HomeWorldPakistan disowns Taliban, calls it ‘non-legitimate’: How Islamabad’s policy U-turn exposes its loss of control

Pakistan disowns Taliban, calls it ‘non-legitimate’: How Islamabad’s policy U-turn exposes its loss of control

The reversal exposes the collapse of Islamabad’s long-standing strategy of using Afghanistan as a buffer against India and highlights its growing loss of control over the very militants it once nurtured.

October 13, 2025 / 10:24 IST
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Taliban fighters ride on a police pickup truck during celebrations marking the fourth anniversary of the U.S. withdrawal and the start of Taliban rule in Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Nava Jamshidi)
Taliban fighters ride on a police pickup truck during celebrations marking the fourth anniversary of the U.S. withdrawal and the start of Taliban rule in Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Nava Jamshidi)

In a desperate and forced foreign policy shift, Pakistan has officially declared that the Taliban regime in Afghanistan is “not legitimate,” four years after it celebrated the group’s return to power in Kabul. The reversal, reported by CNN-News18, exposes the collapse of Islamabad’s long-standing strategy of using Afghanistan as a buffer against India and highlights its growing loss of control over the very militants it once nurtured.

Pakistan’s Foreign Office said in a formal communication that it was “deeply concerned” over what it described as “unwarranted aggression by the Afghan Taliban, terrorists and militants” along the Pak–Afghan border on the night of October 11–12. The statement alleged that the attacks were aimed at “destabilising the Pak-Afghan border” and violated the “spirit of peaceful and cooperative ties between two brotherly countries.”

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Pakistan claimed it had exercised its right to self-defence by “effectively repulsing assaults all along the border,” inflicting “heavy losses on Taliban forces and affiliated Khwarjis” in men, material, and infrastructure. According to the statement, “the targeted structures were being used to plan and facilitate terrorist attacks against Pakistan.”

While insisting that “all possible measures were taken to prevent collateral damage and protect civilians,” Islamabad warned that “any further provocations would be met with an unwavering and befitting response.” The statement also claimed that Pakistan “values dialogue and diplomacy” but will “take all possible measures to safeguard its territory and people.”