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Alliance under strain: Pakistan rethinks Taliban ties after attacks

Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan reached a new low this week following two suicide attacks in the western Pakistani cities of Hangu and Mastung. Pakistan’s caretaker government has since ordered all unauthorized immigrants, including an estimated 1.7 million Afghans, to leave the country by Nov. 1 or face deportation. 

At the center of the dispute is the militant offshoot Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which Pakistan says is using Afghanistan as a safe haven and launch pad for attacks on Pakistani soil, an allegation Kabul denies. 

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What does it take to make a friend an enemy? Pakistan – once seen as sympathetic to the Taliban – is reassessing its relationship with the neighboring regime after a series of terror attacks on its soil.

“There is no doubt that attacks on us are coming from Afghanistan,” said Pakistan’s interior minister at a press conference Tuesday.  

Pakistan has historically been sympathetic toward the Taliban, with whom they shared ideological and security interests. During the fall of Kabul, the Pakistani prime minister said the Taliban were “breaking the chains of slavery.” But Afghanistan’s failure to crack down on TTP activity has some rethinking the alliance. Not all Pakistanis back the government’s ultimatum, but many see an urgent need for change. 

The question, says Pakistani diplomat Maleeha Lodhi, is “what kind of tough-love policy Islamabad is prepared to pursue to persuade the Taliban to respond to its security concerns.”

Experts see the crackdown on migrants as one way to rattle the saber.

Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have reached a new low this week following an uptick in terror attacks on Pakistani soil. 

Two separate suicide attacks in the western cities of Hangu and Mastung claimed the lives of at least 60 people on Sept. 29, and prompted a controversial ultimatum: Pakistan’s caretaker government ordered all unauthorized immigrants, including an estimated 1.7 million Afghans, to leave the country by Nov. 1 or face forced deportation. 

Central to the deterioration of ties between the governments is the relationship, perceived or real, between the Afghan Taliban and the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), colloquially known as the Pakistani Taliban. The militant offshoot emerged during what became known as the war on terror, which was led by the United States.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

What does it take to make a friend an enemy? Pakistan – once seen as sympathetic to the Taliban – is reassessing its relationship with the neighboring regime after a series of terror attacks on its soil.

Pakistan says the TTP is using Afghanistan as a safe haven from which to launch terrorist attacks, an allegation Kabul has consistently denied. 

Of the roughly two dozen suicide attacks carried out along the Pakistan-Afghan border since January, the majority can be attributed to Afghan citizens, says Sarfaraz Bugti, Pakistan’s caretaker interior minister.

“There is no doubt that attacks on us are coming from Afghanistan,” he said at a Tuesday press conference. On Wednesday, Pakistan’s army said an Afghan sentry had opened fire at the Wesh-Chaman border crossing and killed two Pakistani citizens, including a 12-year-old child.

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