India’s ‘false flag plan’ against Pakistan exposed by spy agencies

A fence along the Line of Control (LoC) between India and Pakistan is shown. — Reuters/File
  • Aim is to award major action to Pakistan: sources.
  • Decision to engage Pakistan along eastern border: sources.
  • Spy agencies decode India’s secret communications: sources.

Intelligence agencies have exposed India’s plan to carry out a false flag operation in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) involving Pakistani prisoners to create tension along the border, security sources said on Monday.

These revelations were made after intelligence agencies decoded India’s secret communications indicating a plan to use Pakistani prisoners in a frame-up to frame Pakistan, they added.

The plan included releasing the Pakistani prisoners and moving them to the border areas of IIOJK, where they could be used to stage an incident.

The aim, sources said, was to attribute major action to Pakistan and justify escalation along the Pakistan-India border.

They added that such a move could be used to engage Pakistani armed forces along the eastern border.

Pakistan and India went to war in May last year after India launched an unprovoked attack on Pakistan following the attack on tourists in IIOJK.

New Delhi has claimed that the terrorists who killed 26 tourists in IIOJK’s Pahalgam were Pakistanis – a charge Islamabad has denied and also asked India to participate in a neutral probe.

India followed up these baseless accusations by launching illegal missile strikes inside Pakistan, which resulted in the martyrdom of several civilians and security personnel.

Pakistan responded by shooting down seven Indian fighter jets, including three Rafales, dozens of drones and destroying an S-400 defense system.

In addition to shooting down several Indian warplanes, security forces launched a retaliatory strike, targeting more than 20 Indian military sites in several areas.

The war between the two nuclear-armed countries ended on May 10 with a ceasefire agreement brokered by the United States.

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