Afghanistan says its forces hit militant hideouts in Pakistan, Islamabad denies claim

KABUL/KARACHI: Afghanistan said on Friday it had launched airstrikes on hideouts of Islamist militants in two Pakistani provinces, an assertion swiftly rejected by Islamabad, months after the neighbors engaged in their worst conflict in years. The Taliban government’s defense ministry said in a post on X that hideouts in Pakistan’s Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, both of which share a border ‌with Afghanistan, ‌had been targeted by the Afghan air force on ‌Thursday ⁠night.

It did not ⁠specify how the attack — Kabul’s first major offensive action in months — was carried out. Afghanistan has no fighter jets but is known to possess at least six aircraft and 23 helicopters, according to data from the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies. The Taliban forces are also known to have drones that have been used in fighting with Pakistan. “These bases, allegedly used in cooperation with ⁠certain hostile intelligence circles to plan and organize attacks ‌against Afghanistan, had previously served as staging grounds ‌for several deadly attacks,” the Afghan ministry said.

“According to preliminary information, the operation successfully ‌hit its key pre-designated targets,” it added, without giving details about casualties. Reuters ‌was not immediately able to verify the assertion.