Amid border tensions with Afghanistan, Pakistan starts ‘two-front war’ propaganda to target India

In an interview with Samaa TV, Asif said it was possible that India might take some “vile action” along the border, though he did not present any proof to back the claim.

Amid border tensions with Afghanistan, Pakistan starts ‘two-front war’ propaganda to target India

Pakistan's Defence Minister Khwaja Asif (photo:X)

Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif has claimed that India “could play dirty at the border” and said the country is ready for a “two-front war,” even as tensions rise along the Afghanistan border.

In an interview with Samaa TV, Asif said it was possible that India might take some “vile action” along the border, though he did not present any proof to back the claim.

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He referred to a past “encounter” with India, likely the clashes that followed India’s Operation Sindoor against terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.

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“The situation is not good,” he admitted, pointing to Pakistan’s worsening security conditions and strained ties with Afghanistan.

When asked if he or Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had held any meetings about a potential conflict with both India and Afghanistan, Asif said there was already a plan in place.

“There is a strategy. We are not discussing it publicly right now, but Pakistan is ready for any situation,” he said, again repeating that India might try to carry out military action.

His comments come as relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan worsen after Islamabad reportedly launched airstrikes in Kabul targeting Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Noor Wali Mehsud.

The strikes were condemned by the Afghan government as a breach of its sovereignty.

Responding to the rising border tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan post a series of clashes and airstrikes in the recent days, India on Thursday (October 16, 2025) gave its stance again, stating its commitment to the sovereignty, territorial integrity, and independence of Afghanistan.

Reacting to a question on India’s view on Afghanistan-Pakistan border tensions during his weekly media briefing in New Delhi, Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said, “We are closely monitoring the situation.”

“Three things are clear — one that Pakistan hosts terrorist organisations and sponsors terrorist activities. Two, it is an old practice of Pakistan to blame its neighbours for its own internal failures. And three, Pakistan is infuriated with Afghanistan exercising sovereignty over its own territories,” he said.

“India remains fully committed to the sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence of Afghanistan,” the MEA spokesperson said.

In reply to another query related to Afghanistan, Jaiswal apprised that the upgrade of India’s Technical Mission in Kabul to a full-fledged Embassy of India will take place in the next few days. “Presently, we have a technical mission in Kabul. The transition from this technical mission to the embassy will happen in the next few days,” he said.

India’s Technical Mission has been operational in Kabul since June 2022, providing limited diplomatic and humanitarian engagement after the closure of the Indian Embassy in August 2021, following the withdrawal of US-led NATO forces from Afghanistan

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