Thursday, March 31, 2016

India Determined to Break Pakistan into Pieces; The RAW Agent Reveals the Truth


By Ishaal Zehra
I was basically the man for Mr Anil Kumar Gupta who is the joint secretary RAW and his contacts in Pakistan especially in the Baloch Student Organization, said Kulbhushan Yadav in his voluntarily confession. Yadav is the Indian spy held by the Pakistani authorities on 3rd March 2016 while infiltrating into Pakistan via Saravan border area of Balochistan with Iran.
“My purpose was to hold meetings with Baloch insurgents and carry out activities with their collaboration. These activities have been of criminal nature. This have been of anti-national, terrorist leading into the killing of or maiming the Pakistani citizen also. I realise during this process that RAW is involved in some activities related to the Baloch liberation movement within Pakistan and the region around it.” “There are finances which are led into Baloch movement through various contacts or various ways and means into the Baloch liberation and the various activities of these Baloch liberation and the RAW handlers go towards activities which are criminal, which are anti-national which can lead to maiming or killing of people within Pakistan and mostly these activities were centred around what I have knowledge is of ports of Gawadar, Pasni, Jeevani and various other installations which are around the coast damaging to the various other installations which are in Balochistan. So the activity seemed to be revolving around trying to create a criminal sort of a mindset within the Baloch liberation and lead to instability within Pakistan.” he confessed.
Interestingly, and as expected in such cases, the Indian government criticised the video confessions of Yadav shown by Pakistan, claiming the man has been tutored and that he might have been abducted from Iran.
Previously, an Indian statement, issued immediately after Pakistan announced Yadav’s arrest from Balochistan, had confirmed that arrested person was an Indian national and former Indian Navy official. But, contrary to Pakistan’s claim, Indian Ministry of External Affairs insisted that Kulbushan Yadav was not an official of Research and Analysis Wing (RAW).  
The Ministry of External Affairs of India said in a statement that their government categorically rejects allegations that this individual was involved in subversive activities in Pakistan at their behest. Their enquiries reveal that he apparently was being harassed while operating a legitimate business from Iran, and while they probe this aspect further, his presence in Pakistan raises questions, including the possibility of his abduction from Iran. The statement further said “That the individual claims to make the statements of his own free will not only challenges credulity but clearly indicates tutoring.”
Contrary to the statement of Indian Ministry of External Affairs, Hussain Zaidi, a prominent Indian journalist has confirmed the details of Pakistani version of Kulbushan Yadav’s story proving him an Indian spy.
Hussain Zaidi, is an investigative journalist working with top Indian newspapers and author of six books including one based on Mumbai mafias. He claimed that Kulbushan Yadav was issued a bogus Indian passport with cover name Husain Mubarak Patel. The passport was said to have been issued from Thane Regional Passport Office (RPO) but his report quotes Thane police commissioner Param Bir Singh saying as “We have tried to establish the authenticity of passport but found no record about it and that no police report was ever filed about this passport.” The commissioner is pretty much sure that Kulbushan Yadav was not only using a fake name to portray himself as an Indian Muslim businessman but the passport carried by him was also not obtained through formal way.
“Kulbushan Yadav’s main goal was to disrupt implementation of the historic China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project, with Gwadar port as an extensive target of activities,” Lt-General Asim Saleem Bajwa said while adding that “this is nothing short of state-sponsored terrorism… There can be no clearer evidence of Indian interference in Pakistan.”
In a separate development, Balochistan Chief Minister Sanaullah Zehri has claimed to have arrested at least 15 more agent of RAW from his province, in raids based on the leads provided by Kulbhashan Yadav.
Pakistan has always been pointing out Indian hand in areas bordering Afghanistan and Iran and also raised objections on the presence of Indian consulates near the Pak-Afghan border which are constantly being used by India to export turbulence in Pakistan through the porous Pak-Afghan border. But the Western media habitually insisted on the bizarre assumptions that Pakistan has secret ties with jihadis to launch attacks on India. Unfortunately, it has less often revealed that it is India actually who is persistently involved in a proxy war against Pakistan.
There are a number of occasions when US officials themselves claimed that India is constantly hindering peace to prevail in Pakistan. For instance, the former US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel who, during an address on Afghanistan at Oklahoma’s Cameron University in 2011, had clearly said, "India for some time has always used Afghanistan as a second front, and India has over the years financed problems for Pakistan on that side of the border. And you can carry that into many dimensions...”
If someone is still clueless on to what Indian strategy could be regarding Pakistan, let's talk about the viral video of Ajit Doval delivered before he was appointed as National Security Advisor (NSA) by Indian Prime Minister Modi. Doval while addressing to the crowd of SASTRA University in 2013 said, "How do we tackle Pakistan? .. You make it difficult for them (Pakistan) to manage their internal security... Pakistan's vulnerability is many many times higher than India's... Taliban have beheaded 23 of their (Pakistani) soldiers... funding can be countered by giving more funds... more than one-and-a-half times the funding they have available and they'll be yours.. the Taliban are mercenaries... go for more of a covert thing."
The speech didn’t surprised me as it portrayed his personal thoughts, what surprised me actually was that Doval was appointed as Indian National Security Advisor after promoting such thoughts for his neighbours.
This time, for once, Pakistan was fortunate enough to bust the Indian sponsored terror ring well-timed. But what about other channels of terror financing India is using against us. We as a nation are conspired against by our neighbor and are locked in a clueless combat against our own people. Merely asserting that India is using underhand tactics to destabilize the country is not enough. India besides using direct agents for the task, is also painting a negative picture of Pakistan around the globe portraying her as the most violent and a failed state which is quite contrary to what Pakistan actually is. Now the question remains what better we can do with ourselves knowing who are real enemy is. And will the world support us in this open and proved case of severe conspiracy while we level the case with India.


Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Kalat Accession: Allegory and Actuality – 2

By:  Aasef Chauhdry

By February 1948, the discussions between Kalat and the Government of Pakistan were coming to a head. The Quaid wrote to the Khan of Kalat: I advise you to join Pakistan without further delay and let me have your final reply which you promised to do after your stay with me in Karachi when we fully discussed the whole question in all its aspects. On February 15, 1948, the Quaid-i-Azam visited Sibi, Baluchistan and addressed a Royal Durbar, where he announced that until the Pakistan Constitution is finally written in about two years time, he would govern the province with the help of an advisory council that he would nominate. However, the main reason for the Quaid’s visit to Baluchistan was to persuade the Khan of Kalat to accede to Pakistan. As it transpired, the Khan failed to turn up for the final meeting with him, pleading illness. In his letter to the Quaid, he said that he had summoned both Houses of the Parliament, Dar-ul-Umara and Dar-ul-Awam, for their opinion about the future relations with the Dominion of Pakistan, and he would inform him about their opinion by the end of the month.

While the Dar-ul-Awam, met on February 21, 1948, decided not to accede, the Dar-ul-Umara asked the Khan to seek three months to consider this request. An intelligence report on the proceedings of the meetings reported that copies of the Instrument of Accession were distributed at the Dar-ul-Awam and Dar-ul-Umara before the members cast their votes, and that the Kalat State National Party was propagating that accession meant restriction on their forces and armament, undesired freedom for their women and migration of Muslim refugees into the State which will weaken the voice of the original residents. The Khan of Kalat, the report said, made a brief speech before the Dar-ul-Awam, in which he emphasized the need to have friendly relations with Pakistan, and also said that the intentions of the Quaid towards Kalat were good. The Prime Minister of Kalat spoke next, and said that since this House had voted for Kalat’s independence, he went to see the Quaid in January and had a two-and-a-half hour meeting. He said the Quaid was prepared to help the State in every way, and while independence of the State would remain intact, the only way forward for Kalat was to accede to Pakistan in the matters of Defence, Communications and Foreign Affairs.41 The Prime Minister argued that with accession in respect of the three subjects, the internal independence of Kalat would not be affected. But Mir Ghauos Bakhsh Bizenjo spoke against accession to Pakistan, and he argued that if Pakistan wanted friendship with Kalat, it should restore its leased territories as well as Kharan and Las Bela. Meanwhile, prior to the meeting of the Dar-ul-Awam, on February 25, Agha Abdul Karim, the brother of the Khan of Kalat, met the members of the Kalat State National Party at Dhadar to discuss the issue of the accession of Kalat to Pakistan, and it was here that a resolution was drafted rejecting the accession.

On March 9, 1948 the Khan received communication from the Quaid announcing that he had decided not to deal personally with the Kalat state negotiations, which would henceforth be dealt with by the Pakistan Government. So far there had not been any formal negotiations but only an informal request made by the Quaid to the Khan at Sibi. This request was placed before the Council of Sardars of the state, which asked for three months to consider the matter. The Khan was, however, under pressure from the Afghan government, which would have liked to negotiate an agreement on their own terms. On March 17, 1948 the Pakistan Foreign Ministry sent a telegram to London announcing that Kharan, Las Bela and Mekran had applied for accession to Pakistan and their accession had been accepted. The Khan of Kalat objected to their accession, arguing that it was a violation of Kalat’s Standstill Agreement with Pakistan. He also said that while Kharan and Las Bela were its feudatories, Mekran was a district of Kalat. The British Government had placed the control of the foreign policy of the two feudatories under Kalat in July 1947, prior to partition.

The ruler of Las Bela too had been lobbying with the Quaid-i-Azam to let his state accede to Pakistan. On September 5, 1947, Mir Ghulam Qadir wrote to the Quaid, saying that he had already written to the Pakistani Prime Minister offering accession of Las Bela to the Pakistan Dominion. The letter also mentioned the dire economic conditions of the people of Las Bela as its supplies seem to have been cut off by Kalat. On March 17, 1948, Las Bela too acceded to Pakistan along with Mekran and Kharan. However, by this time the Kalat Government had heard a Radio Pakistan announcement that the Government of Pakistan had accepted the separate accession of Las Bela, Kharan, and Mekran, and wanted this report denied. However, on March 18, 1948, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Pakistan issued a press note that the States of Kharan, Las Bela and Mekran had applied for accession to Pakistan, which was granted to them. The offer of accession was accepted by the Pakistan Cabinet when Jam of Las Bela, Chief of Kharan and Nawab Bai Khan of Mekran met the Quaid on March 17, 1948 and told him that if Pakistan was not prepared to accept their offers of accession immediately, they would be compelled to take other steps for their protection against Khan of Kalat’s aggressive actions. This was seen as a blow to the Khan as head of the alliance.

What finally forced the Khan of Kalat to accede was the furor caused by news on the All India Radio that the Khan had been negotiating with India. As a consequence of these developments, a report on March 20, claimed that the brother of the Khan, who was also the Governor of Kalat, was leaving for Afghanistan with his wife, who was from the Royal Afghan family.56 However, on March 28, the Reuters news agency carried a story filed from Karachi that Gateway State Joins Pakistan. The Khan issued a communiqué, which said, “On the night of March 27, All India Radio, Delhi announced that two months ago Kalat State had approached the Indian Union to accept its accession to India and that the Indian Union had rejected the request. It had never been my intention to accede to India. It is, therefore, declared that from 9 pm on March 27th, the time when I heard the false news over the air, I forthwith decide to accede to Pakistan, and that whatever differences now exist between Kalat and Pakistan be placed in writing before Mr. Jinnah, the Governor-General of Pakistan, whose decision I shall accept”. The UK High Commissioner, commenting on the Khan’s denials, wrote, “Khan’s public denials of rumours about offers made to him by India and Afghanistan conflict with his own statements in earlier discussion with Pakistan representatives, when he used these offers as a blackmailing argument. There is good reason to believe that he has been flirting with both India and Afghanistan”.

While the Instrument of Accession was signed by the Khan of Kalat on March 27, it was placed before Muhammad Al Jinnah on March 31, 1948, who accepted it. There was no kind of resistance to the accession till the middle of July 1948, when the brother of the Khan returned from Afghanistan, where he had fled with a body of armed followers. The Pakistan Army engaged this band and the majority of his followers arrested.
As this account makes amply clear, the story of the accession of Kalat was a long drawn out process. And although Pakistan came into being on August 14, 1947, the accession of Kalat did not take place till March 27, 1948. The three feudatories, two of which Las Bela and Kharan, which were recognized by the British as independent, played a key role in forcing the Khan of Kalat to accede to Pakistan. The issue of the accession of Kalat has been clouded in argument and folklore, because little or no research has been done on the subject. One scholar has described the annexation as, a nine month tug of war that came to a climax in the forcible annexation of Kalat. The reality is quite different. Khan of Kalat had no choice but to accede after Kharan, Las Bela and Mekran’s acceded to Pakistan, cutting off Kalat from the sea. The announcement on All India Radio that Kalat had been negotiating with India, which Nehru was at pains to deny in the Indian Parliament, caused such an outcry within Baluchistan and outside that the Khan acceded immediately to Pakistan. That was the time from where this controversy abetted by Bizenjo started. And since last few recent years BSN has started observing 27 March every year as black day on alleged annexation of Kalat state with Pakistan in 1948.  Why these announcements of shutter down strikes in small and far-flung areas of Balochistan, demonstrations of small attendance by exiled BSNs and activities by a handful miscreants on social media are made, is no more a secret after the arrest and confession of RAW’s agent Kulbhushun Yadav.


Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Kalat Accession: Allegory and Actuality – 1

By Aasef Chauhdry

There was a kind of tug of war between Kalat and Pakistan in the early days, however, making the accession controversial, doing propaganda and celebrating so-called Black Day every year on its basis is not acceptable. Many journalists would unashamedly lie that Kalat joined Pakistan by vigor but they can’t give any historic proof to this claim. If taking over of Kalat state was a myth, why would people like Mir Ghauos Bakhsh Bizenjo, President of the Kalat State National Party, who were against Kalat state acceding to Pakistan later on became the Governor of the Balochistan province? Another most vital truth is that why Kalat is termed as whole Balochistan province? Why people forget the reality that by the time of Accession of Kalat, most of Balochistan was already part of Pakistan but propagandists and planted agents would only talk about Kalat as if it was entire Balochistan. What is now called Balochistan had many Pashtun dominated districts which along with Quetta and other districts readily became part of Pakistan by August 1947 excluding Gwadar which belonged to Oman at that time and was later sold to Pakistan. Just to clear these misconceptions it was felt mandatory to take the help of authentic and well researched material to clear the doubts lurking in general public’s minds.

Baluchistan that Pakistan inherited consisted of three types of territory. First, there was a long strip of land separating Baluchistan from Afghanistan and the Northwest Frontier Province, which was directly administered by the British. Chiefs, who had treaty relationships with the British, controlled the rest of Baluchistan. They had internal independence but the Government of India controlled their external relations. The Khan of Kalat was the most important of these chiefs, whose territories were divided amongst a number of feudatories with different levels of independence. Kalat did not feature large in the competition between India and Pakistan for the accession of princely states at the time of the partition. Since it was on the periphery of the Indian sub-continent, it did not hold the same importance as Kashmir, Hyderabad, or even Junagadh. Nor did it have the disagreement of the ruler belonging to one faith while its people belonged to another, as both were Muslim. However, the Quaid-i-Azam had promised Kalat and other princely states independence, if they acceded to Pakistan. Independence in this environment meant that foreign affairs, defence and communications would be handled by Pakistan.

As the Viceroy, Lord Mountbatten, sought to settle the question of accession of all princely states, Kalat was the subject of a meeting on July 19, 1947. While discussing the future of Kalat, Lord Mountbatten said that he would meet the representatives of the other princely states and suggest to them that they should adhere to one or the other of the Dominions. The minutes of the same meeting revealed that the Khan of Kalat claimed that Jinnah had asked him whether he would be willing to send representatives to the Pakistan Constituent Assembly, but he had responded in the negative, saying it would not be possible because of Kalat’s independent status. However, more importantly, the Khan had agreed with Jinnah that an understanding must be reached between Kalat and Pakistan on defence, external affairs and communications. A series of meetings between the Viceroy, as the Crown’s Representative, the Quaid and the Khan of Kalat followed, which resulted in a communiqué on August 11, 1947. The communiqué stated that, “The Government of Pakistan recognizes Kalat as an independent sovereign state in treaty relations with the British Government with a status different from that of Indian States. Legal opinion will be sought as to whether or not agreements of leases will be inherited by the Pakistan Government. Meanwhile, a Standstill Agreement has been made between Pakistan and Kalat. Discussions will take place between Pakistan and Kalat at Karachi at an early date with a view to reaching decisions on Defence, External Affairs and Communications”.

While the Quaid on behalf of the Government of Pakistan agreed to recognize Kalat as an independent and a sovereign State, the Khan of Kalat tried to get the Crown Representative to do so as well. The Crown Agent refused on the basis of an advice from his political adviser. It is clear from the draft communiqué and the UK High Commissioner’s letter discussing it that not only was the British Government unhappy with Pakistan’s recognition of Kalat as an independent and a sovereign State, but it also did not want it to become a precedent.
Grafftey Smith mentions in his memo of September 24, 1947 to the Commonwealth Relations Office that a draft Instrument of Accession has been sent to the Khan of Kalat, and it is in the same form as the Junagadh Instrument, but that the Khan is unlikely to accept it. He further said that Jinnah has had second thoughts regarding the recognition of Kalat as an independent sovereign state, and is now desirous of obtaining its accession in the same form as was accepted by other rulers who joined Pakistan. The same note mentions that an interesting situation is developing as Pakistan might accept the accession of Kalat’s two feudatories, Las Bela and Kharan, and points out that this is like Junagadh, where India is negotiating directly with Mangrol. However, it says, the significant difference between the two situations is that the Crown Representative recognised Kharan and Las Bela as independent states prior to August 15, 1947, which was not the case with Mangrol. The note also mentions that the Khan has assured Jinnah of having no intention of opening negotiations with Iran, Afghanistan or India, but observed that the situation would become very difficult if the Khan attempted to open negotiations with New Delhi.
On August 15, 1947 when the British withdrew from India, the Khan of Kalat said in his speech, “I thank God that one aspiration, that is independence, has been achieved, but the other two, the enforcement of Shariah-i-Muhammadi and unification of Baloch people, remain to be fulfilled”. The speech was delivered in the Balochi language, with promises to work towards the unfulfilled aspirations. He also expressed the sense of incompleteness of the process of unification and independence, and appeared to be referring to the leased areas, which Pakistan had inherited from British India.

What complicated the situation was the desire of Kharan and Las Bela, two feudatories of Kalat, to accede to Pakistan, irrespective of Kalat’s decision. Moreover, Mekran, which was a district of Kalat, wanted to do the same. There are a plethora of letters from the rulers of Kharan and Las Bela entreating the Quaid to accept the accession of their states to Pakistan, irrespective of Kalat’s decision. Mir Mohammed Habibullah Khan, the ruler of Kharan, wrote to the Quaid on August 21, 1947, “I announce on behalf of myself and my subjects; and joins Pakistan Dominion as its suzerain and promises to serve Pakistan up to its extent”. In each successive letter, Habibullah Khan makes it apparent that the supremacy of Kalat is unacceptable to him. He wrote to the Quaid in November 1947, by then the Governor-General of Pakistan, “My State will never submit to the dictates of the Kalat State and will continue to oppose any moves aimed at an interference of the State’s freedom to act. A few days later writing again to the Governor-General, he argued that it is not possible any longer for Kharan to bear the undue interference from the Kalat state, and described the legal status of Kharan in these words, “Following the lapse of the British paramountcy, Kharan repudiated the supremacy of Kalat and acceded to Pakistan; Kharan also complained that Kalat was arming the mischief mongers in Kharan with the purpose of creating law and order situation in Pakistan-controlled areas.
By October 1947, Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah had a change of heart on the recognition of Kalat as an Independent and a Sovereign State, and wanted the Khan to sign the same form of instrument of accession as the other states which had joined Pakistan. The Khan was unwilling to abandon the nominally achieved independent status but ready to concede on defence, foreign affairs and communications. However, he was unwilling to sign either a treaty or an Instrument, until and unless he had got a satisfactory agreement on the leased areas. Fears were also being voiced that officials of the Government of Pakistan might start dealing with the two feudatories of Las Bela and Kharan, and accept their de facto accession, as these two feudatories were recognized by the Crown Representative as separate States prior to August 15, 1947.
Mir Mohammad Habibullah Khan, the ruler of Kharan, wrote to the Quaid-i-Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah in December 1947 and explained why Kharan did not accept the suzerainty of Kalat. He said that before the advent of the British, Kharan was under the influence of Afghanistan, and that it was in 1883 that it accepted the supremacy of Britain. Kharan, he said, received an allowance of Rs. 6,000 per year from the British until August 15, 1947 in lieu of the allowance it used to get from Afghanistan. He argued that Kharan was an independent state under the supremacy of the British. Kalat, he said, has always wanted to subjugate Kharan, and even launched an armed attack against Kharan in 1939 to force it to accept Kalat’s hegemony. Habibullah Khan then declared, “After August 15, 1947, Kharan is absolutely an independent State. It has decided to accede to Pakistan. However, whether Kharan joins Pakistan or remains outside, this much is clear that it will never, in any way, accept Kalat’s hegemony. His position about the Brohi Confederacy was that Sardar Azad Khan, the ruler of Kharan, had not recognized the Khan of Kalat as his Sardar during Sir Robert Sandeman’s tenure of office. The ruler of Kharan in Baluchistan, while visiting Karachi in October 1947, issued a statement, saying, “Kharan was equal to Kalat and would never suffer subordination to her; Kharan would live and, if necessary, die for Pakistan. Kalat continued to deny that either of the two feudatories could be regarded as separate states.
(To be concluded)


Pathankot Attack and Indian Rhetoric against Pakistan


By Tariq Rizwan
A group of unidentified armed men attacked an Indian Air Base at Pathankot on 2 January 2016. The attack had great similarity with the attacks taken place against air bases in Pakistan in the past. The so called non-state-actors only believe in regional instability and have never spared any one. Pathankot is part of the Western Air Command of the Indian Air Force. Four attackers and three security forces personnel were killed in the initial battle, with an additional security force member dying from injuries later. On 3 January, fresh gunshots were heard, and another security officer was killed by an IED explosion. The operation continued on 4 January, and a fifth attacker was confirmed killed.  The attackers were wearing Indian Army fatigues and were suspected to be affiliated with Jaish-e-Mohammed, an Islamist militant group. The group has been declared as a terrorist organization by India, the US, the UK and the UN. The attack was described as a terrorist incident in the Indian and foreign media. The United Jihad Council, a Kashmiri Freedom Fighters’ group claimed responsibility for the attack on 4 January
Media reports suggested that the attack was an attempt to derail a fragile peace process between India and Pakistan, as several pieces of evidence were found linking the attackers to Pakistan. Reports claimed that the people who carried out the attack in Pathankot were in regular touch with their handlers. It has been alleged that the two phone numbers to which calls were made by the attackers were from Pakistan. According to the report, the first number probably belonged to the mother of one of the militants made in order to intimate her of not coming back home and taking care of herself, while the second one belonged to one of the handlers of the attackers. Indian Intelligence Bureau officials have stated that the attackers called their handler "ustaad" while describing their positions inside Punjab after crossing over from Pakistan. Maulana Masood Azhar, chief of Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), and his brother Abdul Rauf Asghar are among four persons identified by Indian intelligence agencies as "handlers" behind the attack. They alleged that the conspiracy was hatched from vicinities of Lahore. As usual, Indian defense Minister Manohar Parrikar has pointed out that some of the materials used by the terrorists were made in Pakistan.
Pakistan has assured India of all possible help in the case but requested India to allow its investigation team to collect sufficient evidences to present it in the local court. After lot of efforts, Pakistan’s Joint Investigation Team (JIT) has got Indian visas and has prepared a 50-point questionnaire for investigating the Pathankot incident. The team which will leave for India on Sunday, will stay there for a week for complete probe there. Modalities of JIT have been agreed between the Indo-Pak authorities," said a senior member of the JIT. The Pakistani authorities conveyed to India that the JIT is of the opinion that it requires a minimum seven-day stay there to carry forward the investigation. The JIT's senior official said that concerned authorities of both countries had agreed on the mandate and working of the JIT and hoped that the issue of stay would also be solved amicably. The top officer of the JIT said that the JIT would enjoy the same power, mandate and authority in India as in Pakistan. The JIT would work under its own CRPC in India and would visit the crime scene and collect evidences.
The JIT Team will meet witnesses to record their statements and would also call on Indian investigation officers who already carried out the investigation for sharing information. The JIT will examine the arms used by the terrorists. It would also record statements of the victims of the terrorist attack and would prepare a memo of the tragedy. India agreed with all the modalities and gave a green signal to Pak authorities. Officers from various security agencies would be part of the team.
Pakistan has remained the most affected country in the ongoing war on terror. Deployment of thousands of troops on its Western Border, losing thousands of people in the war as well as suffering economical losses worth more than Rs 70 billion shows Pakistan’s sincerity and whole heartedness in the struggle to see terror free world. Our leadership humble approach is being taken for granted. Indian interference from Afghanistan to destabilize Pakistan’s western belt coupled by a series of premature statements after attacks in India by the non-state actors followed by Indian media’s irresponsible tirade against Pakistan has raised a big question mark on the sincerity on India in the war on terror.
It is India who has exposed Pakistan’s weak security in Balochistan and KPK by carrying terror attacks. The arrest of Indian serving Navy officer Kul Yadav Bhoshan from bordering areas of Balochistan is a strong evidence of Indian interference in Balochistan. So there is no use of bilateral talks unless both sides are sincere to settle all the controversial issues including the core issue of Jammu and Kashmir. The politics of allegations for the sake of maligning and defaming one another must end now. Indians are not bad and people from both sides want peace and prosperity but the Modi led government must come out of the clutches of Hindu extremist groups; Shiv Sina and others. The pace of talks and speedy resolve has been sluggish and needs to develop an environment of trust by both sides.
Pakistan’s Army and its prime institution ISI have specially been targeted to undermine its strong pillars. India was actually just left behind as no man area and backlog has yet not been cleared. It is still ruled by the extremist Hindus. Moderates have no say in the affairs. The day to day killing of innocent people by Hindu “Banyas “have exposed the India’s face of secularism and big democracy. India has no democracy rather a “Government of the mob, by the mob and for the mob” of extremist Hindus. Pakistan was created for and ideology that we are Muslims and we have to live according to our Islamic teachings. Islam does not believe in ethnic and sectarian divide. However India and its intelligence agency “RAW” have remained engaged to revive such weak areas and exploit them for destabilizing Pakistan specially our Western Belt.  

Unlike India, why Pakistan is close to China; due to China’s sincerity, friendly attitude and her belief in non interference as well peace and prosperity in the region. Despite having large population, India is playing in the hands of extra regional power US/West to counter China’s rising power and strength in the region. It is all at the cost of regional peace and stability. Europe has witnessed all levels of development by leaving behind all past rivalries and wars for the sake of peace and prosperity in their continents. Only we are leaving in Stone Age by pressing one another’s tales. It is reap time to forget about the past and resolve all outstanding issues and move forward to compete in development. The region may usher in new era of peace and prosperity.  
The writer is a freelance journalist based in London



Pakistan & Nuclear Security Summit 2016

By Sajjad Shaukat

From 31 March to 1 April, 2016, heads of more than 50 countries and the leaders of four international organizations will negotiate and finalize new commitments to improve nuclear security protocols around the world at the fourth Nuclear Security Summit (NSS) in Washington, D.C. Two years ago, in Berlin, the US President Barrack Obama had formally announced his plan to host a fourth and final Nuclear Security Summit in 2016. 

The NSS process has been President Obama’s flagship initiative since his first term when he underlined security of nuclear materials as a priority of his administration in Prague speech of April 5, 2009. He initiated an international effort to secure all vulnerable nuclear material around the globe within four years. This ambitious goal was not fully achieved by March 2014; however, the process has observed few successes. Since Prague speech, three nuclear security summits have taken place so far—Washington in 2010, Seoul 2012 and Hague in 2014. So, this will be concluding summit, as President Obama completes his final term this year. The NSS process has survived two presidential terms and will become part of President Obama’s legacy.

The United States seeks a strengthened global nuclear security architecture which is comprehensive, is based on international standards, builds confidence in nations’ nuclear security implementation, and results in declining global stocks of nuclear weapons-usable materials. We cannot afford to wait for an act of nuclear terrorism before working together to collectively raise our standards for nuclear security.

However, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif will represent Pakistan at the forthcoming nuclear security summit. The conference will discuss the future of nuclear security summit process and will determine pathways to secure and build on the achievements of the whole process. In this regard, Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States Jalil Abbas Jilani has said such high-level participation by Pakistan reflects its strong commitment to nuclear security. He elaborated that The US has been very appreciative of Pakistan’s participation in these meetings. It has periodically recognised Pakistan’s active engagements with global community on the issue of nuclear security.

Meanwhile, in a policy statement on Pakistan’s nuclear programme, the US State Department admitted that Islamabad is well aware of its responsibilities with respect to nuclear security and has secured its nuclear arsenal accordingly.

Nevertheless, the forthcoming summit meeting will discuss future of nuclear security summit process and will determine pathways to secure and build on achievements of whole process. It will continue discussions on the evolving (nuclear terrorism) threats and highlight steps which can be taken together to minimize the use of highly-enriched uranium, secure vulnerable materials, counter nuclear smuggling and deter, detect, and disrupt attempts at nuclear terrorism.

In fact, terrorism is an international phenomenon and the prevailing global security landscape is characterized by instability, volatility, and the reshaping of geopolitical and geo-strategic order due to both traditional and other emerging challenges and threats. Terrorism which has long been evolved and recognized as a serious domestic and international security threat is capable of instigating a systematic crisis at the global level. The contemporary trend in terrorism is towards loosely organized, self-financed, international networks of terrorists who are usually religiously or ideologically motivated. Notwithstanding several threats to international security, looming over the entire issue of international terrorism is the specter of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs).

In this respect, the concluding Nuclear Security Summit is likely to take place in a differently characterized international strategic environment. The emergent global nuclear order being shaped is focusing on a greater role for India’s nuclear weapon status, transfer of nuclear technology and materials especially uranium, and behind the door hectic diplomatic pressure by America to convert India’s Nuclear Supplier Group (NSG) waiver into a full-fledged membership. And Government of Pakistan is being subjected to the renewed pressure to freeze its nuclear weapon and ballistic missile capabilities in an internationally shifting political and geo-strategic alignment, dividing the West and India on one side of the global polarization, while Russia and China on the other. The unstated rationale for Pakistan’s discrimination is due to its unique position in the Muslim world, facing the increasing specter of terrorism. In these terms double standard of the US-led West is quite obvious.

It is notable that Indian nuclear weapons and their related-material are unprotected, as various cases of smuggling and theft have verified.

In July 1998, India’s Central Bureau of Investigation seized eight kg. of nuclear material from Arun, an engineer in Chennai, including two other engineers. It was reported that the uranium was stolen from an atomic research center. On November 7, 2000, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) indicated that Indian police had seized 57 pounds of uranium and arrested two men for illicit trafficking of radioactive material. IAEA said that Indian civil nuclear facilities were vulnerable to thefts. On January 26, 2003, CNN disclosed that Indian company, NEC Engineers Private Ltd. shipped 10 consignments to Iraq, containing highly sensitive equipment including titanium vessels and centrifugal pumps. Indian investigators acknowledged that the company falsified customs documents to get its shipments out of India.

On June 12, 2004, Berkeley Nucleonics Corporation, an American company was fined US $ 300,000 for exporting a nuclear component to the Bhaba Atomic Research Center in India.
In December 2005, United States imposed sanctions on two Indian firms for selling missile goods and chemical arms material to a Muslim country in violation of India's commitment to prevent proliferation. In the same year, Indian scientists, Dr. Surendar and Y S R Prasad had been blacklisted by the US due to their involvement in nuclear theft. In December, 2006, a container packed with radioactive material had been stolen from an Indian fortified research atomic facility near Mumbai.

It is mentionable that correspondingly, in the recent Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI) report, Pakistan has been placed at the bottom in ranking for nuclear weapon usable material. To put the records straight, this criterion ignores Islamabad’s stellar role in on-site physical protection, control and accounting procedure, and physical security during transportation. Interestingly, it is difficult to empirically measure how effective nuclear-related material control is unless theft, pilferage or sabotage is reported. Not a single such incident has ever been reported in Pakistan. Contrary, by setting aside Indian poor records as already mentioned, Indian regulations for nuclear sites are written as guidance rather than as binding requirements.

Additionally, India lacks an independent regulatory agency even if it has vowed to establish one. Thus the said report has clearly shown biases against Pakistan, while India has been taken softly.

Conversely, Pakistan has played an active role in international nuclear security summits. Islamabad has accepted President Obama’s proposal for securing all vulnerable materials within four years (i.e. by 2014). Several safety and security measures have been put in place as part of this commitment. Pakistan acceded to the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material. But, it has refused to endorse the Convention’s 2005 amendments, because the original articles covered nuclear material in international transport; the amendments sought to extend it to nuclear facilities and to material in peaceful domestic use and storage.

Notably, the recent statement of Pakistan’s National Command Authority (NCA)  which carried a reference of deep satisfaction to country’s national nuclear safety and security measures, and another regarding the NSS process for which NCA members were briefed, hints toward Islamabad’s commitment to nuclear security. The statement reads; “NCA noted with satisfaction that Pakistan has the requisite credentials which entitle it to become part of all multi-lateral export control regimes, including the NSG, for which Islamabad seeks adoption of a non-discriminatory approach. Pakistan was considering ratification of the Convention on Physical Protection of Nuclear Material (Amended), for which NCA gave approval in principle for its ratification’. That is a pitch repeated in 2014 and has echoed in the NCA most recent meeting.

In the same vein, Islamabad has repeatedly reiterated its stance that we have revisited our safety parameters, emergency preparedness and response, and operators’ training and yet again these measures should be recounted in the upcoming international platforms.

As a matter of fact, Pakistan maintains that nuclear security within a state is a national responsibility because then the fundamental responsibility lies at the state. It is difficult that third party can be asked to come and access them, irrespective of their national or international obligations.

Nonetheless Pakistan has lost nothing by joining these summits, but gained, and thus as a responsible nuclear state, Pakistan will continue to contribute meaningfully towards the global efforts to improve nuclear security and nuclear non-proliferation measures. While, internationally, there is an urgent need to develop a mechanism which can provide a process for sustained review and improvement of the nuclear security regime beyond 2016. This is crucial in an environment where an increasing amount of nuclear material and the terrorism threat is escalating.

Sajjad Shaukat writes on international affairs and is author of the book: US vs Islamic Militants, Invisible Balance of Power: Dangerous Shift in International Relations

Email: sajjad_logic@yahoo.com


Nefarious RAW Sponsoring Terror in Pakistan

By Sarah Khan

Arrest of Indian Intelligence Research and Analysis Wing’s Officer Kul Bushan Yadav followed by one of the worst incident of terror in Lahore which claimed more than 72 lives including women and innocent children leaves no doubt of Indian meddling in Pakistan’s internal affairs. There is no denying that in the past Pakistan has been deeply affected by terrorist activities of all shades and hues. RAW’s role in creating problems for Pakistan especially in Sindh and Balochistan is no secret. Thousands of people have been killed and many more injured in such terrorist incidents, which have been the hallmark of mainly Indian intelligence and some other groups supported by unfriendly foreign countries.
On 25th March, it was reported that Security Forces in Balochistan claimed the arrest of a man who is 'a serving officer in the Indian Navy and deputed to the Indian intelligence agency “Research and Analysis Wing (RAW)”. The spy had been shifted to Islamabad for interrogation, as he was suspected of involvement in various acts of terrorism and other subversive activities in Balochistan. During investigation he has revealed that more than 500 RAW trained terrorists are in Pakistan. He added that trained terrorists are working in Karachi and Balochistan whereas he traveled to Pakistan from Chah Bahar, an Iranian city and see port.

The spy had links with separatist elements in Balochistan, the individual was also involved in acts of sectarian terrorism and terror attacks in Karachi. Balochistan Home Minister Mir Sarfaraz Bugti confirmed the arrest of an Indian spy from the southern part of the province. The arrest has proved Indian involvement in Balochistan. Bugti added that the Indian spy was sponsoring terrorist and subversive activities in Balochistan. Bugti last year claimed RAW and NDS are behind the funding and training of Baloch insurgents.

Sattar Masoori, a BRA militant who surrendered in August 2015, claimed that the Indian intelligence agency RAW and Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security (NDS) were behind funding and training of the BRA militants. The RAW and NDS personnel trained BRA militants in its camps in Afghanistan, he said, adding that providing arms and ammunition and transport were also their responsibility. He said he and many other BRA militants had received training to carry out subversive activities in camps in the Afghan district of Spin Boldak and Nimruz.

In February 2016, Pakistan Rangers, Sindh, informed the administrative judge of antiterrorism courts about 90-day preventive detention of three suspected hitmen who had been trained by the Indian spy agency RAW to carry out terrorist activities in Karachi. The suspects disclosed during initial questioning that they along with other accomplices flew to India via Sri Lanka and Thailand and were received by RAW officials at Delhi airport who later took them to different places for training. After completing the training, the suspects were tasked with creating disturbances and carrying out terrorist activities in the city and to train their accomplices, they disclosed.

After the tragic incident of Lahore and confession of RAW’s agent that India has trained 500 terrorists inside Pakistan, the government of Pakistan should urge international community and UN to take action against terrorists of RAW. On the lines of counter ISIS strategy, Pakistan must also urge international community to devise and implement counter RAW related terror strategy in order to eliminate Indian terror from the region. Moreover, it may also be conveyed to Afghanistan and Iran that they must not allow Indian to use their territories as launching pade for terrorist’ acts insides Pakistan.



Arrest of RAW Agent

Dr Moeed Pirzada

Arrest of Raw Agent Kal Boshan Yadev from Baluchistan! Many of you wonder why our government is shying away from making full disclosure, why not release his video interview, his full details officially? Details of his activities in Baluchistan? the actions he organized, the groups he funded across Karachi and different parts of Pakistan? This is a very valid question that bothers many many minds...
Reason is that powerful interests in Islamabad are pressing hard to   suppress this information. They are advising to 'stay cool', they are warning of 'Indian reaction', lack of cooperation with Pakistani SIT on Pathankot AFS attack (which is another big b ) the forthcoming dialogue with Modi, the possible visits of Foreign Secretaries etc etc and so son..and they are worried that 'disclosure of parties and sectarian groups receiving Indian funding' will be a political bombshell...
But the fact remains that Indian establishment, and not only the Modi Sarkar, but the whole Indian establishment, has been caught with its pants down. The fact that India had been helping, orchestrating sectarian and political violence across Pakistan - from the fringes of FATA, through the insurgency belt of Baluchistan to the killing streets of Karachi is hardly a news. This should not surprise anyone. But 'Comander Kal Boshan Yadev' provides the proof, the connect, a rare discovery of its kind, one in a life time that happens in this kind of 'proxy conflict'
Countries, Nation states and their agencies have always done that. Insurgencies, political conflicts, urban violence were often - if not always - sponsored from outside. That makes perfect sense from a 'national interest perspective'. Once we created bleeding wounds in FATA as a result of our U-Turn against Taliban, or sent shock waves of anger and hurt in a large perimeter around Islamabad after our stupid, ill-advised rash action against 'Lal Masjid' or when we failed to pacify the Baluch nationalists through a political process or the city of Karachi  through a genuine 'City Government' (free from the control of rural Sindh) then a fertile ground existed for outside agencies to exploit, to accentuate and increase the violence.
And Indian agencies naturally had a field day to exploit the situation. This pattern started to become obvious several years ago. But Indians mostly did it in a very sophisticated fashion. Their influence inside Afghanistan in a post-Taliban Afghanistan on Tajik & Uzbek establishments was a great help. They used their 'proteges' and 'assets' inside Afghanistan, inside NDS, inside Afghan government to advance their agendas of political violence inside Pakistan - from FATA to Karachi. Presence of large number of Indian assets inside the construction companies and economic entities was part of the design. Naive Pakistani media kept on crying foul, repeating adnauseum stories of 16 or 20 Indian Consulates across Afghanistan. But Indians never had more than 3-4 Consular stations. They are not that dump. They are smart. This strategy of using overlapping contacts and assets is called 'Wheels within Wheels' in political science. Arresting foot soldiers of violence, or insurgency becomes meaningless. What even if a senior TTP leader gets arrested; he can only point to contacts inside Afghanistan or other Taliban groups. Its next to impossible to  reach to the 'roots' or 'master minds' - even if in rare movement of generosity CIA hands over 'Lateef Ullah Mehsud" to you. It still cannot take you very far.
All agencies know that. Lets ask ourselves: Who sponsored all the violent insurgent groups in Syria? who wanted to get rid of Bashar al Asad? And who may now be punishing 'Erodogan's Turkey' for his uncalled 'audaciousness'? Look at the increasing violence in Turkish cities; all the Turks can do is to thunder against the 'Kurds'; they can't even name their real enemies. They know it won't help.
Bottom line is you understand the 'proxy conflict' and role of 'external agencies' by observing the patterns; by connecting the dots. And Indian role and strategy was written large on all what happened in Pakistan after 9/11. I have repeatedly hinted on this in my programs and I have written many times on this page.
The way regional dynamics are: it is not in India's larger interest to accept a stable, prosperous Pakistan. A stable, confident, internationally connected Pakistan with international businesses investments, financial flows, international sporting events like bilateral Indo-Pakistan cricketing events, T-20s, World Cups and all that don't suit Indian lager design in the region. Such a stable Pakistan will be a confident Pakistan that will assert itself, its rights and concerns on the negotiation table.
India will prefer a Pakistan that is harassed by internal conflict and insurgencies, political violence and a Pakistan continuously facing the charge sheet of 'exporting terrorism'. Such a situation - that prevails at the moment - helps India to negotiate with Pakistan on its terms. On one hand it prevents any discussion on Kashmir, on the other hand it allows them to make a case for trade and energy routes to Central Asia via Afghanistan. And all without any necessary, politically difficult quid-pro quo. Pakistan's image helps India to extract all kinds of concessions from a weak Pakistani state that is continuously under pressure to engage India. Because the 'narrative' is that while India is eager to engage Pakistan, its Pakistan and its agencies that don't let the regional peace move forward. Now look at the pattern of Indo-Pakistani talks; Is not this what is happening again and again?
I don't buy that Nawaz Sharif's principal motivation to engage India  and Modi, at all costs, is contingent upon his personal business interests. No, he appears to be under international compulsions. And these international compulsions, to a great extent, are created by the power of Indian narrative shaping around Pakistan. Pakistan  is seen as the 'trouble maker' that is not letting a regional peace happen. This is what is India's great regional design is. And this is where RAW and countless agents like 'Commander Kal Boshan Yadev s/o of Sudhir Jadhev fit in. This is where India's indirect support for TTP, Baluch insurgents, sectarian organizations and killer gangs of Karachi all neatly fit in.
It is because of this that people like me were very suspcious when Narendra Modi suddenly visited PM Nawaz in Lahore in end December 2015; I had predicted then in my program that we should not be overly excited about this; since it defies the overall  Indian logic, India's Grand Design.
Understanding this 'Indian Grand Design' is important. No only the Indian, but many many Pakistani commentators will sweat hard to reject that such a design exists. Accepting this flies against their 'superficial mantras' of 'peace and harmony' which they have been repeating ad-nauseum again and again for past 20 plus years - without any real progress on ground. In the process they have become biggest advocates of 'endless appeasement'. But real peace is possible only and only when Pakistan gets to expose this 'Grand Design' and wriggles out of the narrative that India has shaped around it.
Unfortunately PM Nawaz Sharif is not willing or is unable to understand this 'Indian Grand Design' he thinks that his 'Sari Diplomacy, his smiles and good will messages' basically his 'endless appeasement of Modi and India' will somehow lead to a change in Indian 'Strategic Design & Thinking'. No. It won't happen. Inter-state affairs are guided by solid well perceived interests. Success of PM Nawaz will depend upon if he can take bold stand; if he can capitalize upon the arrest of RAW Agents like 'Commander Kal Boshan Yadev s/o Sudhir Jhadev'. But more importantly it depends upon his government's ability to fast track the development of CPEC trade route, earliest connectivity of Gawadar port with regional flows, his ability to keep Baluchistan and Karachi peaceful, his suppression of sectarian violence and his ability to continuoulsy engage religious parties - not letting them come


Another Conspiracy Hatched: Serving Indian Naval Personnel Held For Spying in Pakistan

Ishaal Zehra

Yet another time Pakistani security agencies have captured an agent of India’s top spy agency RAW from the volatile southwestern province of Balochistan. In a media statement, Home Minister Balochistan, Mir Sarfaraz Bugti said that the agent who was captured in an intelligence guided raid in Chaman area (near Pak-Afghan border) was an Indian Naval serviceman who was active in the province with an aim to destabilize Pakistan. Maps of different installations and sites and Afghan and Pakistani SIMs were also recovered from his possession.
Sources say that the arrested agent, Kul Bushan Yadav, is an in-service commander rank officer of the Indian Navy and was deputed to work for India's external intelligence agency RAW. They claim that Bhushan had contacts with separatist groups and Baloch liberation parties operating in province. He was actually working as agent and trainer of Baloch insurgents.
During initial investigation, he confessed his links with separatist, sectarian and terrorist organizations in Karachi and Balochistan.
Sarfraz Bugti said that the arrest confirms the involvement of RAW in Balochistan as the man was found guilty of sponsoring subversive activities in the already-troubled province and arranging for funding and training of the Baloch Republican Army. Minister also claimed that India is spreading unrest in Balochistan through RAW agents with help of Afghan National Directorate of Security (NDS).
Pakistan’s premier intelligence agency, ISI, claimed they have ‘blown a major RAW ring through this catch’. After initial interrogation by agency’s Balochistan office, the arrested man was moved to Islamabad for detailed investigation, they said. As per them and other informed official sources, the RAW officer told the interrogators that he has been operating with the assistance of Afghanistan’s spy agency, NDS. As per initial investigation, the RAW officer had came from Iran to Afghanistan and had been operating from Kandhar province. He used to enter into Balochistan on regular basis as he was running a network of agents in that volatile province.
Interestingly, Yadav, during preliminary investigations confessed that his main agenda was to sabotage the CPEC through propaganda and create disharmony among the Baloch nationalist political parties. He crossed the Pak-Afghan border 12 times. The initial investigation also reveals that during his latest stay, he contacted various Baloch nationalist leaders and insurgents, including Dr Allah Nazar Baloch, to task them to undermine the CPEC project.  He also distributed millions of rupees among the trouble-makers and insurgents of Balochistan.
Pakistan has always been pointi8ng out Indian hand in areas bordering Afghanistan and Iran. She also raised objections on the presence of Indian consulates near the Pak-Afghan border which are constantly being used by India to export turbulence in Pakistan through the porous Pak-Afghan border. Out of the total more than 15 Indian consulates in Afghanistan, most are located in areas adjacent to Pakistan border and Yadev was stationed at one of them in Kandahar.
On the same note, former US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel has also indicated that India is using Afghan soil to finance the problems for Pakistan. According to the video still present on internet Hagel, during an address on Afghanistan at Oklahoma’s Cameron University in 2011, had said, "India for some time has always used Afghanistan as a second front, and India has over the years financed problems for Pakistan on that side of the border”. “And you can carry that into many dimensions, the point being the tense, fragmented relationship between Pakistan and Afghanistan has been there for many, many years,” he added.
Ironically entire U.S. policy is a provision to these Indian incursions in Pakistan, as Webster G. Tarpley revealed in an interview, “The entire thrust of U.S. policy in the region (Afghanistan and Pakistan) is to provoke a civil war in Pakistan, to breakup Pakistan and prevent Pakistan in becoming energy corridor between Iran and China. I think this claim is actually quite plausible.”
The Western media habitually insists on the bizarre assumptions that Pakistan has secret ties with jihadis to launch attacks on India, but it has less often revealed that India is persistently involved in a proxy war against Pakistan.
For clues as to what Indian spooks are up to now, let's talk about the viral video of a 2013 speech by Ajit Doval delivered before he was appointed as National Security Advisor (NSA) by Indian Prime Minister Modi. Doval while addressing to the crowd of SASTRA University said, "How do we tackle Pakistan? .. You make it difficult for them (Pakistan) to manage their internal security... Pakistan's vulnerability is many many times higher than India's....Taliban have beheaded 23 of their (Pakistani) soldiers...funding can be countered by giving more funds...more than one-and-a-half times the funding they have available and they'll be yours..the Taliban are mercenaries...go for more of a covert thing"  (http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2cq6ov_how-to-tackle-pakistan-by-ajit-doval-india-national-security-adviser-2014_webcam)
The arrest of Indian spy comes at a crucial time. Pakistani officials are set to travel to India to discuss the Pathankot incident, which India has blamed on non-state actors based in Pakistan – the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM). Islamabad has assured New Delhi of full cooperation in this case. However, the investigations made so far on the leads provided by India have not yielded any result, security sources said. “We searched their (JeM leaders’) homes, seminaries, hideouts and also examined their call records for past three months and found nothing dubious,” a security official with links to the investigating team told a news agency. What we have to see now is what India has to offer Pakistan in this evident case of conspiracy against Pakistan.


RAW

By Farrukh Saleem
·                  
Capital suggestion
RAW and Tamil Tigers: According to the Jain Commission, which was set up by PM Narasimha Rao, India trained five extremist organisations using the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) – the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), People’s Liberation Organization of Tamil Eelam (PLOTE), Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Fron (EPRLF), Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization (TELO) and Eelam Revolutionary Organization of Students (EROS).
The Indian Air Force undertook ‘Operation Poomalai’ to help the besieged Tamil Tigers in the town of Jaffna. The Jain Commission says that RAW provided camps across Tamil Nadu to each of the five extremist organisations where they learned the deadly tactics of suicide bombing. For the record, one hundred thousand Sri Lankans were killed during the course of the Sri Lankan civil war.
RAW and Balochistan: According to WikiLeaks, “Foreign powers have dangerous designs in Balochistan”, “KGB along with RAW and KHAD had supported insurgency in Balochistan”, and India “is striving hard to destabilize and possibly detach Balochistan from Pakistan.”
On February 27, 2012, WikiLeaks began publishing ‘The Global Intelligence Files’ whereby five million emails were exposed. According to WikiLeaks, militant organisations such as the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) and Baloch Liberation Front (BLF) etc are materially and financially funded by CIA, RAW, MI-6, RAAM and Mossad to keep Balochistan destabilised through acts of sabotage and subversion. The BLA alone received Rs50-90 million per month. According to The Hindu of October 8, 2015, “India is preparing to take an aggressive position on Balochistan, in a marked departure from South Block’s Pakistan policy of the past.” The Hindu continues, “The new Indian position over Balochistan became public when Balochistan Liberation Organization (BLO) representative Balaach Pardili addressed a gathering in New Delhi….reading out a statement from BLO’s exiled leader Nawabzada Hyrbyair Marri.
RAW and Mukti Bahini: On May 15, 1971, Indian Army’s Eastern Command officially initiated ‘Operation Jackpot’. RAW had set up training camps in the Indian states of West Bengal, Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar, Assam, Nagaland, Mizoram and Tripura. RAW equipped the Mukti Bahini with Italian howitzers, Dakota DC-3 aircraft, Otter DHC-3 fighter planes and Allouette helicopters.
For the record, the Mukti Bahini killed anywhere from 1,000 Biharis (according to the ‘Chronology for Biharis in Bangladesh’) to 150,000 Biharis (according to the ‘Encyclopaedia of Violence, Peace and Conflict’; page 64).
RAW and the TTP: According to leaked WikiLeaks cables, “On December 15, 2009, Treasury Department Acting Assistance Secretary of the Office of Intelligence and Analysis met with senior officials from the United Arab Emirates State Security Department (SSD) and Dubai’s General Department of State Security (GDSS) to discuss suspected Taliban-related financial activity in the UAE.” According to the cable, “GDSS believes that India also has supported Pakistani Taliban and Pakhtun separatists.”
India has six neighbours – Bangladesh, Bhutan, Burma, China, Nepal and Pakistan. India has had border disputes with China, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. In 1974, India and Sri Lanka resolved their border dispute through an agreement. In 2015, India and Bangladesh resolved their border disputes when the Indian Parliament passed the 100th Amendment Act. India’s border disputes with China, Pakistan and Nepal are yet to be resolved. History is witness that in this part of the world the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) laid the foundation of cross-border terrorism.
The writer is a columnist based in Islamabad.
Email: farrukh15@hotmail.com  Twitter: @saleemfarrukh


Nuclear security summit

By Dr Adil Sultan
·       In April 2009, while outlining his nuclear non-proliferation and disarmament agenda in Prague, President Obama announced that he would host a leadership-level Nuclear Security Summit (NSS). The objective was to raise awareness, at the highest political level, about the threat of nuclear terrorism and the need to strengthen global nuclear security efforts.
The first summit, which was hosted by the US in 2010 in Washington DC, issued a communique and a work plan that reflected a broad consensus on the need for all states to strengthen nuclear security efforts. Successive summit-level meetings held in Seoul (2012) and The Hague (2014) helped create greater awareness on nuclear security related issues. The final summit, planned at Washington DC from March, 2016 to April 1, 2016 would culminate the NSS process with a communique and possibly some guideline documents to identify future nuclear security efforts.
Pakistan is one of the 53 states, besides the four international observers – the UN, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Interpol and the EU – that are invited to be part of the NSS process. Pakistan’s delegation to all summits was led by the prime minister. Following past precedent, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is likely to head the Pakistani delegation at the coming summit as well.
Because nuclear security is a highly sensitive issue, Pakistan’s engagement in the NSS process was guided by the following key principles: first, the NSS should not lead to new or parallel mechanisms; rather, it should help strengthen the existing arrangements. Second, the NSS should not put any additional obligations on the participating countries.
Third, the NSS should maintain focus on the civil-nuclear fuel cycle, without venturing into weapons programmes, which remain the sovereign prerogative of all nuclear weapon states. And finally, NSS-related commitments, as agreed by participating states in the form of communiques and other outcome documents, would remain voluntary in nature and be guided by the states’ domestic and international obligations.
Pakistan has been constructively engaged in the NSS process and has made significant contributions to building a consensus and developing a common understanding on nuclear security issues. In retrospect, the confidence reposed by the global powers in Pakistan’s nuclear security efforts at such high level meetings has helped remove the misperceptions about Pakistan’s nuclear program, which continues to be the target of criticism, mainly for political reasons.
The summit also offered an opportunity for Pakistan to project its credentials in the nuclear field. In its national statement at the 2010 NSS, Pakistan introduced the main contours of its nuclear security regime, which includes: (i) a well-defined command and control system; (ii) a strict regulatory regime covering all nuclear security and safety matters; (iii) a comprehensive export control regime and; (iv) international cooperation consistent with national priorities and interests, as well as international obligations.
The 2010 national statement also elaborated measures that Pakistan has taken towards strategic export control, to align its export control guidelines with the requirements of the Nuclear Suppliers Group and the Missile Technology Control Regime. Both these regimes regulate global nuclear and missile trade. Pakistan hopes to join these ‘informal’ arrangements to meet its civilian nuclear needs and to benefit from dual-use technologies for its civilian space programme.
At the 2010 NSS, the prime minister also made a strong case for providing access to peaceful nuclear technology on a non-discriminatory basis to meet Pakistan’s growing energy needs. As a technologically advanced nuclear-state, Pakistan also offered its nuclear fuel cycle services, under IAEA safeguards, and conveyed the willingness to participate in any non-discriminatory nuclear fuel cycle assurances mechanism, which would be critical to achieve the target of 40,000 megawatts, as per Pakistan’s nuclear energy vision of 2050.
Pakistan’s national statement at the 2012 NSS at Seoul introduced its state of the art Centre of Excellence (CoE) on nuclear security, which is now known as the Pakistan Centre of Excellence on Nuclear Security (PCENS). It conducts specialised courses on nuclear security related issues and is one of the best facilities in the region. Since its establishment, the PCENS has conducted several international and regional courses in collaboration with the IAEA. Pakistan has also offered its PCENS as a regional and international hub for nuclear security training for countries that want to benefit from Pakistan’s experience.
Another significant aspect of the 2012 statement was the establishment of the Nuclear Emergency Management System, which caters to the entire spectrum of nuclear and radiological incidents and accidents. The Nuclear and Radiological Emergency Support Centre and the National Radiation Emergency Coordination Centre are working round the clock to help provide a coordinated response in case of nuclear and radiological accidents.
The NSS process has been able to achieve the intended objective of developing a better understanding of the threat of nuclear terrorism and the need to strengthen global nuclear security efforts. This objective can be achieved by encouraging states to strengthen their respective nuclear security efforts without putting on additional obligations and creating new mechanisms.
The writer is visiting faculty at the NDU.
Email: adilsultan66@hotmail.com