Heart-wrenching images are emerging from Kabul after Pakistani airstrikes slammed into the Afghan capital on March 17, 2026. Rescue workers pull bodies from the rubble of what the Taliban claims was a major drug rehabilitation hospital in Police District 9. According to Taliban officials, at least 400 people are ᴅᴇᴀᴅ and 250 more injured in the devastating attack. Video footage shows collapsed buildings, blood-stained corridors, and desperate families searching for loved ones amid the chaos and dust.

Pakistan has strongly rejected the hospital claim, stating its jets precisely targeted terrorist infrastructure used by Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants. Islamabad insists the sites were active command centers and hideouts for extremists launching ᴅᴇᴀᴅly cross-border attacks inside Pakistan. Military sources say intelligence confirmed the presence of senior TTP operatives, not civilians seeking medical treatment.
The grim scenes have shocked the world and fueled outrage across Afghanistan. Yet this tragedy highlights a familiar and disturbing pattern: the Taliban’s repeated tactic of embedding terrorist operations inside civilian facilities, then weaponizing casualty figures for maximum propaganda value when those locations are struck.
This escalation is part of Pakistan’s intensifying campaign to destroy TTP sanctuaries that the Taliban government has sheltered since regaining power. After suffering numerous suicide bombings and raids on its soil, Pakistan has made clear it will no longer tolerate a hostile neighbor exporting terrorism.

Now the big question looms: Will the Taliban launch revenge attacks? Taliban spokesmen have already vowed a strong response, raising fears of fresh suicide bombings or cross-border raids into Pakistan. Such retaliation would only deepen the cycle of violence and bring more suffering to Afghan civilians already exhausted by years of war and harsh rule.
Pakistan’s leadership stands firm: “We are exercising our legitimate right to self-defense. The blood of our citizens demands action.” While civilian casualties are always tragic, the ultimate responsibility lies with a Taliban regime that chooses to protect terrorists over the safety of its own people.
The international community must see through the propaganda. Harboring anti-Pakistan militants has consequences. Pakistan is fighting for its security and regional stability. True peace requires the Taliban to stop playing host to terror groups instead of crying victim after every justified strike.
