ARSENAL OF CHAOS

By NEWS DESK
7 Min Read

 

‘’By Omay Aimen”

- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image

It wasn’t the sound of boots or the thunder of jets that dawned upon a new era of regional instability, it was the roar of foreign-made firepower echoing across desolate tracts of Waziristan, Kunduz, and Pahalgam. When the United States hurriedly vacated Afghanistan in 2021, its exit did not mark the end of war; it merely scattered the tools of conflict like radioactive dust across a region already burdened by geopolitical commotions. Today, these sophisticated, lethal, and conveniently abandoned weapons have found new users and fresh targets. In May 2025, Pakistani forces eliminated 71 militants in coordinated operations, only to uncover caches of U.S. military-grade weapons possessed by eliminated terrorists. These lethal weapons and sophisticated equipment included M4 carbines, night-vision optics, communication gear, and even anti-armor systems, all left back for the now-defunct Afghan National Army. What was supposed to be battlefield aid for allies has mutated into an arsenal of chaos, distributed across an underground network of non-state actors, used with impunity against a Pakistan that has long cried foul at global forums. These cries, often dismissed as strategic posturing, are now validated by cold metal and hard facts. The same weapons the West once supplied in the name of democracy and counterinsurgency now ignite the fires of terrorism not only in Pakistan but across Central Asian states and even within the smoldering valleys of Indian-occupied Kashmir.

The exit from Kabul was messy, but the consequences are meticulously organized. The United States left behind military equipment worth over $7 billion some estimates run higher including light arms, armored vehicles, drones, and encrypted radios. While Washington claimed much of it was rendered non-operational, reality tells a more sinister story. The Taliban, inheriting not just a country but a cache, soon began organizing training sessions openly and unapologetically. In January 2025, the Taliban regime announced the completion of a month-long training program for its forces on using Russian Konkurs and Milan anti-tank guided missiles French-German tech now reportedly under their command. More alarming still was a propaganda video released by the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), in which militants demonstrated proficiency in handling American-made Javelin missiles. Though Javelins were not part of the official inventory provided to the Afghan government, former Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu revealed that over 100 such units were left behind during the U.S. withdrawal. These shoulder-fired systems are precision killers able to lock onto armored targets and annihilate them with autonomous accuracy. That such weaponry now graces the hands of actors like TTP and BLA should jolt the conscience of any nation that still believes in regional stability. Pakistan, which has fought valiantly to contain the sprawl of extremist violence, now faces a battlefield where the enemy’s strength is buttressed by NATO’s forgotten supply lines.

The spillover of abandoned U.S. weapons is no longer limited to Pakistan. Central Asian states like Uzbekistan and Tajikistan are now intercepting arms caches identical to those used in Pakistani conflict zones. These weapons have become a transnational currency for insurgents from the Caucasus to the Hindu Kush. The most alarming case came in April 2025, when a tourist attack in Indian-occupied Pahalgam initially blamed on Pakistan was later linked to arms with serial numbers from U.S. stockpiles meant for Afghan allies. The incident shattered India’s narrative and revealed a darker truth: Afghanistan’s abandoned arsenal is fueling both terrorism and false-flag operations, destabilizing the region without regard for borders or truth.

Pakistan has long tried to ring the alarm bell. At the United Nations, in bilateral dialogues, and in back-channel briefings, its intelligence community has warned about the diffusion of these weapons into terrorist networks. Groups like the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), once limited to hit-and-run tactics, are now deploying night-vision drones, encrypted radios, and armor-piercing projectiles once restricted to state actors. Even more troubling is the synergy between outfits like the TTP and regional terror nodes, creating a lattice of militancy emboldened by American lethality. When one considers that these very weapons were meant to build and defend Afghan democracy, their repurposing by terror groups represents not just strategic failure but moral decay. Meanwhile, India’s manipulation of such dynamics whether through covert support to anti-Pakistan militants or weaponizing these tools in hybrid operations only exacerbates the threat. In Pahalgam, what looked like a terror ambush is now widely believed in security circles to have been an orchestrated stunt designed to internationalize the Kashmir issue in India’s favor, all while camouflaging it in the convenient cloak of “cross-border terrorism.” The truth, however, is hard to bury when the serial numbers on the shrapnel point westward and the digital trail leads back to Kabul’s abandoned airbases.

Washington must disclose the scale of weapons left behind in Afghanistan, while regional cooperation must shift from lip service to actionable intelligence-sharing and disarmament efforts. Pakistan must also enhance its counterinsurgency and narrative warfare capacities to confront both physical threats and the propaganda that fuels them. The battlefield remains flooded with U.S.-issued arms, turning leftover military hardware into tools of ideological violence. Though the war officially ended in 2021, its weapons continue to threaten Pakistan, regional peace, and the vision of a stable South Asia.

-The author is an independent researcher who writes on issues concerning national and regional security, focusing on matters having critical impact in these milieus. She can be reached at omayaimen333@gmail.com

- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image