The Taliban has given the order of victory over Pakistan from Kabul. This decree has been claimed by Noor Ali Mehsud, who is the Chief Commander of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and the biggest enemy of Munir Fauj. Which has killed five soldiers of Pakistan only last night. That means Taliban has once again killed the Pakistani army. After which Pakistan has become very upset. Pakistan is not able to understand how to deal with the Afghan Taliban which it has created. People in Pakistan are saying good and bad about Afghan Taliban. Threats are being made to wage open war against Afghanistan. But despite this, there has been no decline in the morale of either the Taliban in Afghanistan or the Tehreek-e-Taliban in Pakistan. Taliban leaders and commanders are constantly threatening to teach Pakistan a lesson.
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How many Pakistani soldiers did the Taliban kill now?
Pakistan Army itself has informed that five Pakistani soldiers were killed in the attack from Afghanistan. Pakistan army has also claimed to have killed some Taliban fighters. These clashes took place in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province near the Afghan border, which is considered a TTP stronghold. Pakistani Army claims that armed fighters from Afghanistan tried to cross the border and during this the Pakistani Army attacked them. In response, Afghan fighters killed five Pakistani soldiers and infiltrated into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in large numbers. This means that there are going to be bigger attacks on Pakistan in the coming times.
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Pashtun dividing line
Relations between the Taliban regime of Afghanistan and Pakistan have reached their worst ever phase. But the story of their enmity has its roots in history. The Durand Line is a legacy of the 19th-century game between the Russian and British empires in which Afghanistan was used as a buffer by the British against what they feared was Russian expansionism. On 12 November 1893, Afghan ruler Amir Abdul Khan and British Government Secretary Sir Mortimer Durand signed the border delimitation agreement. Abdur Rahman became king in 1880, two years after the end of the Second Afghan War, in which the British took control of many areas that were part of the Afghan Empire. His agreement with Durand demarcated the boundaries of his and British India’s “spheres of influence” on the Afghan “border” with India. According to Rajeev Dogra, author of the book Durand’s Curse: A Line Across the Pathan Heart, the seven-section agreement recognized the 2,670-kilometre line. Durand had drawn a small map of Afghanistan during his conversation with Amir. The 2,670 kilometer line extends from China’s border with Iran to Afghanistan’s border. Clause 4 of this stated that the “boundary line” would be determined in detail and demarcated by the British and Afghan Commissioners. In which there was also talk of including the interests of local villages.
The reality is quite different
In fact the line passes through Pashtun tribal areas, dividing villages, families and lands. It has been described as a “line of hatred”, arbitrary, illogical, cruel and a hoax on Pashtuns. Some historians believe that this was a ploy to divide the Pashtuns so that the British could easily take control over them. With this they wanted to keep the Khaber Pass under their control.
afghan-pakistan tension
With independence in 1947, India and Pakistan were partitioned and inherited the Durand Line. With this the Pashtuns rejected the line and Afghanistan refused to recognize it. Afghanistan was the only country to vote against Pakistan’s accession to the United Nations in 1947.