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The Pakistan Afghan on going war - 727Sky - 03-01-2026

I thought I had posted something about the war between the Afghan's Taliban and the Pakistan military but I could not find the thread ??




RE: The Pakistan Afghan on going war - F2d5thCav - 03-01-2026

Somehow doubt the Talibunnies will blitz into Pakistan like the image of that first video depicts  Laughing

Paks will definitely have an edge in any conventional battles.

Like Ninurta wrote, the Talibunnies are spawn of Pakistan's deep state.  There is a bit of karma in all this.

MinusculeCheers


RE: The Pakistan Afghan on going war - Ninurta - 03-02-2026

(03-01-2026, 05:38 PM)F2d5thCav Wrote: Somehow doubt the Talibunnies will blitz into Pakistan like the image of that first video depicts  Laughing

Paks will definitely have an edge in any conventional battles.

Like Ninurta wrote, the Talibunnies are spawn of Pakistan's deep state.  There is a bit of karma in all this.

MinusculeCheers

I tried to keep that previous post brief, so I wasn't very thorough on the history and development of the Taliban.

The Taliban was initially a creation of the Pakistani ISI, recruited from Pakistani madrasas in the aftermath of the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan. The Soviets left in, I believe, 1991, and the Taliban did not exist at all until 3 years later in 1994. The Soviets ran so fast they left a hole in the air, and a power vacuum in Afghanistan. The ISI, seeking to exploit that power vacuum and exploit Afghan mineral resources for themselves, created the Taliban (meaning "the students") in order to send them into Afghanistan to take control of the country as a proxy, to do the bidding of Pakistan in the control of Afghanistan. Not so much a client state as a puppet state. By 1996, the Taliban had effective control of over half of Afghanistan, ruling on behalf  (and enjoying the full support) of Pakistan.

Then shit started sliding sideways, and the Taliban started increasingly slipping out from under Pakistani control.

Former mujahideen warlords started joining the Taliban, giving the false impression that the Taliban was a holdover from the Soviet war days, when it was nothing of the sort. Warlords like Gulbuddin Hekmatyar (may he roast in hell!). were joining the Taliban solely because they believed that membership in it were their own future path to power. Like Hekmatyar, they drifted whichever way the wind blows, changing alliances as frequently as an American changes socks. They had and still have no honor or loyalty, only ambition.

Other former mujahideen warlords, like Ahmed Shah Masood, actively opposed the Taliban.

So, the new Taliban and the old mujahideen are NOT the same thing, despite internet claims to the contrary that postulate the Taliban was "a creation of the CIA". It was not, it was a creation of the ISI, but the defections of old ambitious warlords (who sometimes WERE supported, but not created, by the CIA against the Soviets) into Taliban ranks tended to foster that misconception and promote that confusion. This is why the gent in the first video, even at this late date when, had he done his homework, would have known better, still make claims of "the Taliban was a creation of the CIA, and fought against the Soviets". They were not, and they did not. They did not even exist when the Soviets were embroiled in Afghanistan.

I think it is poetic justice that the monster created by the Pakistanis has now come full circle, and turned to bite them in the ass.

I have no use for the Pakistani ISI (or any of their creations for that matter), those duplicitous theivin' bastards.

.


RE: The Pakistan Afghan on going war - 727Sky - 03-02-2026

The Marines for once were able to do their job ! Graphic mayhem age restricted and you need an account which I don't have !!
 https://x.com/LauraLoomer/status/2028226941871140928


RE: The Pakistan Afghan on going war - Ninurta - 03-02-2026

(03-02-2026, 03:35 AM)727Sky Wrote: The Marines for once were able to do their job ! Graphic mayhem age restricted and you need an account which I don't have !!
 https://x.com/LauraLoomer/status/2028226941871140928

I have an account, but from so long ago that I can't get into it any more - lost the logins. I tried, for the first time ever, anywhere, to allow Google to sign me in to it, but Google couldn't git 'er done either.

ETA: Finally got into the account after checking my e-mail and getting one from X telling me what my username was, which was the "security question" holdup that prevented me from getting in. Pretty awesome video. A bunch of protesters try to rush the Consulate gate, shots pop out, and protesters start scattering like sheep before the wolves. One guy pops a few rounds at the Marines with some pistol that looks like it was hand-made on the street at Darra, the rest run like hell carrying their "wounded", most of whom look pretty sure to be goners anyhow. One guy collapses on the portico in front of the gate after running just a little bit, and they pick his bloody ass up and haul him off, too. Looks like the Marine Embassy Guards meant business, as they should.

Can't have Iran'79 or Bengazhi repeating all over again in Pakistan - it took 47 years to start un-fucking the first instance in Iran! I don't have another 47 years on this rock-ball to stay pissed off about another embassy takeover!

Note that both Tehran'79 and Bengazhi happened under Democrats, who apparently believe the we should not defend ourselves from predators.

Paks want to swarm us? Yeah, they're bought and paid for if they do. Most of the shit-heads brought steel pipes to a gunfight.

Dumbasses.

.

.


RE: The Pakistan Afghan on going war - 727Sky - 03-03-2026

https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/least-42-civilians-killed-afghanistan-conflict-with-pakistan-un-agency-says-2026-03-03/


Quote:At least 42 civilians killed in Afghanistan in conflict with Pakistan, UN agency says
By Reuters
March 3, 20261:48 PM GMT+7Updated 54 mins ago



[Image: ALJ4QI5NL5N4VPWHCJTRACPI5M.jpg?auth=e7c2...quality=80]
An Afghan man walks past a damaged wall following airstrikes, amid the conflict between Afghanistan and Pakistan, in Kandahar, Afghanistan, February 28, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
  • Summary
  • UNAMA says casualties are preliminary and urges immediate halt to fighting
  • Afghanistan claims capture of a Pakistani post as clashes continue
  • Pakistan says carried out airstrikes on Taliban military site in Nangarhar
  • Fighting displaces 16,400 households and hampers aid delivery, UNAMA says
KABUL/ISLAMABAD, March 3 (Reuters) - At least 42 ‌civilians have been killed and 104 wounded in Afghanistan in the fighting with Pakistan between February 26 and March 2, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA)said on Tuesday, as the military conflict between the neighbours entered its sixth day.
Military tensions between the South Asian Islamic nations remained high on Tuesday, with Afghanistan saying it had captured another Pakistani post in the Kandahar region and the fighting between the allies-turned-foes ⁠was "still ongoing".
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"The civilian casualties include those caused by indirect fire in cross-border clashes...as well as those caused by airstrikes," the UN agency said, adding that the numbers were "preliminary".
The conflict — the worst between the countries in years — was sparked last week by what Afghanistan's Taliban rulers said were retaliatory strikes on Pakistani installations in response to Pakistan's targeting of militants in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan says Pakistani forces targeted its civilians, a charge Islamabad denies.
Islamabad has launched air-to-ground missiles at Taliban military sites over the last week, and even directly targeted the Taliban government for the first time over allegations it harbours militants executing attacks on Pakistan from its soil.

Pakistani forces destroyed a military base in Nangarhar ‌province ⁠of Afghanistan in a successful air operation, Pakistani security sources said on Tuesday.
UNAMA CALLS FOR HALT TO FIGHTING
Both sides have claimed to have killed scores of troops of the other and inflicted heavy damage on military facilities since the fighting began.
Reuters has not been able to verify the numbers.
Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, while addressing a joint session of parliament on Monday, ⁠reiterated that Islamabad would not allow territory in its neighbourhood to be used for attacks against it.
"The soil of Pakistan is sacred. We will not allow any entity — domestic or foreign — to use neighbouring territory to destabilise our peace," he said.
UNAMA called ⁠for a halt to the fighting and warned that the violence, which has displaced an estimated 16,400 households, has worsened the situation of Afghanistan's people who were still recovering from successive earthquakes in August and September that ⁠killed more than 1,400 people.

"Restrictions on movements in the border area due to the active conflict have reduced the capacity of humanitarian agencies and partners to deliver life-saving and other assistance in the most-affected areas," it said.

Reporting by Mohammad Yunus Yawar and Asif Shahzad, writing by Sakshi Dayal; Editing by YP Rajesh