Military spokesman warns fighters ‘we will chase you, we will hurt you’ amid the spate of deadly ambushes.

The latest attacks, which unfolded in the province of Balochistan, have brought the death toll since Monday to 42 people, military spokesperson Lieutenant General Ahmad Sharif Chaudhry told a televised news conference Wednesday.
Chaudhry said the casualties included four civilians, while security forces also killed 54 fighters across several operations.
“We will chase you, we will hurt you,” Chaudhry said, claiming that “many Afghans” were behind the attacks.
“We will take on each and every terrorist, their facilitators, those who harbour them, those who nourish them and those who provide them bases, wherever they are located,” he added.
The 18 slain police officers were abducted Monday, when dozens of fighters descended upon a post guarding the large Mangi dam project in Balochistan’s Ziarat district. Nine other officers were killed in the attack.
Then, on Wednesday, fighters ambushed a vehicle as it travelled on a Balochistan highway, killing the 11 soldiers, Chaudhry said.
Escalating attacks
Pakistan has been battling a separatist uprising for years in Balochistan, which is the country’s largest, but least populated, province bordering Afghanistan and Iran.
Fighters from the banned Pakistan Taliban (TTP) – which is allied with Afghanistan’s Taliban – and the banned Balochistan Liberation Army have targeted state forces, foreign investment projects and infrastructure in the mineral-laden region. At least five separatist uprisings have been recorded since Pakistani independence in 1947.
Islamabad has repeatedly accused Afghanistan of serving as a base for separatist groups seeking to overthrow Pakistan’s central government, which Kabul has denied.
Earlier this month, Pakistan’s military said it intercepted four drones launched by the Afghan Taliban into Balochistan, the latest in a string of tit-for-tat strikes since October 2025.
The strikes came after Pakistani security forces killed 29 fighters along the Afghan border in late June, following an assault on a Karachi paramilitary compound for which the Pakistan Taliban claimed responsibility.

