India’s false flag operation against Pakistan exposed by agencies
How spy agencies cracked India's secret plot to frame Pakistan using its own prisoners
IIOJK – (Web Desk) – Intelligence agencies have uncovered a disturbing plan by India to stage a false flag operation in Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK), reportedly involving Pakistani prisoners to stir up tensions along the border, according to security sources.
The plot came to light after intelligence officials successfully decoded secret Indian communications, which revealed a scheme to use Pakistani prisoners to carry out a staged incident that would then be blamed on Pakistan.
The plan was reportedly centered around releasing Pakistani prisoners and moving them toward border areas in IIOJK, where they would be used to act out a scripted provocation.
The ultimate goal, sources explained, was to pin a major incident on Pakistan and use it as a justification to escalate military tensions along the Pakistan-India border — potentially drawing Pakistan’s armed forces into a conflict on its eastern front.
It is worth recalling that Pakistan and India engaged in a serious military confrontation in May last year, after India launched an unprovoked strike on Pakistan. India had used the attack on tourists in IIOJK as a pretext for that military action.
New Delhi claimed that the terrorists who killed 26 tourists in IIOJK’s Pahalgam were Pakistanis — a charge that Islamabad has denied and has also asked India to partake in a neutral investigation.
India followed the baseless accusations with unlawful missile strikes inside Pakistan, which resulted in the martyrdom of several civilians and security personnel.
Pakistan responded by downing seven Indian fighter jets, including three Rafale, dozens of drones, and destroying an S-400 defence system.
In addition to downing multiple Indian fighter jets, security forces launched a retaliatory strike, targeting over 20 Indian military sites across multiple regions.
The war between the two nuclear-armed nations ended on May 10 with a ceasefire agreement brokered by the United States.


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