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Wish List of Shadowy Spoilers!

22 0
13.03.2026

The security situation in Afghanistan and the broader region is complex and requires careful analysis in media domains. A recent commentary published in a foreign media platform on South Asian security ironically relies on dramatic claims about intelligence agencies, terrorist networks and geopolitical intrigue. The premier intelligence agency of Pakistan was accused of simultaneously manipulating militant groups to undermine Chinese interests in Afghanistan. Such baseless assertions often rest on weak evidence, questionable sourcing and analytical shortcuts which eventually obscure rather than clarify complex realities of regional security dynamics. Afghanistan’s post-2021 security environment is highly fluid, with local insurgent groups, transnational self-style jihadist networks, and competing regional intelligence actors operating in overlapping spaces. In such a fragmented landscape, isolated incidents or unverified claims can easily be interpreted through geopolitical narratives. Requisite caution and due verification were lacking in recent eye-catching commentary about the cross-border shipment on the Pak-Afghan border. The alleged claim of interception of a shipment of weapons that had supposedly crossed from Pakistan into Afghanistan, destined for militant groups operating in the Wakhan Corridor, remains baseless and unauthentic. Such claims are often presented as proof of covert Pakistani efforts to destabilise Afghanistan or manipulate terrorist actors. Hostile elements involved in patronising anti-Pakistan cross-border terror proxies from Afghan soil usually spread such propaganda to dent the stance of Islamabad on the sensitive issue of regional security. The weapons reported in the alleged seizure consisted largely of short-range submachine guns and pistols, equipment that is typically associated with security forces rather than terrorists. Terrorist groups operating in the region have historically relied on assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, explosives and improvised explosive devices. This evidently negates the accusation of the provision of weapons to terrorists by Pakistan. Another baseless accusation thrown in recent commentary is that Pakistan’s role is undermining Chinese investments in Afghanistan in order to preserve geopolitical leverage over Beijing. This argument appears counterintuitive amid long-term reliance of Pak economic strategy on mutual cooperation with China, as evident from CPEC-related projects.

The alleged claim of interception of a shipment of weapons that had supposedly crossed from Pakistan into Afghanistan, destined for militant groups operating in the Wakhan Corridor, remains baseless and unauthentic.

The alleged claim of interception of a shipment of weapons that had supposedly crossed from Pakistan into Afghanistan, destined for militant groups operating in the Wakhan Corridor, remains baseless and unauthentic.

Islamabad has consistently advocated expanding regional connectivity linking China, Pakistan, Afghanistan and the Central Asian republics. Stability in Afghanistan has therefore been framed not as a strategic threat but as a prerequisite for extending economic corridors toward Central Asia. This factor also merits attention to how Islamabad could manipulate Afghan dynamics to leverage Beijing, once terrorist groups sheltered by the Taliban regime have posed serious security threats to Pakistan. Linking Pakistani intelligence with ISKP to hurt Chinese interests seems fictional and illogical amid the arrest of high-value target Sharifullah, the affiliated ISKP mastermind of the 2021 Abbeygate attack on US forces. Balochistan hosts a complex mixture of actors that include ethnically motivated terrorist organisations, sectarian groups, criminal networks and transnational extremist elements exploiting ideological motivations, organisational structures and operational patterns. Pakistan has suffered heavy losses while countering the foreign-sponsored terrorism in Balochistan. Unfortunately, misleading conclusions presented in Western media contradict the ground realities and reflect meaningful bias in favour of hardcore terrorist groups and their sympathisers operating in Balochistan. Regional security analysis in South Asia is often shaped by competing geopolitical narratives promoted by states, political actors, and advocacy networks. Presence of hardcore terrorist groups in Afghanistan under the umbrella of the Afghan Taliban regime is an undeniable fact, especially after repeated endorsements from the UNSC, Russian foreign ministers, Chinese official statements and regular cautions from Pakistan. The controversial role of New Delhi in spoiling the regional security through Afghanistan-based terror proxies is no longer a well-kept secret. Discomfort of New Delhi with growing Pak-China ties, especially progress on CPEC projects in Baluchistan, should not be ignored while assessing the complex regional security dynamics. Biased conclusions presented from Western media in the garb of commentary seem like a wish list of shadowy spoilers operating in New Delhi.

The writer is a freelance contributor based in Islamabad.


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