SECURITY — May 5, 2026

Pakistan Army Chief Says Militant Safe Havens in Afghanistan Have Backfired Amid Strike Disputes

Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir claimed that militant safe havens in Afghanistan have increased domestic security threats, while dismissing civilian casualty reports from cross-border strikes as propaganda. The Taliban and UNAMA dispute these claims, citing civilian deaths in Kunar and Kabul amid ongoing diplomatic tensions.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV2 min read

Pakistan Army Chief Says Militant Safe Havens in Afghanistan Have Backfired Amid Strike Disputes
Image courtesy Amu TV

Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir stated that militant safe havens in Afghanistan have produced the opposite of their intended effect, increasing domestic security threats within Pakistan. Speaking on the country’s military posture, Munir reiterated that operations against militant networks will continue and intensify, including the ongoing campaign known as Operation Ghazab-ul-Haq.

Pakistani military authorities have accused the Taliban of harboring armed groups, including the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, allegations that the Taliban has consistently denied. In response to international and local reports of civilian casualties from recent cross-border strikes, Pakistan’s military dismissed the figures as propaganda, asserting that its operations are precise and exclusively target militant infrastructure.

The Taliban disputes these assertions. Deputy Spokesperson Hamdullah Fitrat stated that recent Pakistani strikes in the Dangam district of Kunar province struck civilian homes, resulting in three deaths and fourteen injuries. Separately, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan confirmed that at least 269 civilians were killed in a Pakistani airstrike on a drug rehabilitation center in Kabul on March 16.

Despite multiple rounds of official negotiations and informal discussions, diplomatic relations between Pakistan and the Taliban remain strained. Both sides acknowledge persistent cross-border security challenges and ongoing militant activity along the shared frontier. As military operations continue, conflicting accounts regarding strike targets and civilian tolls underscore the deep divisions in how both governments assess the security situation.

Read the original reporting at Amu TV

Reliability assessment

Single source (Amu TV) provides direct, on-record attribution from named officials and recognized entities (Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir, Pakistan Army PR, Taliban Deputy Spokesperson Hamdullah Fitrat, UNAMA) with concrete, checkable details regarding military operations, diplomatic tensions, and casualty disputes. While casualty figures and strike impacts are heavily contested between the reporting parties, the core event (Pakistan's military posture, cross-border strikes, and official statements) is concretely attributable. Per verification guidelines, differing details on casualties do not block a reliable rating when the underlying event and official statements are well-sourced.

The source language reads straight.

Independent web corroboration

An independent web search turned up no separate corroborating reports. Treat the account as single-sourced until more outlets pick it up.

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SecurityPakistan Army, Asim Munir, Taliban, UNAMA, TTP

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