Pakistani security sources allege that Indian intelligence agencies are preparing a “false-flag” operation in Kashmir designed to implicate Pakistan and blame the Haqqani Network.
The sources told Afghanistan International on Monday, 25 August, that the alleged plan involves using Taliban fighters and tribal Pashtuns to frame the Haqqanis. They claimed the operation is being facilitated with the help of the intelligence services of a “third country,” though they did not identify which one.
India has long accused the Haqqani Network of having ties to Pakistan. The group, largely made up of Pashtuns, has historically been linked to Islamabad through family and political connections dating back to the 1980s. Founder Jalaluddin Haqqani organised his activities from Pakistan under the umbrella of Mohammad Yunus Khalis’s Hizb-e-Islami during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
According to the Pakistani sources, some Indian media outlets have already begun publishing narratives in support of what they described as pre-planned operations.
Diplomatic observers warned that such actions could sharply raise tensions between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.
Pakistan has frequently accused New Delhi of staging false-flag attacks to deflect from internal issues and shape international opinion against Islamabad. One security source said that while false-flag operations are not new, the scale of the current preparations suggested “something much more serious.”