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    Home » The perils of cross-border militancy
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    The perils of cross-border militancy

    adminBy adminDecember 28, 2025Updated:December 28, 2025No Comments6 Views
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    By S.M. Inam

    Afghanistan, once hailed as a centerpiece of international peacebuilding efforts, has again emerged as a focal point of regional insecurity. The Taliban’s interim government, installed amid the dramatic withdrawal of international forces, has struggled—or perhaps declined—to fulfil its commitments under international agreements to prevent Afghan soil from being exploited for terrorism. The consequences of this failure, long feared by neighboring countries, are increasingly manifest in violent incidents that transcend Afghanistan’s borders. In the latest episode, militants crossing from Afghan territory attacked a Tajik border post, killing two border guards before being repelled by Tajik forces, who killed three of the attackers in retaliation. While the immediate toll was tragic yet contained, the broader implications are worrying.

    Tajik authorities have publicly criticized the Taliban for failing to uphold assurances of border stability, highlighting what many regional observers describe as a pattern of negligence or incapacity. From Central Asia to South Asia, there is a growing recognition that Afghanistan under the current administration has reverted to being a permissive sanctuary for militant groups, a reality that threatens both regional diplomacy and security. The concerns are not merely anecdotal. A recent report in The Geopolitics, an American journal, alleges that the outlawed Tehreek‑e‑Taliban Pakistan (TTP) is carrying out attacks inside Pakistan using US-made weapons abandoned in Afghanistan during the chaotic withdrawal of international forces.

    According to the report, these arms, valued at over $7 billion, are being trafficked through Afghanistan’s black market and funneled into networks capable of executing cross-border operations. Whether the Taliban are complicit in this flow or merely incapable of enforcing control, the effect is the same: weapons intended to safeguard Afghanistan have become instruments of violence elsewhere. Pakistan, long on the frontline of cross-border militancy, has repeatedly called attention to this issue, emphasizing that the Taliban government lacks both the will and the capacity to rein in extremist groups operating within its territory. Evidence is mounting to support this claim. Incidents of infiltration, targeted attacks, and organized violence emanating from Afghan soil have increased in frequency and sophistication, creating a persistent security threat not only for Pakistan but for all neighboring states with which Afghanistan shares a porous frontier.

    The repeated failures of the Taliban to act decisively challenge the very foundations of regional trust and cooperation. Beyond the immediate human and material costs, these developments carry broader geopolitical implications. The permissiveness of Afghan territory has become a destabilizing factor that risks undermining decades of diplomatic and security arrangements across South and Central Asia. Nations in the region are caught between the necessity of engagement with the Taliban, whose control over Afghanistan is indisputable, and the urgent need to protect their citizens from the consequences of cross-border attacks. This tension is compounded by allegations of external patronage and international indulgence, which critics argue have emboldened the Taliban to maintain a lax stance toward groups that pose a threat beyond Afghanistan’s borders.

    The situation also presents a challenge to the international community and global institutions. When the Taliban repeatedly fail to honor commitments regarding terrorism, what mechanisms exist to enforce accountability? Conditional aid, diplomatic pressure, and sanctions have historically been tools used to influence state behavior, yet Afghanistan’s rulers have so far navigated these levers with relative impunity. The longer this environment persists, the more entrenched the networks of militancy become, and the harder it will be to dismantle them. Regional instability, far from being contained within Afghanistan, now has the potential to reverberate globally, as weapons, training, and ideologically motivated operatives move across borders with alarming ease.

    It is a sobering reality that a mixture of permissive governance, international hesitation, and alleged external support has allowed the Taliban to consolidate power internally while failing to constrain the very elements that threaten regional peace. Without decisive action, Afghanistan risks becoming synonymous not with sovereignty but with sanctuary for extremists. The consequences are clear: recurring attacks, erosion of trust with neighbors, and the perpetuation of a cycle of violence that will exact human, political, and economic costs for years to come. For Pakistan and other neighboring countries, the implications are immediate. Cross-border attacks not only endanger lives but also strain diplomatic relations, disrupt trade, and force militaries to adopt reactive stances that consume resources better spent on development and social stability.

    For the international community, the stakes are similarly high. The enduring presence of ungoverned spaces, unmonitored weapons caches, and ideologically driven militants presents a direct challenge to global counter-terrorism objectives. If Afghanistan is allowed to operate as a permissive environment for terrorism, it undermines decades of multilateral efforts to stabilize the region, threatens broader security alliances, and risks exporting conflict far beyond South and Central Asia. The time for equivocation is over. Statements of concern, diplomatic notes, and symbolic gestures will no longer suffice. Effective measures must include concrete accountability for the Taliban, verification mechanisms to ensure compliance with international commitments, and concerted regional cooperation to prevent Afghan soil from being a launchpad for terrorism.

    (The writer is a former government officer and a senior analyst on national and international affairs, can be reached at inam@metro-morning.com)

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