PAK-Afghan confrontation more than a bilateral dispute

PAK-Afghan confrontation more than a bilateral dispute

ISLAMABAD, NOV 4: Pakistan-Afghanistan confrontation is more than a bilateral dispute, as it might have a wide-ranging impact on regional level as well as affecting international peace as a whole.

Stakeholders needed to sit together to set aside the raising conflict, lowering the temperature between the two sides.

Regional analysts view the confrontation as more than a bilateral dispute. The whole scenario should be looked into the background of Pakistan’s closer counter-terrorism coordination with the United States sits alongside its strategic and economic ties with China, including plans to extend connectivity through western corridors.

The frontier’s stability will not be read without the lens of US–China competition and a reshaping of influence in Central Asia. In this context, any perception of disproportionate force or legally ambiguous actions could complicate Islamabad’s diplomacy as well.

It is heartening to note that Pakistan and Afghanistan remain in a fragile calm after mid-October ground clashes and Pakistani airstrikes, including inside Afghanistan, were followed by a ceasefire mediated by Qatar and Türkiye and announced in Doha on the 19th of October. UN monitors urged “a lasting end to hostilities” after recording at least 18 killed and more than 360 wounded on the 16th of October.

The heaviest fighting was reported around Spin Boldak in Kandahar and parts of Paktika, underscoring how quickly the frontier can tip from skirmishes to wider confrontation.

Torkham, the main Khyber Pass crossing linking Pakistan’s Khyber district with Afghanistan’s Nangarhar, has since been partially reopened to allow Afghan nationals to return.

Pakistan resumed limited movement on the 1st of November to let stranded Afghans cross back under its repatriation plan, while commercial traffic remained shut. Mediators said both sides agreed in Istanbul to keep the truce in place and to set up a mechanism to monitor and verify alleged ceasefire violations, including cross-border fire, incursions and support for militants.

The consequences for non-compliance are to be decided at the next meeting on the 6th of November.

Islamabad claims that the confrontation stemmed from militant attacks launched from Afghan soil and has tied any durable truce to Kabul taking action against the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan.

“We have a ceasefire agreement as long as there is no violation,” Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif said on the 20th October, adding that the truce “hinges” on curbing attacks from across the border. In a later interview he warned that, if talks fail, Pakistan has the “option of open war.” The Taliban administration firmly denies harbouring anti-Pakistan militants.

In Doha, spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said “neither country will take hostile actions against the other” and that there would be no support for groups attacking Pakistan.

Reports indicate a high civilian toll inside Afghanistan. By 16th October, UNAMA reported that at least 18 people had been killed and more than 360 wounded. Most casualties were in Spin Boldak, where it is recorded that at least 17 civilians were killed and 346 injured. UNAMA also documented earlier casualties in Paktika, Paktia, Kunar and Helmand.