Durand Line Clashes Pak-Afghan

RUPTURE ACROSS THE DURAND LINE: PAKISTAN–AFGHANISTAN CLASHES

Why in the News?

  • Cross-Border Escalation: Pakistan and Afghanistan engaged in intense air, missile and ground clashes across the Durand Line.
  • Strategic Breakdown: Escalation reflects collapse of trust over handling of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and wider militant networks, with third party information sharing mechanisms breaking down.

RUPTURE ACROSS THE DURAND LINE: PAKISTAN–AFGHANISTAN CLASHES

POLITICAL AND SECURITY RUPTURE ACROSS DURAND LINE

  • Political Breakdown: Diplomatic engagement between Islamabad and Kabul has deteriorated despite post-2021 expectations of strategic alignment.
  • Establishment Divide: Long-standing ties between Pakistan’s Deep State and Afghan Taliban leadership have fractured significantly.
  • TTP Dispute: Pakistan accuses Kabul of sheltering or failing to control Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan militants.
  • Militant Surge: Rise in militant attacks in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa during 2022–25 intensified Islamabad’s military approach.
  • Societal Divide: Deportation of Afghan refugees and cross-border hostility deepened people-to-people rupture.

ASYMMETRY AND REGIONAL GEOPOLITICAL IMPLICATIONS

  • Military Imbalance: Pakistan’s air force and missile capability create clear asymmetry against Taliban’s limited arsenal.
  • Economic Dependency: Landlocked Afghanistan remains dependent on Karachi port and transit routes, limiting strategic leverage.
  • Proxy Complexity: Expansion of Islamic State–Khorasan (IS-K) complicates Taliban’s internal and external calculations.
  • Externalisation Strategy: Islamabad faces criticism for externalising internal militancy by blaming Kabul and external actors.
  • Conflict-Prone Future: Structural mistrust and strategic recalculations render the bilateral relationship fragile and volatile.

DURAND LINE AND PAK-AFGHAN RELATIONS

  Historical Boundary: Durand Line (1893) demarcated British India and Afghanistan, remaining contested by Kabul historically.

  Strategic Depth Doctrine: Pakistan historically pursued Afghanistan as a buffer under its strategic depth policy.

  Tribal Linkages: Cross-border Pashtun tribes maintain deep sociocultural ties complicating border governance.

  Terrorism Nexus: Region remains hub for Taliban, TTP, and IS-K activities, affecting regional security.

  UPSC Relevance: Topic aligns with GS Paper II and III, covering international relations and internal security challenges.