Sanctuaries and weapons available to TTP in 'neighbouring country' reason behind spike in terror attacks: Pak Army
The Pakistan Army's top generals have said that Taliban militants in Afghanistan who harbour terrorists from the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan group were partly responsible for recent terrorist attacks in Pakistan. During a meeting of commande...

"The sanctuaries and liberty of action available to the terrorists of proscribed TTP and other groups of that ilk in a neighbouring country and availability of latest weapons to the terrorists were noted as major reasons impacting security of Pakistan," the army said in a statement.
Though not named, the neighbouring country was Afghanistan which was blamed by Pakistan last week for tolerating the outlawed TTP on its soil.
On Saturday, Defence Minister Khwaja Asif claimed that terrorists involved in bloodshed in his country were getting refuge in Afghanistan and warned that Pakistan would no longer tolerate this.
"Afghanistan is not fulfilling the right to be a neighbour and brother country and is not abiding by the Doha agreement. 50/60 lakh Afghans have 40/50 years of asylum in Pakistan with all rights," Asif said.
"On the contrary, the terrorists who shed the blood of Pakistanis can find refuge on Afghan soil. This situation cannot continue any longer. Pakistan will use all its resources to protect its land and citizens," the minister said.
His statement came a day after Army chief Gen Munir warned the Afghan Taliban of an "effective response" by his forces if they fail to stop harbouring militants who plot cross-border attacks from Afghanistan.
Tempers are running high in Pakistan after 12 soldiers were killed in two separate terrorist incidents in Balochistan on July 13, the highest single-day toll of troops in the province.
A little-known group of the Pakistani Taliban militants claimed responsibility for the attack.
Pakistan has accused the Taliban government in Kabul of tolerating the presence of the banned TTP militants in the country.
Pakistan has seen a significant increase in TTP attacks since the Afghan Taliban came to power in 2021.
The army said on Monday that the meeting deliberated in detail upon the operational preparedness and training aspects of the forces. The participants were briefed in detail about the prevailing internal security environment.
"Objective training remains the hallmark of our professionalism and we must always remain prepared to guard against any threat to our national security," the army chief was quoted as saying on the occasion.
The commanders were also apprised of the government's economic revival plan and the role of the Army in uplifting agriculture, IT, mining & mineral and defence production sectors under the ambit of the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC).
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