Pakistan and Afghanistan agree to maintain ceasefire
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Pakistan’s defense minister warned Afghanistan on Wednesday that any new “terrorist or suicide attack” by militants on Pakistani soil would draw a stern response, hours after talks between the two countries in Istanbul failed to secure a peace agreement.
ISLAMABAD: Defence Minister Khawaja Asif has said that Pakistan-Afghanistan relations cannot return to normal unless Afghanistan stops backing the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan .In an
As deadly border clashes erupted between Pakistan and Afghanistan in early October 2025, an image of a missile circulated online with users falsely claiming that it depicted a successful test launch by Kabul.
Afghanistan occupies a central position in Tehran’s changing playbook, as the country is both a risk and a buffer for Iran.
ISLAMABAD/ISTANBUL: Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif on Tuesday revealed that an agreement with Afghanistan was “within reach” during the second round of Istanbul talks but was derailed several times after the Afghan negotiators “backpedaled” following instructions from Kabul.
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Afghanistan's Chilling Warning to Pakistan: 'If Kabul is Attacked, Islamabad Will Be Targeted'
Afghanistan’s Taliban warned Pakistan that any future attack will draw a direct strike on Islamabad. Sources told TOLOnews that Pakistan “sabotaged” the Istanbul peace talks, demanding Kabul ensure its security amid rising border tensions.
The Istanbul talks are part of a broader diplomatic push to ease months of heightened tension between Islamabad and Kabul over cross-border attacks and militant safe havens.
Shortly before a ceasefire brought an end to a week of violence along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in which dozens of troops and civilians were killed, a video of a fire at a plaza in Peshawar was shared in posts falsely claiming it was the result of an Afghan drone attack.