In one of the ᴅᴇᴀᴅliest cross-border strikes in recent South Asian history, Pakistani forces carried out a mᴀssive airstrike on a major hospital in Kabul, killing over 400 people and wounding at least 250 others, many of them civilians, women, and children.
The attack targeted the Sardar Mohammad Daoud Khan Hospital, one of Afghanistan’s largest medical facilities, in the early hours of Friday. Multiple precision-guided munitions struck the main building and surrounding wards, causing the structure to partially collapse and triggering fierce fires. Rescue teams are still pulling bodies from the rubble as the death toll continues to climb.

The Taliban government has strongly condemned the strike as a “barbaric war crime” and “an act of state terrorism against innocent Afghans.” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid stated: “Pakistan has deliberately targeted a hospital full of patients and medical staff. This is unforgivable. We will respond with full force at the time and place of our choosing.”
Pakistani military sources claim the strike was aimed at high-value Taliban and militant targets allegedly hiding inside the hospital compound. However, independent reports and survivor testimonies indicate the facility was primarily treating civilians wounded in previous clashes, with no confirmed militant presence at the time of the attack.
The incident has triggered widespread international outrage. The United Nations has called for an immediate and independent investigation, while several countries have condemned the strike as a clear violation of international humanitarian law. Humanitarian organizations warn that the destruction of such a critical hospital will have catastrophic consequences for thousands of Afghans already suffering from years of conflict and instability.

This ᴅᴇᴀᴅly airstrike marks a dangerous deterioration in already tense Pakistan-Afghanistan relations. As grief and anger spread across Afghanistan, many fear this could ignite a new and even bloodier chapter of conflict along the volatile border.
The world is watching closely. An attack on a hospital is not just a military operation — it is a moral catastrophe that may redefine the future of the region.
