Pakistan and Afghanistan Agree to 48-Hour Ceasefire Amid Escalating Border Tensions: How Taliban forced Pakistan To Plead for a Ceasefire?

by · TFIPOST.com

In a rare diplomatic pause after days of heavy cross-border shelling, Pakistan and the Taliban-led government in Afghanistan have agreed to a temporary 48-hour ceasefire, beginning at 6:00 PM Pakistan Standard Time on Wednesday. The truce aims to halt escalating hostilities that have killed dozens on both sides and displaced thousands near the Durand Line the long-disputed border dividing the two countries.

The ceasefire, which will remain in effect until Friday evening, comes after Islamabad reportedly reached out to Qatar and Saudi Arabia for urgent mediation, fearing the conflict could spiral into a wider regional confrontation.

Conflicting Claims Over Who Requested Truce

While Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry claimed that the ceasefire was initiated at Afghanistan’s request to prevent further casualties, Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid contradicted this, saying it was Islamabad that pleaded for de-escalation. “The ceasefire has been implemented at the request and insistence of the Pakistani side,” Mujahid posted on X, adding that Afghan forces would respect the truce unless Pakistan violated it.

Afghan media cited senior Taliban official Abdul Haq Hamad, who revealed that Pakistan had reached out to Qatari and Saudi diplomats, urging them to “convince Afghans to stop the fighting.” Hamad quoted a Pakistani official as saying, “For God’s sake, stop Afghans from fighting.”

Pakistan Seeks Gulf Mediation Amid Security Pact with Saudi Arabia

The truce follows a flurry of diplomatic activity in Islamabad. According to reports, Pakistan’s government has sought to use its recently signed security cooperation pact with Saudi Arabia as leverage to mediate the border crisis. The pact, finalized just days before the clashes, is seen as part of Islamabad’s broader attempt to rebuild trust with Gulf allies and project stability amid domestic turmoil and rising militant attacks.

However, the Taliban’s response has been defiant. “Pakistan should understand that we will never remain silent in defending our sacred values, the Islamic system, and our national interests,” Hamad warned. “If any aggressor attacks us, we will respond in a way that becomes an example for future history.”

Violence Follows Pakistan’s Airstrikes Inside Afghanistan

The latest hostilities erupted last week after Pakistani fighter jets carried out airstrikes inside Afghanistan’s Kandahar province, claiming to target Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) hideouts. Afghan authorities accused Pakistan of hitting civilian areas in Spin Boldak, killing at least 15 civilians and injuring over 100, including women and children. The Taliban retaliated with mortar and artillery fire, resulting in multiple casualties among Pakistani paramilitary soldiers.

Unverified videos circulating online show Taliban fighters seizing Pakistani military equipment, including a T-55 tank, underscoring the intensity of the skirmishes. The Torkham and Chaman border crossings vital trade routes remain closed for over a week, worsening the humanitarian crisis as thousands flee the border districts.

Durand Line Dispute at the Heart of the Conflict

At the core of the recurring violence lies the Durand Line, the 2,640-km border drawn during British colonial rule in 1893. Afghanistan has historically refused to recognize it, while Pakistan considers it an international boundary. Tensions have intensified since the Taliban’s takeover in 2021, with Islamabad accusing Kabul of sheltering TTP militants who conduct cross-border attacks on Pakistani security forces.

Both nations have suffered from decades of mistrust. Despite Pakistan’s early support for the Taliban regime, relations have sharply deteriorated over border management, cross-border terrorism, and growing anti-Pakistan sentiment in Afghanistan.

The 48-hour ceasefire between Pakistan and Afghanistan may offer a brief pause in violence, but it remains fragile and uncertain. With both sides trading accusations and nationalist rhetoric running high, lasting peace seems distant. The Taliban’s defiance and Pakistan’s internal pressures from insurgencies to economic instability make sustained de-escalation a formidable challenge. Unless both nations move beyond short-term truces toward structured dialogue, the volatile border could once again erupt, threatening wider regional security.