Pakistani strikes kill 13 civilians on Afghan border, officials say
Quick Look
- Pakistani military strikes in Afghanistan's border provinces of Kunar, Khost, and Paktika killed 13 civilians, including 11 children, and injured 14 others, according to Afghan officials.
- This marks the deadliest incident in weeks, with Afghanistan accusing Pakistan of "unforgivable war crimes."
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Hostilities have flared up on the Afghan-Pakistan border following Pakistani military strikes that killed 13 civilians, including 11 children, in Afghan border provinces. This incident marks the deadliest episode in weeks and follows a period of relative calm. Afghanistan has accused Pakistan of "unforgivable war crimes."
Hostilities flared up on the Afghan-Pakistan border overnight as strikes by the Pakistani military killed 13 civilians, Afghan officials have said.
The strikes took place in the Afghan border provinces of Kunar, Khost, and Paktika, according to Zabihullah Mujahid, a government spokesman. It marks the deadliest episode in weeks, following a period of relative calm.
The Pakistani bombing claimed the lives of “11 children, one woman, and one elderly man,” Mujahid posted on X. Fourteen others were injured, he said, including women and children.
An AFP report quoting an unidentified official in Khost said a strike on a house in Spera district killed nine and wounded 11. Residents of a neighboring province said a separate attack claimed three civilians in Barmal district. The deceased were all children, a resident said.
Pakistan has accused Afghanistan’s Taliban government of sheltering armed groups that conduct cross-border raids and terrorist attacks, including the bombing of a mosque in Islamabad in February that killed more than 30 people.Afghanistan has, in turn, accused Pakistan of “unforgivable war crimes.” Low-intensity clashes have continued on the Afghan-Pakistan border despite the two nations agreeing to a truce in late March.
Islamabad has repeatedly said its strikes in Afghanistan are aimed at insurgents carrying out attacks on its territory and that it does not target civilians.
But a United Nations report published last month put the death toll of Afghan civilians at 372 in the first three months of this year. It said 397 people have been wounded in the conflict.
Pakistan partly attributes the strain in its relationship with Kabul to the latter’s increasing engagement with its longtime rival, India.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Continued low-intensity clashes on the border.
Likely · Within weeks
Diplomatic tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan to increase.
Very likely · Within weeks
Open Questions
- What specific intelligence led Pakistan to conduct these strikes?
- What is the Taliban government's official response beyond accusations of war crimes?
- Will there be any diplomatic repercussions or investigations?
- What is the current status of the late March truce?





