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"ISI is My Enemy"- Shahabuddin Liwal, a member of the Taliban ministry's cultural commission .

Explain to me what Pakistani would kill army kids? Or kids in general? Has that ever happened before? They were not Pakistani nationals and if they were they Afghans living in Pakistan either naturalised or fake IDs.

I am sick of your excuses and gaslighting for their actions. Time for some accountability.

I will not buy into your narrative of Afghans are innocents and Pakistanis are the ones to ruin everything. This is the TTP narrative. They shouldn't have backed Al Qaeda/Bin Laden for the $$$, not Pakistanis fault they got pumped by the West and rightfully so, well deserved.

Terrorism have its reasons and effects. Its for the country to know why terrorists are brewing. Your denial only shows u know nothing. These TTP goons are all Pakistanis and mostly tribal area ppl. The refugees u blame are mostly farsi speakers and those ppl are liberals at heart and hate taliban, they even hate Afghan taliban. They do hate Pakistan but that does not mean they r involved in terrorism, they live very carefully in Pakistan.
You dont even know TTP narrative man, its better u dont talk about topics u have no idea about.
 
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People who are creating excuses for Taliban over here are usually Pashtoon.

Check their usernames and posting history. They have a soft corner for their pashtoon brothers. The excuses they are coming up and the blatant misinformation is staggering. They are trying to playdown the threats as if they are not even important but as history is of any importance. Afghans have been a trouble making state since the independence of Pakistan.
 
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People who are creating excuses for Taliban over here are usually Pashtoon.

Check their usernames and posting history. They have a soft corner for their pashtoon brothers. The excuses they are coming up and the blatant misinformation is staggering. They are trying to playdown the threats as if they are not even important but as history is of any importance. Afghans have been a trouble making state since the independence of Pakistan.

I am not Pashtoon and far from it everyone knows this.. I still stand with the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan for geo-stragetic reasons and for the benefit of Pakistan stragetic positioning.. We are strong with a friend in our flank rather then an enemy including an stragetic depth
 
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People who are creating excuses for Taliban over here are usually Pashtoon.

Check their usernames and posting history. They have a soft corner for their pashtoon brothers. The excuses they are coming up and the blatant misinformation is staggering. They are trying to playdown the threats as if they are not even important but as history is of any importance. Afghans have been a trouble making state since the independence of Pakistan.

Hostilities existed between Afghanistan and the newly independent Pakistan since 1947,[13] when Afghanistan became the only country to vote against the admission of Pakistan to the United Nations.[14] Afghanistan advocated the independence of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to form Pashtunistan,[15] although the region's predominant Pashtun population had voted overwhelmingly in favor of Pakistan over India in the referendum held in July 1947. 99.02% votes were cast in favor of Pakistan.[16][17] Afghan nationalists pressed for an independent state to be called Pashtunistan but the idea became unpopular.[18] The Balochistan province of Pakistan was also included in the Greater Pastunistan definition to gain access to the Arabian sea in case Pakistan failed as a state,[13] as Afghanistan had expected.[14]

Pakistan inherited the Durand Line agreement after its independence in 1947, but the Afghan Government has always refused to accept the Durand Line Agreement. Afghanistan has several times tried to seize Pakistan's western provinces of Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The then Afghan Prime Minister, Muhammad Hashim, said "if an independent Pashtunistan cannot be set up, the frontier province should join Afghanistan. Our neighbor Pakistan will realize that our country, with its population and trade, needs an outlet to the sea, which is very essential", in an interview with the Statesman.[13] In 1949, Pakistan Air Force bombed the Afghan sponsored militant camps in border areas including an Afghan village to curb an unrest led by Ipi Faqir propagating independent Pashtunistan.[21] Border clashes were reported in 1949–50 for the first time.[14] On 30 September 1950, Pakistan claimed that Afghan troops and tribesmen had crossed into Pakistan's Balochistan, but the low-scale invasion was repelled after six days of fighting.
 
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Hostilities existed between Afghanistan and the newly independent Pakistan since 1947,[13] when Afghanistan became the only country to vote against the admission of Pakistan to the United Nations.[14] Afghanistan advocated the independence of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to form Pashtunistan,[15] although the region's predominant Pashtun population had voted overwhelmingly in favor of Pakistan over India in the referendum held in July 1947. 99.02% votes were cast in favor of Pakistan.[16][17] Afghan nationalists pressed for an independent state to be called Pashtunistan but the idea became unpopular.[18] The Balochistan province of Pakistan was also included in the Greater Pastunistan definition to gain access to the Arabian sea in case Pakistan failed as a state,[13] as Afghanistan had expected.[14]

Pakistan inherited the Durand Line agreement after its independence in 1947, but the Afghan Government has always refused to accept the Durand Line Agreement. Afghanistan has several times tried to seize Pakistan's western provinces of Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The then Afghan Prime Minister, Muhammad Hashim, said "if an independent Pashtunistan cannot be set up, the frontier province should join Afghanistan. Our neighbor Pakistan will realize that our country, with its population and trade, needs an outlet to the sea, which is very essential", in an interview with the Statesman.[13] In 1949, Pakistan Air Force bombed the Afghan sponsored militant camps in border areas including an Afghan village to curb an unrest led by Ipi Faqir propagating independent Pashtunistan.[21] Border clashes were reported in 1949–50 for the first time.[14] On 30 September 1950, Pakistan claimed that Afghan troops and tribesmen had crossed into Pakistan's Balochistan, but the low-scale invasion was repelled after six days of fighting.

Go for a walk sometimes and leave Pakistan's affairs you don't share same sentiments as Pakistan.. Take a hike or better case scenario go out on a date and burn some steam don't get to stressed out on us here
 
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Hostilities existed between Afghanistan and the newly independent Pakistan since 1947,[13] when Afghanistan became the only country to vote against the admission of Pakistan to the United Nations.[14] Afghanistan advocated the independence of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to form Pashtunistan,[15] although the region's predominant Pashtun population had voted overwhelmingly in favor of Pakistan over India in the referendum held in July 1947. 99.02% votes were cast in favor of Pakistan.[16][17] Afghan nationalists pressed for an independent state to be called Pashtunistan but the idea became unpopular.[18] The Balochistan province of Pakistan was also included in the Greater Pastunistan definition to gain access to the Arabian sea in case Pakistan failed as a state,[13] as Afghanistan had expected.[14]

Pakistan inherited the Durand Line agreement after its independence in 1947, but the Afghan Government has always refused to accept the Durand Line Agreement. Afghanistan has several times tried to seize Pakistan's western provinces of Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The then Afghan Prime Minister, Muhammad Hashim, said "if an independent Pashtunistan cannot be set up, the frontier province should join Afghanistan. Our neighbor Pakistan will realize that our country, with its population and trade, needs an outlet to the sea, which is very essential", in an interview with the Statesman.[13] In 1949, Pakistan Air Force bombed the Afghan sponsored militant camps in border areas including an Afghan village to curb an unrest led by Ipi Faqir propagating independent Pashtunistan.[21] Border clashes were reported in 1949–50 for the first time.[14] On 30 September 1950, Pakistan claimed that Afghan troops and tribesmen had crossed into Pakistan's Balochistan, but the low-scale invasion was repelled after six days of fighting.

You have quoted factual history but some or may be most people would conveniently ignore it for either religious or ethnic reasons.
 
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I f it wasn’t for loyal Pashtuns on western border who have through Pakistans history stopped any aggressive from Kabul. I don’t really think these key board warriors from Karachi or Lahore be fighting to keep it Pakistani for long. Jokers
 
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