Security Forces Intercept Aerial Threat
Pakistan’s security forces successfully intercepted and shot down two rudimentary drones operated by the militant group Fitna al-Khawarij on Friday, according to an official statement from the Ministry of Information. The drones were neutralized using electronic countermeasures.
The ministry reported that no military or critical infrastructure was struck in the incident. Minor damage occurred only from the debris resulting from the forced crash of the unmanned aerial vehicles.
Official Rejects Taliban Claims, Alleges Proxy Role
In a sharp rebuke, the Information Ministry dismissed recent claims from the Afghan Taliban as baseless propaganda. “The Taliban regime’s claim includes no verifiable evidence as always,” the ministry stated in a post on social media platform X.
The statement escalated diplomatic tensions, accusing the Taliban government of being a “master proxy of terrorism.” It alleged the regime harbors and supports multiple terrorist organizations, specifically naming “Indian proxies Fitna al Khawarij and Fitna al Hindustan.”
Officials further criticized Taliban communication channels, including a Ministry of Defence account, for regularly proliferating what they called “fake news and propaganda.” This reference included previously deleted claims about shooting down Pakistani aircraft and capturing pilots.
Operation Ghazab lil-Haq: Mounting Casualties
The drone incident occurs amid Pakistan’s ongoing “Operation Ghazab lil-Haq,” a military campaign launched in response to increased cross-border terrorist activity since the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan in 2021.
Information Minister Attaullah Tarar provided a detailed casualty report on Friday, confirming significant losses inflicted on militant forces:
- Over 660 Afghan Taliban fighters killed in Pakistani strikes.
- More than 800 fighters injured.
- 249 checkposts destroyed.
The operation followed earlier airstrikes on seven terrorist camps and hideouts belonging to Fitna al Khawarij, its affiliates, and Daesh-Khorasan along the volatile Pakistan-Afghanistan border. Security sources indicated those strikes, conducted in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar, Paktika, and Khost provinces, killed more than 80 militants.
Persistent Border Tensions and Stalled Diplomacy
Border clashes between the two nations have been recurrent. A significant escalation in October 2025 saw Afghan Taliban and militant forces launch unprovoked attacks against Pakistani border posts.
The resulting conflict was costly:
- Over 200 Taliban and affiliated militants killed.
- 23 Pakistani soldiers martyred.
Despite multiple rounds of talks, Pakistan asserts that diplomatic efforts have failed due to the Afghan Taliban regime’s “reluctance to take action against terrorist outfits” operating from its soil. The latest drone interception and accompanying statements underscore a deepening rift and a continuing security crisis along the shared frontier.

