf Arab states and a brittle relationship with the United States.

On Friday in Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, hundreds of protesters trampled on portraits of Mr. Trump and of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel. Some held photographs of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran who was killed in U.S.-Israeli strikes last Saturday.

Mr. Sharif’s government now has to justify its overtures to the Trump administration, which it pursued as an economic strategy to yield crypto and critical minerals deals and a geopolitical move to get more clout in South Asia at the expense of its rival, India. Pakistan, home to what is estimated to be the world’s largest Shiite community outside Iran, is now grappling with deadly anti-U.S. protests and an energy crisis sparked by the U.S.-Israeli bombing campaign.

“The Pakistani government is now under a lot of pressure for cozying up to Trump,” said Maleeha Lodhi, a former Pakistani ambassador to the United States and the United Nations.

Arif Hussain Wahidi, a Shiite political leader, told the crowds at Friday’s protests that he was ashamed that Mr. Sharif had nominated Mr. Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, a move that the Pakistan prime minister made last year after the Pakistani government said Mr. Trump helped stop a short-lived conflict with India.

“The government must now recognize who the real victims of terrorism are and who the terrorists are,” Mr. Wahidi said.

At least 26 people died in anti-U.S. and anti-Israel protests in Pakistan in the past week, including 11 who were shot and killed as demonstrators tried to storm the U.S. Consulate in Karachi. The U.S. Embassy in Islamabad declined to say whether it was U.S. armed personnel or Pakistani security forces who opened fire.

Pakistan has walked a delicate line so far, condemning the strikes on Iran without criticizing the United States directly.

“The prime minister and the field marshal have to find a balance, but a good relationship with the U.S. is good for Pakistan,” said Mosharraf Zaidi, a government spokesman. Referring to Mr. Sharif and to the Pakistani army chief, Syed Asim Munir, he added: “They have the courage to withstand the criticism at home, which they know comes from a place of good will and pain for our Muslim brothers.”

Ms. Lodhi, the former ambassador, said that anger was not limited to the Shiite community. “That anti-U.S. sentiment is a national sentiment, not a sectarian one,” she said.

Pakistan also has had to manage its longstanding ties to the Gulf states that have been hit by Iran’s retaliatory missile and drone strikes. More than half of the $40 billion worth of remittances sent to Pakistan every year comes from the Gulf.

“It cannot be that Iran keeps hitting the Arabs and we say that we are neutral,” said Anwaarul Haq Kakar, a Pakistani senator and former caretaker prime minister.

On Saturday, Field Marshal Munir met with Saudi Arabia’s defense minister, Prince Khalid bin Salman, to discuss “Iranian attacks on the Kingdom and the measures needed to halt them,” according to a Pakistani military statement. Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed a mutual defense pact last year stipulating that an attack on one is an attack on both, and on Tuesday Pakistan warned Iran that it is bound by that agreement.

Pakistan, a Sunni Muslim-majority country where 15 to 20 percent of the population is Shiite, has had a rocky relationship with Iran since its 1979 revolution. Pakistani officials say they have often tried to mediate between Iran’s leaders, the United States and Arab states.

But the impact of the current conflict is straining those efforts.

To preserve Pakistan’s dwindling energy stocks, which it hasn’t been able to replenish from the Gulf, the government is considering imposing a four-day workweek, and remote school and work. Pakistan has crude oil reserves for less than two weeks and liquefied natural gas through the end of the month, according to the oil ministry.

The chaos in Iran also threatens to spill over into Balochistan, a resource-rich province in southwestern Pakistan along the border with Iran. The United States has pledged $1.25 billion to finance a gold-copper mine in Balochistan, even as a separatist insurgency there has surged. Experts say it carried out more than 200 attacks last year.

“Any security vacuum on the Iranian side would make it easier for militants to move between Iran and Pakistan,” said Pearl Pandya, a senior analyst for South Asia at Armed Conflict Location & Event Data, a conflict-tracking group.

Pakistan is also counting on U.S. support in a conflict with another neighbor — Afghanistan, where it has been carrying out airstrikes on military installations for more than a week. As Pakistan has accused the country’s Taliban government of supporting militant groups that target Pakistani security forces, the State Department said Pakistan had a right to defend itself.

Pakistan “is far better off staying on the right side of the Trump administration particularly in times of instability, so long as it’s able to balance out the domestic side,” said Elizabeth Threlkeld, an analyst at the Stimson Center.

Privately, some Pakistani officials have expressed fears that Mr. Trump is too mercurial to build a lasting partnership. The relationship also remains troubled by a deep-seated view in Washington that Pakistan played a double game during the 20-year U.S. war in Afghanistan by covertly supporting the Taliban.

The latest conflict in the Middle East is likely to threaten that fragile balance, analysts said.

“We’ve had our challenging times with the United States,” said Jauhar Saleem, a Pakistani diplomat and former acting foreign minister. “It’s one of those times.”

Salman Masood and Zia ur-Rehman contributed reporting from Islamabad.

Pakistan Praised Trump. Now It Risks Being Caught Up in His War.
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Pakistan, Afghanistan claim killing dozens of other’s troops in relentless fighting

By MUNIR AHMED and ABDUL QAHAR AFGHAN

Associated Press

March 6, 2026, 9:01 AM

Pakistani and Afghan officials say their forces have launched multiple strikes at each other in cross-border clashes, with each side claiming to have killed dozens more enemy troops in what has been the deadliest fighting yet between the two neighbors

ISLAMABAD — Pakistani and Afghan forces launched multiple strikes at each other in cross-border clashes Friday, and each side claimed to have killed dozens more enemy troops in what has been the deadliest fighting yet between the two neighbors — a conflict that Islamabad has declared to be an “open war.”

Repeated appeals from the international community for restraint had no effect as the fighting, now in its ninth day, continued unabated.

In Afghanistan, the Taliban-run government’s Defense Ministry said its forces “destroyed numerous Pakistani military posts” along the border in Nangarhar, Kandahar, Kunar, Paktia, and Khost provinces, killing dozens of Pakistani soldiers.

Pakistani state-run media said the country’s air force and ground troops inflicted heavy losses in latest strikes targeting Afghan forces and the Pakistani Taliban — a militant group known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP.

Islamabad said fighting is ongoing and that the military “inflicted heavy losses” on Afghanistan, without elaborating.

Pakistan has repeatedly accused the Taliban government in Afghanistan’s capital of harboring the TTP, a charge Kabul denies. Since the Afghan Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in August 2021, the TTP has stepped up its attacks within Pakistan.

Islamabad says its military operations, which started last week, will continue until Afghanistan takes verifiable steps to rein in the TTP and other militants operating from its territory.

The U.N. mission in Afghanistan has urged for a halt in the fighting, saying it’s worsening Afghanistan’s already grave humanitarian situation. On Friday, the mission known as UNAMA said on X that so far, 56 civilians have been killed inside Afghanistan.

Several people were injured Friday when Afghan mortar shells landed in a village in Mohmand, a district in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, local official Mohammad Asif said.

Casualty claims have varied widely. This week, Afghanistan said its forces had killed 150 Pakistani soldiers since the fighting began, while 28 Afghan troops were killed.

On Friday, Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said on X that Pakistan’s military has killed 527 Afghan soldiers.

The border region, where militant such as al-Qaida and the Islamic State are also active, is largely inaccessible to the media and The Associated Press could not independently verify the conflicting claims.

It remains unclear whether efforts by other Muslim nations will get Kabul and Islamabad to the negotiating table anytime soon.

On Wednesday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan offered to mediate a new ceasefire in a call with Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.

And a day later, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim spoke with Afghanistan’s Prime Minister Mullah Mohammad Hasan Akhund, according to the Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid.

The ongoing clashes ended an earlier ceasefire brokered by Qatar and Turkey in October, when the two neighbors had again come close to a war. The truce, signed in Qatar at the time, was followed by six days of talks in Istanbul, which resulted in an agreement to extend the truce and hold a third round of negotiations in November.

Afghan reported from Kabul. Associated Press writers Riaz Khan and Rasool Dawar in Peshawar, Pakistan, and Ishtaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan, Pakistan, contributed to this report.

Pakistan, Afghanistan claim killing dozens of other’s troops in relentless fighting
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Clashes erupt again along Pakistan border in Afghanistan’s Paktia and Khost provinces

Heavy clashes broke out overnight along the Pakistan border in eastern Afghanistan, with local sources reporting intense fighting and heavy weapons fire.

Local sources say fighting has resumed between fighters of the Taliban and forces of the Pakistan Army in eastern Afghanistan.

According to the reports on Thursday that the clashes began in the Dand Patan District of Paktia Province and Zazi Maidan District in Khost Province, along the disputed Durand Line.

According to the sources, both light and heavy weapons were used in the clashes, and the sound of heavy gunfire was heard in several nearby areas.

The fighting reportedly began around 9 p.m. local time, though there has been no confirmed information yet about casualties from the latest confrontation.

The renewed violence comes amid rising tensions along the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, where sporadic clashes have intensified in recent days.

The United Nations and humanitarian agencies have expressed concern about escalating border tensions and their impact on civilians in eastern Afghanistan.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that earlier that at least 56 civilians were killed and 129 wounded.

Observers warn that continued clashes along the Durand Line could further destabilize border communities and worsen the humanitarian situation in eastern Afghanistan.

Clashes erupt again along Pakistan border in Afghanistan’s Paktia and Khost provinces
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UN says 185 Afghan civilians killed or wounded in border clashes with Pakistan

The United Nations said Friday at least 185 Afghan civilians were killed or wounded during recent cross-border fighting between Taliban forces and Pakistan.

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said in a report released on Friday, March 6, that 185 civilian casualties were verified between Feb. 26 and March 5. The casualties included 56 killed and 129 wounded, mostly due to airstrikes and indirect fire during clashes along the border with Pakistan.

The mission said more than half of the victims, about 55% — were women and children. UNAMA added that one airstrike in Barmal district of Paktika province alone killed 14 civilians, including four women, two girls, five boys and three men, while six others were wounded.

The figures mark a higher civilian toll than similar clashes between Taliban forces and Pakistan that occurred between Oct. 10 and Oct. 17, 2025, according to the UN report.

UNAMA also said that in the last three months of 2025, at least 70 civilians were killed and 478 others injured in Afghanistan due to conflict-related violence.

Taliban officials claimed their forces killed at least 30 Pakistani soldiers during recent clashes along the disputed border, according to the reports.

Pakistani officials, however, said their forces inflicted heavy losses on Taliban fighters, claiming more than 100 militants were killed during retaliatory operations.

Earlier this year, between Jan. 1 and Feb. 22, another 13 civilians were killed and 12 wounded in airstrikes and cross-border shelling in Nangarhar province, the mission said.

The United Nations urged all parties involved in the fighting to take immediate measures to prevent civilian harm and to comply with international humanitarian law obligations to protect civilians.

UN says 185 Afghan civilians killed or wounded in border clashes with Pakistan
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Pakistan and Afghanistan claim killing dozens of the other side’s troops in relentless fighting

By MUNIR AHMED and ABDUL QAHAR AFGHAN

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistani and Afghan forces launched multiple strikes at each other in cross-border clashes on Friday, and each side claimed to have killed dozens more enemy troops in what has been the deadliest fighting yet between the two neighbors — a conflict that Islamabad has declared to be an “open war.”

Repeated appeals from the international community for restraint have had no effect as the fighting, now in its ninth day, continued unabated.

Also on Friday, a suicide car bomber struck a security post in the district of North Waziristan, which borders Afghanistan. One civilian was killed and 18 were wounded, several of them seriously, a local doctor, Mohammad Asif, said.

No one immediately claimed responsibility but suspicion was likely to fall on the Pakistani Taliban, who often target Pakistani forces and civilians in the region.

In Afghanistan, the Taliban-run government’s Defense Ministry said Friday its forces “destroyed numerous Pakistani military posts” along the border in Nangarhar, Kandahar, Kunar, Paktia, and Khost provinces, killing dozens of Pakistani soldiers.

Pakistani state-run media said the country’s air force and ground troops inflicted heavy losses in their latest strikes targeting Afghan forces and the Pakistani Taliban — also known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP. Islamabad said the fighting is ongoing and that the military “inflicted heavy losses” on Afghanistan, without elaborating.

Pakistan has repeatedly accused the Taliban government in Afghanistan’s capital of harboring the TTP, a charge Kabul denies. Since the Afghan Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in August 2021, the TTP has stepped up its attacks within Pakistan

Islamabad says its military operations, which started last week, will continue until Afghanistan takes verifiable steps to rein in the TTP and other militants operating from its territory.

The U.N. refugee agency said in a statement Thursday that the Afghanistan-Pakistan border clashes have so far displaced about 115,000 people in Afghanistan and around 3,000 people in Pakistan.

The U.N. mission in Afghanistan has urged for a halt in the fighting, saying it’s worsening Afghanistan’s already grave humanitarian situation. The mission, known as UNAMA, said Friday on X that so far, 56 civilians have been killed inside Afghanistan.

Several people were injured Friday when Afghan mortar shells landed in a village in Mohmand, a district in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, local official Mohammad Asif said.

Casualty claims have varied widely. This week, Afghanistan said its forces had killed 150 Pakistani soldiers since the fighting began, while 28 Afghan troops were killed. On Friday, Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said on X that Pakistan’s military has killed 527 Afghan soldiers.

The border region, where militant such as al-Qaida and the Islamic State are also active, is largely inaccessible to the media and The Associated Press could not independently verify the conflicting claims.

It remains unclear whether efforts by other Muslim nations will get Kabul and Islamabad to the negotiating table anytime soon.

On Wednesday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan offered to mediate a new ceasefire in a call with Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.

And a day later, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim spoke with Afghanistan’s Prime Minister Mullah Mohammad Hasan Akhund, according to the Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid.

The ongoing clashes ended an earlier ceasefire brokered by Qatar and Turkey in October, when the two neighbors had again come close to a war. The truce, signed in Qatar at the time, was followed by six days of talks in Istanbul, which resulted in an agreement to extend the truce and hold a third round of negotiations in November.

Afghan reported from Kabul. Associated Press writers Riaz Khan and Rasool Dawar in Peshawar, Pakistan, and Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan, Pakistan, contributed to this report.

Pakistan and Afghanistan claim killing dozens of the other side’s troops in relentless fighting
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UNFPA warns limited maternal healthcare access endangers women in rural Afghanistan

By Fidel Rahmati

Khaama Press

The United Nations Population Fund said access to healthcare services for women and pregnant mothers remains severely limited in remote villages of Afghanistan.

In a report released on Wednesday, UNFPA said poor roads, long distances to hospitals and the absence of nearby health facilities often force pregnant women to give birth at home without skilled medical assistance.

The agency said mobile health teams are operating in these areas, providing antenatal care, safe delivery services and postnatal support to women in hard-to-reach communities.

According to the report, families also receive training on maternal recovery, newborn care, nutrition, hygiene and recognition of warning signs during and after pregnancy.

UNFPA said these mobile services have helped reduce childbirth-related risks and brought a sense of safety and hope to families in remote regions.

Afghanistan continues to face one of the world’s highest maternal mortality rates, with decades of conflict, poverty and fragile health infrastructure limiting access to essential reproductive health services.

Since 2021, funding shortages and restrictions affecting female health workers have further strained the healthcare system, particularly in rural areas where women depend heavily on community-based services.

UN agencies warn that without sustained international support, maternal and newborn health indicators could deteriorate further, putting thousands of lives at risk each year.

UNFPA said expanding mobile outreach, strengthening local clinics and ensuring the presence of trained female staff remain critical steps to safeguarding maternal health in Afghanistan’s most isolated communities.

UNFPA warns limited maternal healthcare access endangers women in rural Afghanistan
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Turkey’s Erdogan offers to try to revive a truce as Pakistan-Afghan border clashes enter sixth day

By SUZAN FRASER and MUNIR AHMED

Associated Press

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday offered to mediate for a new ceasefire between Pakistan and Afghanistan as border clashes between Afghanistan and Pakistan entered their sixth day. Pakistan’s army chief said lasting peace depends on Kabul cutting ties with militants targeting his country.

The conflict erupted last week with Afghanistan launching attacks on Thursday in retaliation for Pakistani airstrikes the previous weekend. Since then, Pakistan has carried out operations along the border and declared it was in an “open war” with Afghanistan, alarming the international community.

The ongoing clashes ended an earlier ceasefire brokered by Qatar and Turkey in October, when the two neighbors had again come close to a war. The truce, signed in Qatar at the time, was followed by six days of talks in Istanbul, which resulted in an agreement to extend the truce and hold a third round of negotiations in November.

Those talks, held on Nov. 6 and Nov. 7 failed to produce any breakthrough and the process stalled.

According to a statement from the Turkish presidential office, Erdogan, in a telephone call with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif “condemned the terrorist attacks in Pakistan” and said Turkey would seek to “contribute to the reestablishment of the ceasefire between Pakistan and Afghanistan.”

Sharif’s office did not directly confirm Erdogan’s offer but said the two leaders discussed tensions along the 2,611-kilometer (1,622-mile) -long Afghan-Pakistan border. It said the two “exchanged views on recent developments” and would remain in closer “contact in our shared pursuit of peace and stability in the region.”

On Wednesday, Pakistan’s army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir said peace between Pakistan and Afghanistan depends on the Afghan Taliban severing ties with militants targeting Pakistan, warning that Islamabad would take “all necessary measures” against threats emanating from Afghan soil.

Munir made the remarks during a visit to a former stronghold of Pakistani Taliban in Wana district bordering Afghanistan. According to a military statement, Munir said the use of Afghan territory by militant groups to launch attacks inside Pakistan was “unacceptable.” He reiterated that “peace could only prevail between both sides if the Afghan Taliban renounced their support for terrorism and terrorist organizations”.

There was also no immediate comment on Erdogan’s offer from the Taliban government in Afghanistan but Kabul may see the Turkish president’s comments as one-sided or even openly supporting Islamabad.

However, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan had reached out to Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi last week to discuss the cross-border situation, according to the Afghan Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The ministry released no further details.

Since the latest fighting broke out, both sides have since claimed inflicting heavy losses on each other in fighting that has mainly focused in Pakistan’s border regions in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and southwestern Balochistan province.

Casualty reports have vastly conflicted. The border area — where militant groups, including al-Qaida and the Islamic State group, are also active — is not accessible to the media and the Associated Press could not independently confirm any of the casualty reports.

Afghanistan’s Defense Ministry said Wednesday that its forces had killed or wounded dozens more enemy soldiers as the cross-border fighting continued. On Tuesday, the ministry said Afghan forces had killed 150 Pakistani soldiers over the previous five days, while 28 Afghan troops were killed in the same period.

Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said Wednesday that 481 Afghan troops had been killed in the past six days. The conflicting reports could not be reconciled.

Pakistan has warned that its military operations will continue until Afghanistan takes verifiable steps to rein in Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP, and other militants operating from its territory.

Pakistan has repeatedly accused Kabul of harboring the TTP, a militant group responsible for a surge in attacks inside Pakistan since 2021 when the Afghan Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan. Kabul denies the charge, insisting it does not allow its territory to be used against other countries.

Fraser reported from Ankara, Turkey. Associated Press writers Riaz Khan and Rasool Dawar in Peshawar, Pakistan, Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan, Pakistan, Abdul Qahar Afghan in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.

Turkey’s Erdogan offers to try to revive a truce as Pakistan-Afghan border clashes enter sixth day
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Afghan allies, stranded at Qatar refugee camp, face ‘hell’ amid Iran war

USA TODAY
March 5, 2026

Missile sirens ring out every few hours. Young children scream in terror. Fire lights up the sky.

For more than a thousand Afghan refugees trapped at a U.S.-run camp in Qatar, this is daily life since the United States and Israel started a war with Iran less than a week ago.

Since the U.S. withdrew from Afghanistan in 2021, these individuals have been awaiting resettlement in the United States at Camp As Sayliyah, a U.S. military base-turned refugee camp outside Qatar’s capital of Doha.

Many of the 1,100 Afghan refugees in limbo at the base served alongside U.S. forces during the occupation of their country, and some 150 of them are family members of active duty U.S. servicemembers. They can no longer return to their homeland, where they would be at risk of persecution or death by the ruling Taliban government.

Four refugees at the camp spoke to USA TODAY on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive situation. Camp residents received messages from officials and Qatar’s government ordering them not to speak publicly about the missile attacks since the war broke out days ago.

“We came from war,” a 14-year-old girl living in the camp told USA TODAY. “Right now, it’s also war here, missiles coming, missiles going, explosions every day.”

About 800 of the camp’s residents, who fled Afghanistan after the United States withdrew from their country, were cleared to enter the United States under the refugee resettlement program after extensive vetting and interview processes, according to a letter sent to Trump administration officials by AfghanEvac, an advocacy organization for Afghan allies. Within hours of taking office in 2025, President Donald Trump suspended the relocation program indefinitely, plunging their lives into chaos and uncertainty. Many Afghans have now been stranded at the Qatar camp for years.

More than a thousand Afghan refugees who fled the country after the U.S. withdrawal in 2021 moved into Camp As Sayliyah in Qatar.

In a joint letter to the State Department and members of Congress, residents of the camp wrote that “the container housing units where we live provide no meaningful protection, and there are no reinforced shelters immediately accessible to residents. Mothers and children often have nowhere secure to go when these alarms sound.”

A State Department spokesperson told USA TODAY in an email, “We are actively addressing all related operational concerns in the region,” including “the safety of residents at Camp As-Sayliyah (CAS) under U.S. care.”

Missile fragments crash into family’s shelter

The missile alerts, refugees at the camp told USA TODAY, came every 15 minutes or less on the first day of the war. They’re now happening every few hours.

Young children and pregnant women scream in terror as explosions sound nearby, the refugees said. According to the 14-year-old girl, most people in the camp, including the girl and her parents, have already been prescribed antidepressants for their high stress. One man said he believes his wife delivered her baby prematurely days ago due to the stress of being trapped in a war with no way out.

A 50-year-old man who fled Afghanistan after working for more than a decade with the U.S. government said he begged camp authorities to relocate children to a safer place, but they said there was nowhere else to go.

On March 2, the man said, around a hundred people packed their bags and tried to escape through the camp’s main gate in hopes of reaching Doha and pleading for help from Qatari officials, but security guards ordered the group back.

“The government is busy. They can do nothing for you,” they told the man. “They are busy and saving their own people.”

People who have lived in the camp for years have already been “crippled psychologically,” said the man. But the missile barrage, he said, has pushed many over the edge.

Refugees in the camp live in large warehouses, hundreds of people to one structure, where they sleep on bunk beds. Since the missile barrage began, people have moved into metal shipping crates to sleep, they said. Photos and videos they shared with USA TODAY showed families of seven and eight packed into one container, children huddled in narrow crannies against the wall. As missiles explode outside, the walls shake, refugees said.

A father who has lived in the camp for more than a year with his wife and five children said his youngest daughter, who is 10, has stopped eating or sleeping since the missile barrage began.

She is “retraumatized,” he said. “All day and night, she is crying.”

Camp As Sayliyah, a former military base, is on the outskirts of Doha, Qatar's capital.
The State Department says it plans to close the camp by March 31, but it has not articulated its plans for where occupants will go next. The refugees who spoke to USA TODAY said they have been told they will be sent to an undetermined third country. At a meeting with State Department officials on March 3, they were told that a decision about their next destination is still pending.

“What will be our future? What will be the future of our kids?”

Afghan allies, stranded at Qatar refugee camp, face ‘hell’ amid Iran war
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Afghans Returning from Iran as Airstrikes Intensify

Some of those returning from Iran describe an atmosphere of fear and widespread panic caused by the war.

As U.S. and Israeli airstrikes on Iranian cities intensify, the return of Afghans from Iran has increased.

Some of those returning from Iran describe an atmosphere of fear and widespread panic caused by the war.

Morteza Shamsi, one of the returnees from Iran, said: “The war is ongoing in Iran and the situation is very bad. Missiles were striking every moment and people were fleeing. No one cared about anyone else.”

Another returnee, Heshmatullah Erfan, said: “People were all terrified and the movement of people leaving the cities was very high. When we were inside the camp, a missile struck near us.”

Most of these migrants have returned to Afghanistan out of fear of the war.

Nearly 2,000 people enter Afghanistan daily through the Islam Qala border crossing from Iran.

Abdul Ghani Qazizada, head of registration at the Department of Migrants and Returnees at the Islam Qala border, said: “Since Saturday, when the war began in Iran, the return of voluntary migrants, especially families, has increased. Deportations have decreased.”

Many Afghans returning from Iran are also facing psychological and mental challenges due to fear of the war.

At the Afghan Red Crescent medical center at the Islam Qala border, returnees are receiving assistance to reduce their fear and anxiety.

Bashir Ahmad Basharat, head of the Afghan Red Crescent health center at Islam Qala, said: “Due to the anxiety and pressures caused by the war in Iran, the return of migrants has increased. Many mental health patients who have returned from Iran are visiting us. They have been affected by the situations that occurred in Iran and are experiencing worry and anxiety.”

Millions of Afghan migrants live in different parts of Iran.

With the intensification of U.S. and Israeli airstrikes on Iran, Afghan citizens in that country have also been affected, and many are trying to return to Afghanistan to escape the war.

Afghans Returning from Iran as Airstrikes Intensify
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