Practice Afghanistan MCQs for Supreme Court of Pakistan Assistant Current Affairs — topic-wise sets with solved answers.
Q1. Which militant group based in Afghanistan has been the primary source of Pakistan-Afghanistan border tensions since 2022?
Answer: Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan
Explanation: Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has been the central driver of Pakistan-Afghanistan border tensions, launching cross-border attacks from Afghan soil. Pakistan has repeatedly demanded the Afghan Taliban government dismantle TTP sanctuaries.
Q2. What type of special diplomatic meeting did Pakistan convene under OIC auspices in 2021 and again sought in 2022 regarding Afghanistan's humanitarian crisis?
Answer: OIC Council of Foreign Ministers extraordinary session
Explanation: Pakistan pushed for and hosted an OIC Council of Foreign Ministers extraordinary session in December 2021, and continued to advocate for similar sessions in 2022, to mobilise humanitarian aid for Afghanistan following the Taliban takeover.
Q3. What does the acronym TTP stand for in the context of Pakistan's security and foreign policy challenges?
Answer: Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan
Explanation: TTP stands for Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan - a Pakistani militant organisation that seeks to overthrow the Pakistani state and impose its interpretation of Islamic law. It operates primarily from sanctuaries in eastern Afghanistan.
Q4. Pakistan's policy toward the Afghan Taliban government since August 2021 has been best described as which of the following?
Answer: Conditional engagement without formal diplomatic recognition
Explanation: Pakistan has pursued conditional engagement with the Afghan Taliban - maintaining diplomatic contact and economic ties while withholding formal recognition, partly contingent on Taliban action against TTP and respect for Pakistan's security concerns.
Q5. When did the Taliban take control of Kabul and Afghanistan?
Answer: August 2021
Explanation: The Taliban captured Kabul on August 15, 2021, completing their takeover of Afghanistan as US and NATO forces withdrew. The Afghan government collapsed and President Ashraf Ghani fled the country.
Q6. What is TTP in the context of Pakistan-Afghanistan relations?
Answer: Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, a militant group operating from Afghan soil
Explanation: TTP (Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan) is a militant group that Pakistan accuses of operating from Afghan territory and conducting cross-border attacks. The TTP issue has been a major irritant in Pakistan-Afghanistan relations since the Taliban takeover in 2021.
Q7. Which SCO member state and Pakistan share the Wakhan Corridor border, creating a direct land link?
Answer: Afghanistan
Explanation: Pakistan and Afghanistan share the Wakhan Corridor border through a narrow strip, while Afghanistan also directly borders Pakistan along the Durand Line. Though Afghanistan is an SCO observer, the Pakistan-Afghanistan border dynamics are central to regional stability.
Q8. Which SAARC member country has had its participation effectively suspended due to political tensions with other members?
Answer: Afghanistan
Explanation: Afghanistan's participation in SAARC has been effectively paralyzed following the Taliban takeover in 2021, with its seat remaining vacant at summits. The last SAARC Summit was held in 2014 in Kathmandu.
Q9. When did Afghanistan officially become a member of SAARC?
Answer: 2007
Explanation: Afghanistan joined SAARC as its eighth member in April 2007 at the 14th SAARC Summit held in New Delhi, India. Afghanistan's membership was seen as connecting South Asia with Central Asian trade routes.
Q10. Afghanistan’s UN seat in New York stayed with the pre-August 2021 diplomatic team rather than the new rulers in Kabul. For exam recall, what is the clearest reason that pattern usually continues?
Answer: The Taliban were not formally recognized as Afghanistan’s government by most UN member states
Explanation: The pre-Taliban diplomatic team retained Afghanistan's UN seat because the vast majority of UN member states withheld formal recognition from the Taliban government, making the credentials of the existing ambassador unchallenged.
Q11. After August 2021, Pakistan frequently urges the world to engage the new setup in Kabul on humanitarian needs. What is the standard short name students use for that government style in headlines?
Answer: Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
Explanation: The Taliban administration that took control of Afghanistan in August 2021 officially calls itself the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, the same name it used during its first rule from 1996 to 2001.
Q12. A timeline question puts the US combat withdrawal and the fall of Kabul in the same chain. Which year is the standard anchor for the Taliban’s return to power in Kabul?
Answer: 2021
Explanation: The Taliban rapidly swept to power following the US and NATO military withdrawal from Afghanistan, capturing Kabul on August 15, 2021, when the Afghan government collapsed without significant resistance.
Q13. Pakistan’s outreach to Afghan authorities often highlights trade and crossing points. Which main land route name is most textbook-familiar for Pakistan-Afghan truck traffic?
Answer: Khyber Pass-Torkham corridor symbolism
Explanation: The Torkham crossing on the Khyber Pass is Pakistan's busiest and most symbolically significant land crossing with Afghanistan, serving as the main overland trade and transit route between the two countries.
Q14. Regional classes place Afghanistan next to Central and South Asia. Which capital is correct exam geography for Afghanistan?
Answer: Kabul
Explanation: Kabul is the capital and largest city of Afghanistan, serving as the political, economic, and cultural centre of the country and home to the offices of the Taliban's Islamic Emirate government.
Q15. A textbook contrasts “recognition diplomacy” after regime change. For Afghanistan 2021-2025, what is the most accurate statement about worldwide recognition of Taliban rule?
Answer: Broad formal recognition did not arrive quickly, so engagement often stayed pragmatic and contested
Explanation: Despite engaging with Afghanistan's Taliban government pragmatically, no major world power formally recognised the Taliban as the legitimate government of Afghanistan in the 2021-2025 period.
Q16. Border management questions note Afghanistan’s long boundary with Pakistan. What name do students memorize for that border line?
Answer: Durand Line
Explanation: The Durand Line, demarcated in 1893 by Sir Henry Mortimer Durand and Afghan Amir Abdur Rahman Khan, forms the approximately 2,640-kilometre border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, though Kabul has never formally recognised it.
Q17. Afghanistan’s humanitarian crises after 2021 are often linked to banking, aid access and girls’ education restrictions. For neutral exam phrasing, what is the safest “apply cause” answer institutions cite?
Answer: Sanctions, frozen assets and disrupted banking complicated aid flows
Explanation: After the Taliban takeover in 2021, frozen Afghan state assets abroad, international banking restrictions, and aid access constraints severely disrupted humanitarian operations and economic activity in Afghanistan.
Q18. Afghanistan’s narcotics economy is often raised in regional stability lectures. What is the standard crop name linked to Taliban-era export worries in exam summaries?
Answer: Opium poppy
Explanation: Afghanistan is the world's largest producer of opium derived from the opium poppy plant; Taliban governance has been closely linked to opium production and heroin export as a major source of revenue and regional security concern.
Q19. Which Afghan group's re-emergence after 2021 has most directly disrupted the western route of CPEC through Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan?
Answer: Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP)
Explanation: The resurgence of Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in August 2021 has most directly disrupted security along the western CPEC routes, with increased attacks on workers and infrastructure in KPK and Balochistan.
Q20. Afghanistan's Taliban-controlled government has restricted girls' education since 2021. Pakistan's MOST strategically nuanced policy response has been to pursue which approach?
Answer: Engagement without full recognition, balancing border security and refugee concerns with international pressure
Explanation: Pakistan has engaged the Taliban government without extending formal diplomatic recognition, balancing its border security imperatives and refugee burden against international pressure to withhold legitimacy until governance conditions improve.
Loading...