Noorullah Noori, the Taliban’s minister for borders and tribal affairs, said on Thursday at a meeting in Jawzjan province: “In four years, the youth of the Islamic Emirate have reached a level where they can target Islamabad and Lahore from Kabul using drones.”
He said the Taliban administration is strong and that Afghans should be grateful for its rule and support it with “full faith”.
Following an escalation in clashes between the Taliban and the Pakistani army, the Taliban reportedly targeted Islamabad, Balochistan and parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa with drones. These attacks were carried out in response to Pakistani airstrikes and military actions inside Afghanistan.
The strikes drew a strong reaction from Pakistan. President Asif Ali Zardari said the Taliban had “crossed red lines”.
Noori is among Taliban ministers known for taking a hard line against Pakistan. He had previously warned that if Pakistan continued attacks on Afghan territory, Taliban forces would advance as far as Lahore.
Earlier, Noori rejected the existing border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, known as the Durand Line, a sensitive issue for both countries, and said the barbed wire along the frontier was “a thorn in the chest of the Afghan people”.
Although the Taliban were allied with Pakistan over the past three decades, with Islamabad providing extensive military and political support during the conflict with the mujahideen and the former Afghan republic, relations have deteriorated into military confrontation since the group’s return to power in 2021.
Analysts say Islamabad supported the Taliban for its own security interests, but the group has become a major security challenge for Pakistan by backing Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
The Institute for Economics and Peace said in its latest Global Terrorism Index that Pakistan has, for the first time, ranked as the country most affected by terrorism. According to the report, Pakistan suffered the highest impact from terrorist attacks in 2025.
The institute said the sharp rise in militant activity is partly a consequence of the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan in 2021.
Deaths from attacks by militant groups such as the TTP in Pakistan have reached their highest level since 2013. In 2025, Pakistan recorded 1,139 deaths and 1,045 terrorist incidents, with most attacks occurring in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan.
For the first time since the index was introduced, Afghanistan is no longer among the ten countries most affected by terrorism.