Pakistan, April 19 -- On Saturday, Balochistan's home department officials stood before cameras and described an insurgency no longer confined to distant mountains or barren crossing points. Militants entering Pakistan from across the border, carrying out attacks and slipping back into Afghanistan, have long been an enduring Achilles' heel, now compounded by the exploitation of women and children. The account was chilling because it narrowed the distance between the battlefield and ordinary households. Rahima Bibi, a woman from Dalbandin, said her husband used her phone to coordinate with militants, hosted a female bomber at their home and then took her to Afghanistan for training before the attacker was later used in the assault on an FC...