
February 28, 2026: The long-simmering friction between Pakistan and the Taliban-led government of Afghanistan has reached a dangerous tipping point. Following a week of unprecedented military escalation, Islamabad’s Defence Minister Khawaja Asif declared on Friday that the two nations are now in a state of “open war.”
The conflict, which has transitioned from localized border skirmishes to deep-set aerial bombardments, has sent shockwaves across South and Central Asia. As both nations trade lethal blows, the eyes of global superpowers—China, Russia, and the United States—are fixed on a region that serves as a critical geostrategic crossroads.
The current crisis ignited in late February 2026. Pakistan, citing a surge in domestic terrorism and the failure of the Taliban to curb militant safe havens, launched Operation Ghazab-lil-Haq (Operation Righteous Fury).
At the heart of this “open war” are two structural issues that have plagued bilateral relations for decades:
“Our patience has reached its limit,” stated Minister Khawaja Asif. “We will no longer tolerate the export of terrorism from Afghan soil under the guise of ‘neighborhood’ ties.”
The prospect of a full-scale war in the Hindu Kush is a nightmare scenario for global powers, each with competing interests in the region.
| Power | Primary Concern | Strategic Interest |
| China | Regional Stability | Protecting the $62 billion CPEC projects and preventing militant spillover into Xinjiang. |
| United States | Counter-Terrorism | Monitoring Al-Qaeda and ISIS-K remnants while managing the fallout of the U.S.-Iran crisis. |
| Russia | Central Asian Security | Preventing the destabilization of Tajikistan and Uzbekistan via northern Afghan borders. |
China has already signaled its willingness to mediate, fearing that a protracted conflict will derail its “Belt and Road” ambitions. Meanwhile, regional actors like Saudi Arabia and Qatar are reportedly working behind the scenes to establish a ceasefire, similar to the fragile truce reached in October 2025.
The economic stakes are equally high. Central Asian nations, particularly Uzbekistan, have invested heavily in trans-Afghan corridors like the Termez–Peshawar railway. A war would effectively bury these dreams of regional connectivity, further isolating the already fragile Afghan economy and straining Pakistan’s precarious financial situation.
As UN Secretary-General António Guterres expresses “deep concern” over the escalation, the world waits to see if the rhetoric of “open war” will transition into a full-scale invasion or if diplomatic pressure can pull these two neighbors back from the abyss.