Explosions tore through the Afghan capital late on March 17, 2026, as Pakistani airstrikes hammered targets in Kabul in a major escalation of the ongoing border conflict. Pakistani forces conducted precise strikes on what Islamabad describes as terrorist infrastructure and militant hideouts linked to the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other groups sheltered by the Taliban regime.

The Taliban immediately claimed the strikes hit a drug rehabilitation hospital in Kabul’s Police District 9, reporting a staggering 400 ᴅᴇᴀᴅ and around 250 injured. Taliban spokesmen labeled it a “crime against humanity,” alleging the facility treating drug addicts was deliberately targeted. However, Pakistan has strongly denied striking any hospital, insisting all targets were carefully selected military and terrorist support sites. Islamabad maintains its operations focused exclusively on legitimate threats, not civilian infrastructure.
This ᴅᴇᴀᴅly episode is the latest chapter in the intensifying 2026 Afghanistan-Pakistan conflict. Pakistan has repeatedly accused the Taliban government of providing safe haven to TTP militants who have carried out numerous ᴅᴇᴀᴅly attacks inside Pakistan, including recent suicide bombings and cross-border raids. After months of warnings and limited strikes, Islamabad launched broader operations to neutralize these sanctuaries and protect its citizens from relentless terrorism.
While the Taliban cries foul over civilian casualties, the pattern is familiar: embedding military ᴀssets and fighters within civilian areas, then exploiting tragedy for propaganda when those sites are struck. Pakistan’s military has emphasized the precision of its airstrikes, using advanced intelligence to minimize collateral damage while dismantling terror networks that threaten regional stability.

The high casualty figures, if confirmed, are tragic, yet they underscore the heavy human cost when a regime prioritizes harboring extremists over the welfare of its own people. Afghanistan has seen hundreds of thousands displaced and its population suffering under Taliban rule, which has turned the country into a launchpad for attacks on neighbors.
Pakistan’s leadership has made its position clear: it will not tolerate terrorist safe havens on its border. The strikes send a powerful message that self-defense against cross-border terrorism is a sovereign right. As the dust settles over Kabul and rescue operations continue, the international community must recognize the reality — the Taliban’s refusal to curb anti-Pakistan militants has brought this suffering upon Afghanistan.
Strength and decisive action against terror are essential. Pakistan is defending its people and borders. Lasting peace in the region requires the Taliban to stop playing host to extremists and start acting as a responsible government. Anything less will only invite more conflict and tragedy.
