Could the Pakistan-Iran airstrikes be the start of regional escalation?

Members of Muslim Talba Mahaz Pakistan chant slogans at a demonstration to condemn Iran strike in the Pakistani border area, in Islamabad, Pakistan on Thursday
Members of Muslim Talba Mahaz Pakistan chant slogans at a demonstration to condemn Iran strike in the Pakistani border area, in Islamabad, Pakistan on Thursday Copyright Anjum Naveed/The AP
Copyright Anjum Naveed/The AP
By Euronews with AP
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Eleven people have been killed this week in airstrikes by Iran and Pakistan - what is behind them and what could it mean for the future?

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This week's airstrikes between Iran and Pakistan which killed at least 11 people marks a significant escalation in fraught relations between the neighbours.

Long-running, low-level insurgencies on either side of the border have frustrated both countries, and the apparent targets of the strikes - Iran's on Tuesday and Pakistan's response on Thursday - were insurgent groups whose goal is an independent Balochistan for ethnic Baloch areas in Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The question now, then, is why Iran and Pakistan would choose to strike insurgents in each other's territories rather than their own, considering the risk of a wider conflagration.

A brief background of relations between Iran and Pakistan

Iran and Pakistan share a 900-kilometre largely lawless border where smugglers and militants are known to roam freely. Both countries have suspected each other of supporting, or at least behaving leniently toward some of the groups operating on the other side of the border.

Jaish al-Adl, the Sunni separatist group that Iran targeted on Tuesday, is believed to operate out of Pakistan, launching attacks on Iranian security forces.

The Baloch Liberation Army, which was formed in 2000 and has launched attacks against Pakistani security forces and Chinese infrastructure projects, is suspected of hiding out in Iran.

A Pakistani checks morning newspapers covering front page story of Iran's strike, at a stall in Islamabad, Pakistan on Thursday
A Pakistani checks morning newspapers covering front page story of Iran's strike, at a stall in Islamabad, Pakistan on ThursdayAnjum Naveed/The AP

Why did Pakistan retaliate on Thursday - and why now?

Pakistan said its strikes in Iran on Thursday were aimed at hideouts of the Balochistan Liberation Army and the Balochistan Liberation Front. It added it wanted to send a message to Iran and other neighbours, sending a warning that it can fight back if provoked.

The last time Pakistan retaliated against a neighbouring country was back in 2019, when it downed two Indian warplanes and captured a pilot in the disputed Kashmir region. It followed an Indian strike inside Pakistan against what New Delhi claimed was a terrorist training camp.

The two nations have long had a volatile relationship, but these strikes are likely prompted by internal dynamics.

Tehran has been experiencing a growing pressure for some kind of action after a deadly Islamic State group attack earlier this month, as well as Israel’s war on Iran's ally, Hamas and wider unrest against its theocracy. Pakistan's attack on Thursday also served a domestic purpose according to analysts.

“The government and military have been under immense pressure (since Tuesday),” Abdullah Khan from the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies think-tank in Islamabad told the AP, adding ,“The public perception of a strong army is not as it used to be, so it had to respond.”

How likely is it that the situation will escalate?

Iran’s military on Thursday began a planned annual air defence drill stretching from its port of Chabahar near Pakistan in the east, all the way across the country to its border with Iraq in the west. The drill will include live fire from aircraft, drones and air defence systems.

Fresh strikes by Iran and Pakistan cannot be ruled out, although this week's attacks raise questions about the preparedness of their own militaries, particularly their radar and air defence systems.

For Pakistan, such systems are crucial given its constant, low-level tensions with its nuclear-armed rival, India. Its equipment has long been deployed along that frontier, rather than its border with Iran. Separately, Iran relies on radar and air defence systems in the case of potential strikes by its main enemy, the United States.

What do the airstrikes mean for Iran and Pakistan?

Launching these strikes allows Tehran to point to it directly taking military action without risking a wider confrontation with either Israel and the US, particularly as tensions also remain high over Iran's rapidly advancing nuclear program.

However, the airstrikes could backfire on Pakistan because the Baloch Liberation Army said it will avenge the killings and wage war on the state.

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