Pakistan has previously attacked by Afghanistan: Defense Minister

As Kabul denies the accusations, Pakistan asserts that no nation will be permitted to harbor armed groups planning attacks against it.
The Taliban government in Kabul responded angrily to Pakistan's defence minister's claim that armed organizations are using Afghan soil to launch attacks on his nation, calling the claim "incorrect" and "regrettable."
Khwaja Asif stated to a private news channel on Monday night, "We have spoken to the Afghan administration and we will keep reiterating that… their soil is being utilized for cross-border terrorism."
Shortly after attending a meeting of the National Security Committee (NSC) in the nation's capital Islamabad, Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, recently appointed military head General Asim Munir, and other top officials made their views.
No nation would be permitted to serve as a haven for terrorists, according to a statement released by the government following the NSC meeting, and attacks "shall be met with the full might of the state."
The NSC statement made no specific mention of any nation, but it was clearly making reference to Afghanistan, which is next door and whose government calls the charges "provocative and unfounded."
