Foreign intelligence's activities in India discussion thread


A senior official, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed that this covert operation has become a catalyst for terror mobilization. Reports suggest that terror groups such as Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), and al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) are being operationally activated under direct ISI guidance. Intercepts reveal plans for logistical support, including safe houses and local reconnaissance, to facilitate potential attacks. The ISI has reportedly tasked aligned groups to map entry and exit points of RSS offices, monitor security protocols, and track the movement patterns of key RSS functionaries. These directives reportedly extend beyond the RSS to public spaces, Hindu temples, and critical infrastructure, aiming to sow panic and project intimidation.

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Pakistan will try to sabotage Indian defence export to Armenia in favor of some other nation, they will surely station ISI there. The way PM of Pakistan urged Russian President that they want to have same relationship with Russia as the Russians have with India explains everything. Pakistan has always been trying to sabotage Indian diplomatic relations by hook and crook, but the times have changed, India is too big of a power to be ignored now.
 
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Shameless Pakistan’s spy agency ISI prepares cyber-jihadis against India, plans to…

Now many IT companies are emerging in the country, which can help country's army in information warfare and counter Pakistan's false propaganda.



Published: August 2, 2025 8:43 AM IST
By Nivedita Dash

Not just at the borders, but patrolling is also needed in the cyber world to counter Pakistan’s false narrative and propaganda on social media, especially after Operation Sindoor. In such a situation, there is a dire need for cyber-patrolling. Now many IT companies are emerging in the country, which can help country’s army in information warfare.

In the two-day Homeland Security and Police Expo (July 31-August 1) which was held in capital Delhi, companies from India and abroad are exhibiting their weapons, while IT companies are also playing an important role in helping security agencies secure the cyber domain. One such company in Delhi-NCR is ‘Mflitrit’. The company claims that with its very special intelligence IT solution, every movement of the enemy in the cyber domain can be kept under close watch.

Why were 800 social media accounts blocked?

According to a report on ABP News, the company’s CEO Amit Relan said that during the recent Operation Sindoor, about 800 such social media accounts were identified, which were running Pakistan’s propaganda while staying in India. All these accounts were blocked by the Ministry of Home Affairs and the Ministry of Information Broadcasting. According to the company, not only the enemy’s activities but also cyber criminals operating from within the country can be controlled through intelligence solutions.

Who is preparing cyber-jihadis?


Pakistani intelligence agency ISI has prepared an army of cyber-jihadis against India, which is engaged in carrying out anti-India agenda. In such a situation, cyber-patrolling against the Pakistani army present on the Internet is very important.


Earlier this year, during the Kumbh Mela held in Prayagraj, the company, in collaboration with the Uttar Pradesh Police, blocked more than 200 websites that were cheating innocent pilgrims through websites similar to the official website, fake accounts and more than 150 scams. These cyber-criminals were trying to commit frauds ranging from hotel bookings to donations.
 

NIA Busts Northeast Terror Plot; Bangladesh, Pakistan Agencies Involved​

India's law enforcement is concerned as Bangladesh-based UPDF has reportedly allied with Tripura Ham Bargha Ta Army and the Mog National Party to spread terror.

New Delhi: Investigation conducted by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) has revealed that Bangladesh’s Directorate General of Forces Intelligence (DGFI) in connivance with Pakistan’s Inter Service Intelligence (ISI) have been trying to destabilise India’s Northeastern states by forming two ethnic militant outfits in Tripura, namely the Tripura Ham Bargha Ta Army (THBTA) and Mog National Party (MNP).

What has become a cause of major concern for India’s law-enforcing agencies is the fact that Chittagong (Bangladesh)- based United Peoples Democratic Front (UPDF), another rebel outfit, reportedly has come to an understanding with THBTA and MNP.

Ironically, NIA recently charged five Mizoram-based accused for their involvement in supplying weapons and ammunition to armed cadres of the UPDF.

The accused, identified as Lalbiakchunga alias Divid alias David, Lalthawmcheuva alias Thawma, Malsawma alias Malsawma Loncheu, Rualliansanga alias Sanga and Alok Bikash Chakma, have been charged under relevant Sections of BNS, 2023, The UA(P) Act, 1967 and The Arms Act, 1959 and the Foreigners Act, 1946.

Earlier, the Mizoram police seized a huge cache of prohibited arms and ammunition, meant for supply to a Bangladeshi militant group. The case was originally registered on January 15, 2025, by the Mizoram police. NIA, which took over and re-registered the case as RC-05/2025/NIA-DLI two months later, unravelled a criminal conspiracy by the accused to supply the prohibited weapons and ammunition to armed cadres of the UPDF.

The weapons seized from Saithah village, Mamit district, Mizoram, included six AK-47 rifles, 13 magazines and 10050 rounds of ammunition.

“Investigation revealed that the United Peoples Democratic Front has come to an understanding with THBTA and MNP. Now, with support from the state actors in Bangladesh, the insurgent organisations would try to create terror in the northeastern states,” said a senior security official privy to the development.

The THBTA aims to establish a Riang state by carving out Riang-dominated areas of North Tripura. The outfit is headed by Hambai Riang and currently has around 70 cadres. The outfit is being assisted by the Bangladesh Army’s infantry brigade based in Khagrachari.


One of the self-styled commanders of the newly formed outfit, Yangpu Riang, is regularly in touch with Bangladesh army officials, the security official said.

On the other hand, MNP’s fresh recruits are undergoing military training under the supervision of the Bangladesh army at Rajasthali sub-division of Rangamati district in the Chittagong Hill Tracts from the first week of December.

The Bangladesh Army has reportedly provided its ground at its Bangalhalia camp in the sub-division for the target shooting of MNP recruits, numbering around 50, the official said.

Terming the development as serious, renowned security expert Brigadier BK Khanna (retd) told ETV Bharat that ever since the Awami League government was dethroned from Bangladesh, all possible efforts were made by the forces inimical to India’s security to create terror in the northeastern states.

“Our security agencies are well aware of the development and accordingly, they have been taking all actions required to foil any attempts made by the anti-India forces from across the border,” said Brigadier Khanna.

By supporting these insurgent organisations like the UPDF, Tripura Ham Bargha Ta Army, and Mog National Party, the state actors in Bangladesh are desperately trying to destabilise the northeast.

“It’s a well-known fact that Pakistan’s ISI is also helping the intelligence agencies in Bangladesh to create terror in India’s eastern frontier,” Khanna said.
 



August 1, 2025
Reading time - 3 min.

Indian intelligence agencies have raised serious alarm over the growing footprint of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in Nepal, warning that the Himalayan nation may soon become a new front in the region’s long-running proxy conflict. The development is being viewed as part of a larger strategic push by Pakistan to undermine Indian interests using religious, cultural and covert means.​


One of the key concerns flagged by Indian agencies is the construction of the Razzak Mosque in Inarwa, near Nepal’s Biratnagar in Sunsari district—just kilometres from the Indo-Nepal border. The mosque is being developed by the Alhaj Shamshul Haque Foundation (Ash Foundation), an NGO registered in Bangladesh in 2022. Intelligence inputs indicate that the mosque may double as a covert base for ISI-backed activities.​


According to an officer from the Intelligence Bureau (IB), the Foundation’s chairman, Muhammad Nasir Uddin, laid the foundation stone on July 18, declaring it a “spiritual and communal centre” aimed at Islamic outreach among Nepal’s majority non-Muslim population in the area.​


However, Indian agencies suspect that behind the religious facade lies a deeper strategy of radicalisation, intelligence gathering and recruitment for anti-India operations.​


Religious infrastructure as cover for extremist networks​


A senior intelligence official warned that ISI has a history of using mosques, madrasas and cultural centres as logistical hubs for its covert missions—both in South Asia and beyond. “What they did in parts of Africa and Southeast Asia, they are now doing in Nepal. These so-called religious centres become bases for espionage, ideological indoctrination, and channeling terror funds,” the IB official said.​


The Ash Foundation has appealed for global donations to replicate such centres across Nepal and other neighbouring countries. Investigations point toward financial backing from ISI-linked networks and additional aid from Gulf countries and Turkey.​


Nepal: The new transit route for terror networks?​


Indian security agencies have long suspected Nepal as a transit route for terrorists attempting to infiltrate India. The relatively porous border and lax surveillance make it an attractive corridor for ISI operatives and jihadist groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM).​


In a recent seminar organised by the Nepal Institute for International Cooperation and Engagement (NIICE) on July 9, Sunil Bahadur Thapa, advisor to the President of Nepal, voiced similar concerns. He highlighted the potential misuse of Nepali territory by outlawed terror groups and stressed the need for vigilance and cooperation.​


Bangladesh shift seen as strategic booster for ISI​


Indian agencies believe that political shifts in Bangladesh, especially with interim government’s advisor Muhammad Yunus—reportedly backed by Jamaat-e-Islami—coming to power, are giving the ISI a freer hand in operating across South Asia. With the exit of Sheikh Hasina, who maintained close ties with New Delhi and cracked down on Islamist groups, Pakistan is moving fast to fortify its proxies in Bangladesh and Nepal, Indian officials allege.​


Apart from security risks, Indian officials are also alarmed by what they term “coordinated demographic engineering” in Nepal. “There is a deliberate attempt to shift the religious balance by planting radical elements in a Hindu-majority country,” an MEA official said, adding, “This is not just about Nepal—it is an effort to destabilise India’s borders and turn peaceful neighbourhoods into extremist strongholds.”​


India urges swift regional response


With growing signs of covert infrastructure development, foreign-backed radicalisation, and proxy terror networks being seeded, Indian intelligence is pushing for urgent diplomatic engagement with Nepal and stronger regional counter-terror frameworks. Officials stress that Nepal must not become another front in Pakistan’s proxy war blueprint.


As tensions quietly rise in the backdrop of Himalayan calm, the region stands at a critical juncture—between preserving its peace and falling into the grip of a calculated ideological conflict.





 

NEW DELHI: The armed forces should go beyond the traditional concepts of war, remaining alert and ready to also deal with 'invisible challenges' emanating from unconventional threats such as information, ideological, ecological and biological warfare, defence minister Rajnath Singh said on Tuesday.Addressing the ongoing combined commanders' conference in Kolkata, Singh stressed the need for a constant assessment of the changes taking place across the globe and their impact on the country's security system. The nature of warfare is continuously evolving, with recent global conflicts underlining the relevance of a "technology-friendly" military. "Wars of today are so sudden and unpredictable that it is extremely difficult to foretell their duration. It can be two months, a year, or even five years. We need to be prepared. We need to ensure that our surge capacity remains sufficient," he said. The defence minister also said that a committee has been set up to prepare "a realistic action plan" to build an air and missile defence shield under 'Mission Sudarshan Chakra (MSC)'. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had announced the MSC on Aug 15, declaring that comprehensive security cover would be provided under it to strategic as well as vital civilian areas in the country by 2035.
 

Pakistan’s military is quietly aligning its leadership reshuffle with a widening youth mobilisation drive in what observers describe as the most explicit shift yet toward institutionalising hybrid warfare. Lt Gen Amer Ahsan Nawaz, a career officer known for introducing cyber and algorithmic warfare doctrines at the Command & Staff College in Quetta, has been slated as the new Commander of 10 Corps. At the same time, the Directorate General of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) has enrolled 6,500 students from 150 universities in its “Summer Internship Programme,” training them in digital information operations and narrative shaping.


Analysts argue the timing is deliberate. While one of the Army’s most powerful field commands is handed to a general steeped in proxy and information warfare, ISPR is seeding its next generation of loyalists through indoctrination drives disguised as academic exposure. Together, the developments point to a synchronised strategy: a top-down military adoption of hybrid warfare doctrine, and a bottom-up civilian recruitment pipeline to execute it.

A General Shaped by Proxy Battlefields​

Lt Gen Amer Ahsan Nawaz, currently serving as Military Secretary at GHQ, will replace Lt Gen Shahid Imtiyaz as Commander of 10 Corps. His pedigree is entrenched in Pakistan’s military elite — he is a third-generation officer, the son of former 31 Corps Commander Lt Gen Khalid Nawaz Khan and the grandson of a former MS of the Army.

Commissioned in the 82nd PMA Long Course, he is a graduate of Command & Staff College Quetta, Fort Leavenworth in the United States, and the National Defence University Islamabad.

His career trajectory has passed through all the theatres most associated with Pakistan’s proxy strategies. He commanded the 3 Baloch Regiment, 5 POK Brigade in Muzaffarabad, and served as Chief of Staff at 11 Corps Peshawar, the headquarters overseeing counter-insurgency in the tribal belt. Later, he led 12 Corps in Murree. According to senior officers quoted in Dawn, Amer Ahsan Nawaz is regarded as “well-versed in offensive and defensive handling of proxy war,” having spent decades in theatres shaped by militant militias and irregular warfare.

ISPR’s Youth Army: Indoctrination as Recruitment​

Parallel to the reshuffle, the ISPR has rolled out its largest-ever “Summer Internship Programme,” enrolling 6,500 students from 150 institutions across 33 cities, most in cantonment towns. In public statements, ISPR has framed the programme as exposure to “Pakistan’s regional dynamics, geopolitics, history and military studies.” But former participants, sometimes referred to as “Ex-5G Warriors,” describe a more directed process of indoctrination and deployment.


According to these alumni, the internship includes classroom indoctrination in Pakistan Studies that glorifies the Army’s role, visits to Fauji units to build esprit de corps, and meetings with pro-Army media influencers. More crucially, the programme introduces participants to “digital tools and techniques of social media,” culminating in supervised exercises led by ISPR and ISI’s Media Wing. Once the six-week programme ends, many are informally recruited into the Army’s vast information operations network — functioning as unpaid foot soldiers amplifying military propaganda online.

Civil-Military Synergy in Information War​

The internship represents a strategic investment in what Pakistan’s generals have long called “fifth-generation warfare.” In 2020, then DG ISPR Maj Gen Babar Iftikhar declared that Pakistan was under attack from “a hybrid and information war launched by India.” Since then, ISPR has steadily scaled its digital outreach, from social media troll farms to youth-facing media campaigns. By embedding students into its ecosystem, it ensures a pipeline of ideologically primed digital warriors who can be activated during crises.

Strategic Implications for India and the Region​

For India, these developments signal a shifting battlespace. The LoC has long been a site of infiltration, ceasefire violations, and proxy war. With Amer Ahsan Nawaz at the helm, information operations may become as central as militant infiltration. Fake narratives of Indian atrocities in Kashmir, doctored visuals circulated online, and coordinated campaigns targeting Indian institutions may rise in frequency and sophistication.


Regionally, Pakistan’s approach aligns with Chinese doctrines of “three warfares” — psychological, media, and legal campaigns. Analysts in Islamabad have quietly admitted to the Financial Times that Beijing’s pressure after repeated attacks on Chinese nationals has accelerated Pakistan’s adoption of hybrid tactics. By portraying itself as both victim and vanguard of hybrid war, Pakistan seeks to placate China while keeping its adversaries off balance.


Observers note the synergy: a general like Amer Ahsan Nawaz, who integrates hybrid doctrines at the top, now takes charge of 10 Corps, while ISPR simultaneously builds a civilian base capable of executing digital campaigns at scale. “It’s top-down doctrine meeting bottom-up manpower,” remarked a South Asia security analyst cited by Reuters. “The Army is ensuring that its information warfare apparatus has both leadership and labour.”
 

New Delhi, Sep 16: In the wake of India’s high-impact Operation Sindoor and the tightening of security along the India-Pakistan border, Pakistan’s spy agency, the ISI, has reportedly pivoted to a more covert and dangerous tactic — setting up underground arms manufacturing units across India.

This dramatic shift in strategy comes after India’s retaliatory operation to avenge the Pahalgam terror attack, which killed 26 civilians. The Line of Control (LoC) and the Punjab border — once primary routes for arms smuggling — are now under round-the-clock surveillance, leaving little room for infiltration or drone-based drops.

Facing these setbacks, the ISI is now turning inward — attempting to activate sleeper cells and modules within India to manufacture and distribute weapons from remote locations. Intelligence sources say these modules are being modeled after the Burdwan module in West Bengal, busted in 2014, where Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) ran covert bomb-making units disguised as firecracker workshops.

ISI’s New Blueprint: Domestic Arms Production

According to Intelligence Bureau (IB) intercepts, the ISI is encouraging its agents to establish small-scale arms factories within India, particularly in rural and isolated areas. These are intended to support terror operations in Jammu and Kashmir and potentially elsewhere in the country.

The goal:

• Bypass tightened LoC and Punjab borders
• Manufacture bombs and ammunition locally
• Establish secure supply chains to active terror cells
• Avoid drone detection and reduce reliance on external routes

Financial Network: Hawala from Gulf

Funding for these operations is being routed through illegal hawala channels, with most of the money originating from Gulf countries, according to counter-terrorism officials. These funds are then directed to modules for buying raw materials and establishing micro-manufacturing hubs.

Agencies have warned that failure to detect and dismantle these hubs quickly could allow terrorists to build a decentralized but robust arms production network — nearly impossible to shut down once fully operational.

The Burdwan Precedent

The reference to Burdwan is not incidental. Back in 2014, the JMB had built thousands of bombs in small residential units, camouflaged as part of cottage industries. These were intended to be used for regime change in Bangladesh. Indian authorities fear a similar model is now being adopted by the ISI for operations within India — this time with the aim of sustained terror attacks and logistical support to J&K-based operatives.

Nationwide Coordination Urged

In response, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has directed all state police forces to work closely with central agencies, with special attention on:

• Surveillance of remote and semi-urban regions
• Monitoring suspicious financial transactions
• Inspecting firecracker units and chemical shops
• Tracking illegal land occupation or unusual rural activity

Officials warn that while setting up these micro-factories takes little time, the damage they can inflict is massive, if even a few go undetected.

Conclusion

As conventional smuggling routes are increasingly sealed off, India’s counter-terrorism agencies now face the complex challenge of detecting and dismantling internal production cells, set up by foreign-backed elements.

The ISI’s evolving playbook, driven by desperation and precision countermeasures from Indian forces, signals a new and more covert phase of asymmetric warfare — one that demands high-tech surveillance, grassroots intelligence, and seamless state-centre cooperation.

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ISI is constructing an array of scattered concrete bunkers as fortifications within Kashmir as well as mentioned in previous news article. This is basically to create a deniability factor restricting Indian kinetic reaction.
 

• Manufacture bombs and ammunition locally
• Establish secure supply chains to active terror cells
These above points in the news article above points the points mentioned below.



2. Increased the momentum of proxy war to create hostage situations and espionage activities ( especially Industrial and military espionage)

7. Planning such covert operations where India has no way to blame Pakistan, and there is a scope of deniability

2. Use of special force to sabotage/neutralize Indian air defence and tele comms
 
Inside Pakistan’s secret spy Unit 412: ₹4,000-crore operation targeting Indians

Unit 412, a specialised wing of Pakistan’s ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence), headquartered in Karachi... Read more at: Inside Pakistan’s secret spy Unit 412: ₹4,000-crore operation targeting Indians


  • Runs honey trap operations using trained female operatives.
  • Controls thousands of fake social media accounts to spread misinformation.
  • Recruits Indian citizens using money, blackmail, or coercion.
  • Employs influencers to present pro-Pakistan narratives online.
  • Aims to manipulate public opinion and damage India’s global image.
 
Addressing a press conference in Leh, DGP Jamwal said that police had earlier apprehended a Pakistan intelligence officer who was allegedly in touch with Wangchuk.

“We arrested a Pakistan PIO in the recent past who was sending reports across the border. We have records of this. He (Sonam Wangchuk) had attended a Dawn event in Pakistan and also travelled to Bangladesh. This raises serious questions. The matter is under investigation,” the Ladakh police chief said.


______________________________

Pakistan intelligence officer? Not possible he must have been an operative.

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Bangladesh Strengthens Ties with Turkey Amid Political Turmoil

According to Indian intelligence, Bangladesh has emerged as the fourth-largest importer of Turkish weaponry, raising alarms as these arms could potentially be directed against India. The Jamaat and ISI have been strategizing this development. While India possesses the capability to counter such threats, it complicates the operational landscape for its armed forces.

It is getting very dirty.
 
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ISKP-Lashkar: Pakistan's new terror matrix​

Opinion by Abhinav Narayan/Srijan Sharma 15h


India, Oct. 17 -- Pakistan's renewed alliance with ISIS-K signals a dangerous revival of its decades-old jihad strategy - blurring lines between global and regional terror. As Islamabad plays its proxy games once more, the Indian subcontinent face escalating security concerns, ideological dilemma and geopolitical challenges



ISIS's Khorasan Province, a regional branch of Daesh responsible for Central and South Asia, has begun expanding its influence in the region, as the Pakistan-based terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) has formed an alliance with Daesh's Khorasanis. Perhaps after a long period, Pakistan has renewed its terror strategy to develop and strengthen its terror networks, which will have serious impacts not only on India but also on the broader subcontinent.


The Imprints of Pakistan's Global-Regional Jihad


Pakistan has a decades-old strategy of mixing global and regional jihad to sharpen its terror capabilities against India. Pakistan employs a double terror strategy, which is driven by three main factors: first, countering forces on the internal front (TTP and Balochis); second, recalibrating its strategic depth in Afghanistan by countering Taliban leadership; and third, providing a substantial basis for the global jihadist organisations to establish a logistical network, thereby strengthening India-centric jihadist groups. A fourth element involves a degree of plausible deniability, allowing Pakistan to shift blame to global jihadists - an approach where Pakistan acts partially but covertly maintains relations with these groups.

Allowing ISKP to operate in Pakistan will give it an opportunity to further expand its operations by striking at TTPs and Balochis. This will, to some extent, help Pakistan to clean its internal front, which was mired by BLA and TTP woes. The reason that ISKP will go aggressive against TTP and have an upper hand is due to decades of factionalism - ISKP was earlier part of disgruntled TTP members who defected to the more extreme, global Islamic State ideology. According to some reports, ISKP had targeted TTP key leaders in Afghanistan last year.

The Afghanistan strategy is reflected in the 2017 secret agreement between Pakistan and ISKP, where Pakistan agreed not to act against ISKP. In return, ISKP would carry out attacks in Afghanistan targeting the Taliban. Recently, ISKP has successfully targeted the Taliban's core, attempting to destabilise its rule in Afghanistan. The assassination of Khalil Haqqani last year by the Islamic State demonstrates its ability to weaken the Taliban's political stability. ISKP also seeks to disrupt the Taliban's global outreach efforts; the bombing of the Russian Embassy in 2022 is a key example of its broader strategy against the Taliban. ver recent years, ISKP has expanded its limited presence beyond Nangarhar and Kunar provinces to include areas in the north and west. Strengthening the Lashkar-ISKP alliance will help ISKP extend its reach and develop its operational capabilities in Afghanistan, using Pakistan as strategic depth to rally against the Taliban, echoing a similar strategy that was used by the Afghan Mujahideen to wage a sustained guerrilla campaign against the Soviets.

Interestingly, Americans would use this as a limited strategic tool to weaken and deter the Taliban, as the US is pressing hard for the Bagram Base.


This limited opportunity will help Pakistan increase counter-terror cooperation with the US and ease the US's oversight of its counter-terror operations, much like during Operation Cyclone, when the US supplied weapons and finances to Pakistan's ISI to fight the Soviets. In exchange, the US turned a blind eye to Pakistan's efforts to pursue its own strategic interests in Afghanistan, such as supporting a hardliner Islamist leader like Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, whose militant group was heavily funded by ISI despite Hekmatyar not achieving significant success against the Soviets.


Similarly, Pakistan used the funds of the CIA's Operation Cyclone in building a jihadist network against India and cultivating logistical networks of Al-Qaeda by opening training camps and madrassas for Arab Afghans who took up global Jihad.



Interestingly, the precursor of Al-Qaeda, Maktab al-Khidamat (MAK), or the "Services Bureau", was founded by Osama Bin Laden in Peshawar in 1980, just a year after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

In an effort to make a centre of global Jihad, Pakistan further cultivated cross-terror relations with global and regional jihadist organisations, especially Indian-centric ones.


The Proxy Games


Apart from providing a breeding ground for the global jihadist network and supporting them with financial and logistical aid, Pakistan's ISI worked on strengthening its terror strategy against India. Zia's 'bleed India with a thousand cuts' doctrine began to take shape in Kashmir by the mid-1980s. In the 1980s, infiltration and terror incidents increased. The reason was clear: Pakistan had started to strengthen its Kashmir-centric jihadi proxies by creating a platform through cultivating their finances, logistics, and operational capabilities. Al-Qaeda perhaps played a major role in establishing a financial and logistical network - Al-Qaeda's South Asia Branch and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's (KSM) network - a key financial and operational network of the outfit operated by its influential and high-profile leader, who is also said to be the principal architect of 9/11, along with covert support from Pakistan's ISI, formed a web of finances and logistics. A report by the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) explains that Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) has a history of backing groups like Al-Qaeda.

This network was used to fund and effectively operationalise JeM and LeT. The most notable instance is that in return for a safe operational environment for training and a financial-logistical network, Al-Qaeda provided specialised training and ideological legitimacy to JeM and LeT. The 2002 kidnapping and murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl was allegedly a joint operation involving JeM and Al-Qaeda members.


Pakistan's ISI Covert Action Division has a long history of arranging alliances among global and regional jihadists through two methods: first, ideological negotiations, and second, strategic negotiations, where it exploits opportunities to link a network of jihadists despite ideological differences. Overall, a key aspect of Pakistan's terror strategy is the use of coordinated efforts among global and regional jihad organisations against India. Decades ago, they did this using Al-Qaeda, and now they are doing it with ISIS-KP. However, there is a double-edged sword to this strategy, at least with ISIS-KP. The Daesh are strong hardliners at the ideological level; they will only commit to an alliance till their
tactical objectives are met, post which they will pay allegiance to their larger goal - Islamic rule in South Asia, which will dangerously damage Pakistan's own security and ideological calculations, as it once faced with the Taliban and Al-Qaeda post 9/11, and that could lead to a dangerous security situation for the subcontinent.



India's Strategy


At both strategic and tactical security levels, India should be concerned as the convergence of global-regional jihadist networks has become a nightmare for the Indian security landscape, especially from the 1980s to the mid-2000s. India's strategy should be more assertive - moving beyond a minimal functional relationship with the Taliban and using the upcoming visit of the Taliban's foreign minister as a key opportunity.


This will help disrupt Pakistan's pursuit of strategic depth in Afghanistan and enable India to expand its influence, thereby increasing its operational reach across the Af-Pak and Central Asian region. While strengthening ties with the Taliban is a necessary option, India must also adopt integrated deterrence and advance network-based operations - including in-depth counter-terrorism strategies in J&K to foil terror plans.




Abhinav is an advocate and columnist. Srijan is a national security analyst
 
The S1 is said to be led by a Colonel-rank officer of the Pakistan Army, assisted by two senior officers overseeing operations, identified by their co... Read more at: Pakistan’s secret ISI unit ‘S1’ behind decades of terror plots against India: Report

The Subversion 1 or S1 unit of ISI is located in Islamabad, and is operational past 25 years as covert unit looking at India. As per the article it is basically a covert technical unit handling chemical engineering and operatives are well trained in handling small arms. The unit maintains the data base of Indian maps for operational purpose. The S1 unit operatives of ISI have been spotted at LeT camps and JeM, HuM camps. The article also says that most of the instructors in camps are basically Pakistani ISI officers and even the tangos don't know about it due to secrecy maintained by ISI.
 
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Sending ripples through international intelligence circles, Russia claimed to have uncovered a secret network linked to Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) allegedly trying to smuggle sensitive air defence technology out of Moscow. The revelation about the suspected espionage plot marks what investigators believe could be ISI’s first known operation of its kind inside Russian territory.

According to sources familiar with the investigation, security agencies carried out a major counter-espionage operation in St. Petersburg, where a Russian national was arrested while allegedly attempting to transfer confidential documents related to military helicopter development and air defence systems.


These documents, the sources said, contained details about the Mi8AMTShV and MI8 AMTShV (VA) military transport helicopters, which are advanced machines designed for combat and strategic mobility.


The officials said the arrested individual was “caught red-handed with classified material” that could have compromised key technologies used in Russian defence aviation.


The suspect was allegedly trying to smuggle information critical to both helicopter technology and the systems that protect them in combat environments.


Investigators revealed that this “covert operation” by the ISI came to light months after Operation Sindoor, India’s successful military offensive against Pakistan that destroyed major Jaish-e-Mohammad training bases in Pakistan.

Officials said the timing of the incident is significant because the alleged ISI’s spy network reportedly seemed eager to get hold of and copy technology linked to Russia’s advanced air defence systems. These systems, especially the Russian-made S-400 missile units used by the Indian Air Force in Operation Sindoor, had given New Delhi a strong advantage in air power and precision attacks.


India presently operates several S-400 batteries and has plans to acquire five additional S-400 air systems to further enhance its air defence capabilities. Experts say the systems have redefined India’s strategic posture, enabling it to neutralise airborne threats across multiple domains.


The Mi8AMTShV helicopter, one of the key technologies the ISI allegedly targeted, is an upgraded military transport and assault variant of Russia’s Mi8AMTSh “Terminator”. It is capable of carrying heavy payloads and performing complex battlefield operations.



The MI8 AMTShV (VA) model, which is designed for Arctic missions, features reinforced insulation, a specialised heating mechanism and long-range fuel tanks that allow it to operate under extreme conditions.


The significance of this espionage attempt lies not only in the stolen data, but in what it represents: a calculated bid by Pakistan’s spy agency to penetrate Russia’s defence industry and access technology that could tilt regional power dynamics.


In a related development, tensions flared last week after the Russian Embassy in Islamabad rebuked an article published in the English-language daily The Frontier Post, accusing it of spreading a narrative that goes against the nation. Moscow’s unambiguous reaction signalled that it views Pakistan’s recent moves (both in the media and in the shadows) with suspicion.


As Russian investigators continue to interrogate the arrested suspect, diplomatic watchers say this episode could strain Moscow’s perception of Islamabad’s intelligence activities and bring Pakistan’s alleged covert ambitions under unprecedented scrutiny.

 
As per sources quoted by CNN-News18, the module used “classic ISI tradecraft” to organise the attack. According to an official, the local perpetrators had “no initiative of their own” and acted under remote direction. The report adds that the external handler used secure voice channels and cash drop techniques, hallmarks of the ISI’s covert operations.

According to CNN-News18, investigators have identified the key external handler as Ukasha or Abu Okasha, a Pakistan-based intermediary believed to be working for a state intelligence agency, possibly the ISI. The report states that Okasha functioned as the primary link between the local module in India and foreign operatives directing the terror plan.


 

ISI, DGFI set up Joint Intelligence Mechanism as Pakistan-Bangladesh ties deepen

Date:
October 29, 2025

New Delhi, Oct 29: Bangladesh has become the latest playground for the ISI and since Muhammad Yunus took charge, Pakistani officials have become frequent flyers to the country. India kept a close watch during the four-day visit by Pakistan’s Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee (CJSC), General Sahir Shamshad Mirza to Bangladesh.

During his visit, he met with Chief Adviser to the interim government, Muhammad Yunus. He also held meetings with the military leadership of the country. While these meetings clearly suggest that both Bangladesh and Pakistan are looking to align closely militarily, the cause for concern was the presence of an ISI official in this delegation.

Officials say that the ISI officials were invited so that the two countries could share Intelligence with the DGFI. It was decided that the DGFI and ISI would work closely and in order to do so, a Joint Intelligence Mechanism was established.

Another official said that India would have to remain on high-alert owing to this development. This joint mechanism by the ISI and DGFI would focus on monitoring the Bay of Bengal. It would also keep a close watch on the airspace along India’s eastern flank.

Another major development was the setting up of a special ISI cell inside the Pakistan High Commission in Dhaka. This cell would ensure cooperation between the ISI, DGFI and Bangladesh’s National Security Intelligence.

An Intelligence Bureau official said that the cell is not just aimed at enhancing cooperation between the two countries. Both have a common enemy in India and their agencies would work against our interests, officials said.

The ISI had very little presence when Sheikh Hasina was in power. While their presence has increased under Yunus, the cause for concern is that it is now official. This would mean that their activities would carried out without any scrutiny. Another official cited the Sri Lanka example when comparing it with the situation in Bangladesh.

The High Commission in Sri Lanka have officials of the ISI. They had devised a major plot to infiltrate people into South India. The National Investigation Agency (NIA) however busted this plot that involved not just setting up modules in South India, but also carrying out a series of attacks.

The Bangladesh operations would be similar in nature, but the focus would be largely around North East and West Bengal. While both countries pledged to work hand-in-hand on sharing of Intelligence, there have also been a lot of developments on the defence front. Pakistan has offered Bangladesh assistance on the technical and military front.

This would include supply of infantry, artillery systems, training programmes, joint naval and air force exercises. Dhaka has sought from Pakistan its Fata-series rocket systems and JF-17 Thunder fighter jets. Pakistan has agreed to the needs of Bangladesh and very soon a delegation would travel to Dhaka to finalise these deals.

A delegation would be in Dhaka as early as next month to sign the agreements so that these deals could go through. A security official said that this bonhomie between Pakistan and Bangladesh since the fall of the Hasina government has gone up hundred fold. This is no doubt a major cause for concern for New Delhi. While India and its armed forces are perfectly capable of handling any threat due to this new found relationship, it still however would remain a concern as the officials cannot let their guard down, officials say.

IANS

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Under the new arrangement, Bangladesh has reportedly granted Pakistan permission to appoint intelligence officers at its High Commission in Dhaka. The first phase of deployment will include one Brigadier, two Colonels, four Majors, and officers from Pakistan’s air force and navy, along with support staff.

Read more on News18

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This deployment is way higher than normal deployment of military attaches, this is just a tip of an iceberg. The real ISI cell will have have double of this as field deployment. Which means close to 7-8 working for ISI only.
 
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7. Planning such covert operations where India has no way to blame Pakistan, and there is a scope of deniability
They tried to make it look like homegrown.


2. Increased the momentum of proxy war to create hostage situations and espionage activities ( especially Industrial and military espionage)



ISI’s New Blueprint: Domestic Arms Production
According to Intelligence Bureau (IB) intercepts, the ISI is encouraging its agents to establish small-scale arms factories within India, particularly in rural and isolated areas. These are intended to support terror operations in Jammu and Kashmir and potentially elsewhere in the country.
The goal:

• Bypass tightened LoC and Punjab borders
• Manufacture bombs and ammunition locally
• Establish secure supply chains to active terror cells
• Avoid drone detection and reduce reliance on external routes
 

ISI-linked arms racket busted: 10 high-end foreign pistols, Turkiye-made PX-5.7 pistol, 92 live cartridges seized; smuggled from Pakistan via drones



Story by Raj Shekhar Jha
• 17h•
2 min read

The operation was conducted by a team led by DCP Sanjeev Kumar Yadav.


Cops confirmed that the weapons were smuggled into the country from Pakistan using drones, indicating a highly modern and concerning method of cross-border infiltration. "The seized consignment includes 10 high-end foreign-made semi-automatic pistols along with 92 live cartridges," Special CP (Crime) Devesh Srivastava said.

Of particular concern among the recovered firearms is the Turkiye-made PX-5.7 pistol, a high-end weapon known to be exclusively utilised by special forces, underscoring the serious nature and intended use of the trafficked arms.

The module was also found to be smuggling the China-made PX-3 pistol, further highlighting the diverse international origins of the weaponry being channelled by the ISI-linked network.

"The arrests and seizures are expected to provide critical leads in tracing the full extent of the network's operations, its forward and backward linkages, and the individuals or groups who were the ultimate intended recipients of these deadly weapons," Joint CP Surendra Kumar said.

The successful operation marks a major blow to the cross-border smuggling of sophisticated firearms intended to destabilise the region.
 

ISI-linked arms racket busted: 10 high-end foreign pistols, Turkiye-made PX-5.7 pistol, 92 live cartridges seized; smuggled from Pakistan via drones



Story by Raj Shekhar Jha
• 17h•
2 min read

The operation was conducted by a team led by DCP Sanjeev Kumar Yadav.


Cops confirmed that the weapons were smuggled into the country from Pakistan using drones, indicating a highly modern and concerning method of cross-border infiltration. "The seized consignment includes 10 high-end foreign-made semi-automatic pistols along with 92 live cartridges," Special CP (Crime) Devesh Srivastava said.

Of particular concern among the recovered firearms is the Turkiye-made PX-5.7 pistol, a high-end weapon known to be exclusively utilised by special forces, underscoring the serious nature and intended use of the trafficked arms.

The module was also found to be smuggling the China-made PX-3 pistol, further highlighting the diverse international origins of the weaponry being channelled by the ISI-linked network.

"The arrests and seizures are expected to provide critical leads in tracing the full extent of the network's operations, its forward and backward linkages, and the individuals or groups who were the ultimate intended recipients of these deadly weapons," Joint CP Surendra Kumar said.

The successful operation marks a major blow to the cross-border smuggling of sophisticated firearms intended to destabilise the region.
Govt along with BSF, Army etc.. needs to Fastrack the integrated grid set up meant for anti-infiltration.

And incorporate C-UAS into the grid. Sort of IACCS for Border management. I think patrol drones along with interceptors can form a squad and do regular checks. Cause this is dangerous.
 
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Govt along with BSF, Army etc.. needs to Fastrack the integrated grid set up meant for anti-infiltration.

And incorporate C-UAS into the grid. Sort of IACCS for Border management. I think patrol drones along with interceptors can form a squad and do regular checks. Cause this is dangerous.
The problem with Bangladesh border is that the state government in Bengal was quite uncooperative. Also as we have discussed before even the central government was kinda sluggish because of SH govt. Also another issue is the geography itself. It's not an easy terrain, there rivers, protected forest areas, etc. Some areas can't be fenced properly. Anyways, they have upped the security there now but a lot has to be done.