Pakistan Rejects Accusations Of Involvement In Kabul Bombing

A massive explosion from a suicide car bomb planted at the gateway of the Indian Embassy in Kabul killed 41 people and injured approximately 150 on Monday in the most recent notice of an acute decline in Afghanistan, where struggle victims have exceeded Iraq’s in the past two months.

Afghanistan made a sparsely disguised allusion to Pakistan in a security report released Tuesday regarding the fact that the incident could not have been successful without the backing of foreign intelligence organizations.

According to the report, terrorists pierced into Afghanistan after receiving guidance and logistical encouragement from across the border. The report conducted by the Ministry of Defense and the country's national security consultant was considered by Afghanistan's Cabinet soon after Monday's embassy assault.

Pakistan's prime minister denied on Tuesday any implications of the country’s intelligence service in the terrorist attack. In a lecture held in Malaysia, Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani said his nation does not benefit from the deterioration of Afghanistan, since both countries are struggling against terrorism.

Afghanistan frequently claims that the Pakistani intelligence is sustaining the Taliban rebels, but Islamabad rejects the charges every time.

Gen. Ahmad Zia Aftali, the head of Kabul's main military hospital reported that the bodies of the four Indians murdered in yesterday’s incident were flown back home late Monday aboard an Indian military plane.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai reprimanded the bombing on Monday and said it was conducted by militants in their efforts to break the Afghan-India friendship. According to the Washington Post, he told the Indian prime minister during a phone call that Afghanistan would do all the possible in order to discover the identity of the aggressors. The explosion was the deadliest in Kabul since the fall of the Taliban in 2001.




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