Russia’s Military Agreement with the Taliban: Arming the Guardians of Pakistan’s Deadliest Foe

Afghanistan and Russia signed a military-technical cooperation agreement during the International Security Forum held in the Moscow region

As Russia signs military cooperation agreements with the Taliban, it bolsters a regime actively sheltering TTP terrorists who launched over 600 deadly cross-border attacks on Pakistan in 2025 alone, revealing a dangerous disconnect between Moscow’s rhetoric and regional realities.

Russia’s deepening military-technical partnership with the Taliban, formalized during Taliban Defense Minister Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob’s recent Moscow visit and signed alongside Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu, expands defense ties at a time when Afghanistan functions as a primary sanctuary for anti-Pakistan militants.

This engagement directly contradicts Russia’s own warnings about terrorist threats from Afghan soil. While Moscow highlights risks from ISIS-K and other groups, it overlooks the Taliban’s permissive environment for Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), estimated at 5,000–7,000 fighters operating from safe havens in Afghanistan. UN Monitoring Team reports consistently document Taliban logistical and operational support to TTP, enabling cross-border infiltration and attacks.

In 2025, TTP’s resurgence from Afghan territory made it Pakistan’s most severe security challenge in over a decade. ACLED data recorded more than 600 TTP attacks, primarily in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, targeting security forces and civilians.

Major incidents included repeated ambushes on Pakistani outposts, suicide bombings, and IED attacks. Escalations peaked in October 2025 when TTP strikes prompted Pakistani airstrikes targeting TTP leader Noor Wali Mehsud’s networks in Kabul, Khost and Paktika. Afghan forces retaliated with border assaults, killing Pakistani soldiers and triggering further clashes that closed key border crossings like Torkham and Chaman.

These attacks underscore Afghanistan’s role as an operational base, recruitment hub  for TTP, which exploits Taliban-controlled territory for training, rearming and launching operations. SIGAR and UN assessments highlight risks of weapons proliferation from inherited arsenals to such groups.

By pursuing military cooperation potentially including technology transfers and joint initiatives Russia risks indirectly strengthening a regime that normalizes and sustains this terror ecosystem. This gamble prioritizes short-term geopolitical maneuvering and isolation of the West over counter-terrorism consistency. This approach has already heightened instability in Pakistan and Central Asia, with  effects that could destabilize global peace by emboldening transnational terrorist networks.

SAT Commentary

SAT Commentary

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