In a development that has shaken the Foreign Office’s biscuit tin to its very core, British intelligence is now ‘monitoring’ Pakistan’s cross-border strikes into Afghanistan with the same level of frantic urgency one might reserve for a slow-boiling kettle. The death toll, as ever, is mounting faster than a Tory MP’s expenses claim, but fear not: GCHQ has its finest algorithms trained on the situation, presumably searching for a way to blame it on the EU or a Remain-voting civil servant.
Sources close to Whitehall – which is to say, a man in a pub who once shook hands with an MP – have confirmed that the UK is ‘deeply concerned’ but ‘not yet at the stage of sending strongly worded letters’. This is the diplomatic equivalent of a fire alarm going off and everyone agreeing to ‘note’ the smoke before returning to their Sudoku.
The strikes themselves, reportedly targeting alleged militant hideouts, have instead hit a remarkable number of civilian homes, schools, and wedding parties. One local elder described the scene as ‘like a bad dream’, which is oddly poetic for a man who has just watched his cousin’s goat turn into a statistical footnote. Pakistan, for its part, insists it is acting in self-defence against ‘terrorists’, a phrase that has become as meaningless as ‘I’ll read the terms and conditions.’
Meanwhile, British intelligence is ‘monitoring’. One can only imagine the scene at MI6 headquarters: operatives in sharp suits squinting at satellite images while muttering ‘Oh, that’s rather naughty’ as a village vanishes beneath a precision-guided munition. Perhaps they will issue a statement. Perhaps it will be issued after a comprehensive risk assessment of the catering options for any potential peace talks.
The mounting Afghan death toll is, of course, a tragedy. But let us not forget the true victims here: the British taxpayer, whose money is being spent on intelligence analysts who are presumably also monitoring the price of organic avocados. In the great game of geopolitics, the UK has perfected the art of watching from the sidelines with a stiff upper lip and a stiffer gin. After all, why intervene when you can instead issue a ‘statement of concern’? That’s practically the same as doing something, isn’t it?
As the bodies pile up in the Hindu Kush, one thing is clear: British intelligence is on it. They are monitoring so hard that somewhere, a civil servant is probably developing a repetitive strain injury from taking notes. God save the King. Or at least, God save the quarterly review of operational effectiveness.








