Naming..Shaming..and Taming pakistan-Full Version

sorcerer

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Indian intelligence infiltrated Islamic State ring to track, arrest Afghan suicide bomber sent to hit Delhi

In an audacious counter-intelligence operation, unprecedented in its scale and scope, Indian security agencies infiltrated an Islamic State ring to thwart a bid by an IS Afghan suicide bomber to strike New Delhi.

The operation included the Indian “plant” supplying the IS operative with explosives — without triggers — and even arranging for his accommodation in the capital.

The arrest by Indian agencies happened in New Delhi around September 2017 but it’s only now that top diplomatic and intelligence sources have confirmed details to The Indian Express.

The IS operative, who lived in New Delhi in the guise of an engineering student, was flown to Afghanistan days after he was arrested and is, at present, understood to be in custody at a key US military base in Afghanistan.

In fact, so “high value” is this Afghan bomber that his confessions and interrogations are seen as one of the possible reasons behind the string of successes achieved recently by US forces against the Taliban in Afghanistan, sources said.

Sources have told The Indian Express that an 18-month-long surveillance operation in Afghanistan, Dubai and New Delhi yielded intelligence that a group of 12 IS operatives were being sent after training in Pakistan to carry out bomb attacks in the region.


One of them, an Afghan national in his mid-twenties and the “son of a wealthy businessman,” was given New Delhi as his target for a suicide attack.

Sources said that as part of his undercover “mission,” he got himself admitted to a private engineering college on the outskirts of the capital, along the Delhi-Faridabad highway. Initially, he lived in the college hostel but, sources said, he subsequently rented a ground-floor apartment in Lajpat Nagar,

As many as 80 Indian investigators and security personnel had to be deployed for “physical surveillance” during the peak one-month period of the operation to ensure that the target was never out of sight and did not slip away, sources said.

There is an indication, from his questioning, that the suicide bomb attack in the Manchester arena in UK on May 22, 2017, killing 23 people, could have been triggered by a member of the same IS group which included the Afghan picked up from New Delhi.

Sources said that the type of explosives he demanded in New Delhi were similar to the ones used in the Manchester blast.

There is information that the IS operation began with sleuths of the Research & Analysis Wing (R&AW) tracking a suspicious transfer of $50,000 by individuals under their watch from Dubai to a location in Afghanistan and then linking the dots with intelligence shared by US about New Delhi being a possible target in the near future for an IS strike.

It was at this stage that a decision was taken to infiltrate the IS circuit. With a flow of telephone intercepts giving away details of the arrival of the bomber in New Delhi, a suitable candidate was picked for befriending the Afghan.

Sources said that the Indian operative was the one who located the Lajpat Nagar safehouse for the Afghan, though initially a third-floor place was arranged, this was later changed to a ground-floor apartment.

This Indian agent was finally tasked by the IS to arrange for explosives for the New Delhi strike at which stage, a multi-agency surveillance ring was thrown around the Lajpat Nagar house, sources said.

It is now known that the IS saboteur visited the Delhi Airport, Ansal Plaza mall, a Vasant Kunj mall as well as the South Extension market, may be among other places in New Delhi, as reconnaissance for the strike.

Constant feedback was being given by him to his handlers in Afghanistan.

Another twist to the dramatic early-morning swoop was the fact that the consignment of explosives and improvised devices was delivered to the Afghan by the Indian without any triggers as the ultimate subterfuge.

Those in the know of the ensuing interrogation of the IS bomber picked up from New Delhi say that besides Indian counter-intelligence experts, US agents also joined the interrogation. Sources said his confessions have helped US forces strike at many Taliban targets in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

https://indianexpress.com/article/i...han-suicide-bomber-sent-to-hit-delhi-5254357/
 

sorcerer

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From Kashmir To Afghanistan – India Chocking Pakistan From Both Sides?

Why is Pakistan worried about Indian reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan? India will soon be assisting the Afghan government to construct another dam, the Shahtoot Dam, according to the Afghan Ministry of Energy and Water. Shahtoot Dam is a proposed dam in the Kabul river basin, one of the five river basins in Afghanistan. The Dam will provide drinking and irrigation water to Kabul, but Pakistan seems to be extremely apprehensive of Indian involvement in Afghanistan.


Shahtoot Dam - Pakistan Apprehensive ::

The cost of Shahtoot Dam project is estimated to be in the range of US$150 to $300 million and the feasibility study of this project cost USD 1.86 million which was completed in 2012. The construction of Shahtoot dam would provide potable water to more than 2 million residents of Kabul, besides paving the ground for irrigation of 4000 hectares land in the district of Charasiab and Khairabad.

Earlier, as EurAsian Times reported, the Pakistan Economy Watch said that Islamabad needs to lessen its dependence on arch-rivals India and Afghanistan for water by constructing dams and water reservoirs. Think tanks in Pakistan are very apprehensive of Afghanistan or India breaking the Water Treaty and cutting off all water supplies to Pakistan during a possible conflict.

EurAsian Times also reported that India-Pakistan War will now find a new battleground on the waters of the Kabul river. Capitalising on the good shape of India-Afghanistan relations the two nations look to build 12 hydroelectric projects in Kabul.

These projects will skew the flow of Kabul River into Pakistan consequently creating a water crisis like situation in Pakistan. Islamabad has alleged that Delhi is conspiring to squeeze Pakistan from Kashmir and Afghanistan and break its economic backbone, which is agriculture.
https://eurasiantimes.com/india-pakistan-kashmir-afghanistan/
 

sorcerer

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Free Balochistan office inauguration in New Delhi triggers strong anti-India reaction from Pakistan


Launching a tirade over the opening of a Free Balochistan office in India, Pakistan has warned the latter against interfering in the former's internal matters, reports said.

The diatribe from Pakistan's Foreign Office came a few days after Delhi played host to a new Free Balochistan office. The move hasn't gone down well with Islamabad, as the new office strengthens the organisation's profile globally.

Free Balochistan, an organisation which lends its support to the pro-Baloch movement, is perceived as seditious by Islamabad.

Speaking to reporters about the recent development, Pakistan Foreign Office spokesperson Muhammad Faisal, said that India's willingness to allow the organisation to open an office at New Delhi, reflects the neighbour's nefarious designs against Pakistan.

Local Times of Islamabad quoted Faisal as saying: "Indian interference in Pakistan is an established fact."

"Indian statements threatening territorial integrity of Pakistan are on record indicating their hegemonic designs," the spokesperson said.

Faisal also spoke about Kulbhushan Yadav, an Indian citizen who is facing espionage charges in Pakistan.

During his interaction, he said that Islamabad has submitted a rejoinder to India's reply on Yadav's conviction at the International Court of Justice. He said that his country's case is 'very strong' as the convict was arrested on Pakistani soil.

Speaking about India's missile test firing, Faisal said: "... buildup of conventional and unconventional weapons by India is undermining strategic stability."

He, however, said that Pakistan is ready to protect its borders from external threats.

https://www.indiablooms.com/news-de...strong-anti-india-reaction-from-pakistan.html
 

indiatester

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I never understood why pakis give so much credence to their Chief Justice. Once every ten years their Chief Justice become more powerful than the paki government.
I've always wondered. Can't the president pardon all such suspicious convictions?
 

F-14B

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Launching a tirade over the opening of a Free Balochistan office in India, Pakistan has warned the latter against interfering in the former's internal matters, reports said.
what can i say funny is it not
The diatribe from Pakistan's Foreign Office came a few days after Delhi played host to a new Free Balochistan office. The move hasn't gone down well with Islamabad, as the new office strengthens the organisation's profile globally
if you can support kashmir then whats wrong with us supporting baluchistan???
"Indian statements threatening territorial integrity of Pakistan are on record indicating their hegemonic designs," the spokesperson said.
after all Pakistan Beta beta ho ta hai baap baap ho ta hai
 

Chinmoy

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Even there HC Judge is now accusing ISI for peddling in judicial matter. So much of Jamurihat........... Its more like Jamure- Hat

 

Safir

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I never understood why pakis give so much credence to their Chief Justice. Once every ten years their Chief Justice become more powerful than the paki government.
Chief justice is some one which is a projection of democracy. And in Pakistan the CJP is nothing more but a diversion away from their secretly run Military courts which are more powerful than SC.
 

dhananjay1

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I never understood why pakis give so much credence to their Chief Justice. Once every ten years their Chief Justice become more powerful than the paki government.
Because like majority of Indians, pakis think that judges of supreme courts are imaandar and above politics.
 

sorcerer

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Pakistan fears India getting ready for water warfare through dams

For years, there has been rampant and widespread opposition within Pakistan to the construction of Kalabagh Dam (KBD) on Indus river in the country's Punjab province. From locals in the Mianwali District to even politicians with considerable clout, criticism has been severe.

Yet, the caretaker government here has somehow managed to turn the attention towards India, indirectly pointing at the country for stoking the flames.

Pakistan-based Dawn recently quoted the country's caretaker minister for water resources as saying that there could be a foreign hand in the opposition to KBD. His reason? "Anti-KBD conferences and protests organised in foreign countries appear better organised than the ones within Pakistan."


Speaking to members of the press, Ali Zafar then pointed an accusatory finger at India and said that several dam projects across the border have been in violation of water treaties signed in the past. The Kishanganga Hydropower Project was in for specific criticism. This despite the World Bank denying Pakistan's call for court of arbitration.

The Kishanganga Project was inaugurated by PM Narendra Modi on May 19.

Islamabad now possibly fears that this and other dam projects could help India bleed Pakistan dry. "India has managed to build about 400 damns after the Indus Water Treaty while Pakistan has not even managed to build the KBD. It (KBD) is very important. It is life — and it should be built as a priority," said Zafar.

Zafar though failed to address concerns raised by political leaders and parties in his own country. In the past, Jamaat-i-Islami had warned of flash floods if KBD comes to fruition. Others - mostly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa like ANP and JUI(F) have warned against it. At one point, the country's leader of the opposition - Syed Khurshid Ahmed Shah - had said that KBD is a threat to small provinces. Still others have highlighted issues of people getting displaced if KBD becomes a reality. In fact, under Nawaz Sharif, there were numerous attempts to build a political consensus but none worked.

Therefore, to blame India for KBD being a paper project appears a rather hollow suspicion. Security experts believe that it often helps governments in Pakistan to shift blame across the border to hide its own follies and the issue of KBD and other damns is a prime example of this.


http://zeenews.india.com/world/paki...y-for-water-warfare-through-dams-2130953.html
 

sorcerer

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India’s Controversial Afghanistan Dams

India is expected to begin work on the $236 million Shahtoot Dam project on the Kabul River in Afghanistan in the coming weeks. Scheduled to be completed in three years, the dam has evoked concern in the lower riparian country, Pakistan. In addition to reducing water flow into Pakistan, the project could erode already fraying relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan.


Simultaneously, the project, which is expected to “bring economic prosperity” to Afghans, will “pump up” Afghanistan’s ties with India, Khan Wali Khan Basharmal, technical deputy to the Administrative Office of the President of Afghanistan, told The Diplomat.


The 700-km-long Kabul River originates in the Hindu Kush Mountains in central Afghanistan. It flows eastward past the Afghan cities of Kabul, Surobhi, and Jalalabad. East of Jalalabad, it is joined by its main tributary, the Kunar River, which originates in Pakistan, where it is known as the River Chitral. Afghanistan and Pakistan are thus upstream and downstream basin states with regard to the Kabul River.


After crossing into Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, the Kabul River runs past Peshawar and Nowshera and joins the mighty Indus River near Attock, northwest of Islamabad.

The Kabul River Basin extends over nine Afghan provinces and two Pakistani provinces. Nearly 25 million people live in this basin and the Kabul River and its tributaries play a significant role in their lives and livelihoods. It is the sole source of drinking water for almost 7 million Afghans and Pakistanis.

The Kabul River’s value to Afghanistan has grown especially in the wake of the severe water crisis that has gripped its capital, Kabul, over the last several decades.

These water problems can be attributed in part to its geography; Kabul is located in an arid region, which receives an annual rainfall of just around 362 mm. In addition, city’s population has increased significantly, with tens of thousands pouring into the capital in search of security and jobs. Demand for water has consequently increased.

Furthermore, Kabul’s water infrastructure, as in the rest of Afghanistan, is in a decrepit condition and a growing number of people are drilling wells and digging deeper for water. Ground water levels are therefore falling and this water is contaminated. According to Afghanistan’s Urban Water Supply and Sewerage Corporation, 68 percent of Kabul’s population doesn’t have access to piped water supply and just 10 percent of its residents have access to potable water

It is in this context that the value of the Shahtoot Dam project must be seen.

To be built on the Maidan River (an upper tributary of the Kabul River) in the Chahar Asiab district in Kabul province, the Shahtoot Dam will have a storage capacity of 147 million cubic meters (MCM) of water. It is designed to meet the drinking water and sanitation needs of roughly 2 million of Kabul’s roughly 6 million residents and irrigate about 400 hectares of agricultural land in Chahar Asiab and Khairabad districts in Kabul province.

While Afghans look to the Shahtoot Dam with hope, across the border in Pakistan the mood is more apprehensive.

Like Afghanistan, Pakistan is a water-stressed country and the overwhelming majority of its people depend on agriculture to earn a living. And while it is the Indus River that dominates Pakistan’s geography and economy, the Kabul River is significant too. The waters of this river and its tributaries are “indispensable” to meet the needs of 2 million residents of Peshawar city as well as for irrigation of the Peshawar Valley and parts of Tank, Dera Ismail Khan, Banuri, and North Waziristan. The Kabul River and its tributaries also augment the waters of the Indus River; they pour 20-28 million acre feet (MAF) of water into the Indus at Attock. Importantly, the Kabul River powers the 250-megawatt Warsak Dam in Pakistan, which generates 1,100 gigawatt hours of electricity per year.

Pakistanis fear that the benefits they draw from the Kabul River would be jeopardized if Afghanistan builds more dams on this river. According to the Pakistani media, Afghanistan plans to build 12 hydropower projects with capacity to generate 1,177 MW of electricity on the Kabul River. When completed, these willstore 4.7 MAF of water for Afghanistan’s use, “squeezing the flow in the river reaching Pakistan.”

The impact will be strongest on Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Decrease in water flow there will reduce crop productivity in the three currently fertile districts of Peshawar, Nowshera, and Charsada.

“Pakistan’s concern is unrealistic and tangential,” Asadullah Meelad, a Transboundary Water Management expert and senior Legal Advisor at Afghanistan’s Ministry of Public Works, told The Diplomat. “As a tributary to the Kabul River in the upper part of the Kabul River Basin, the Maidan River contributes to less than 0.5 percent of the total flow of Kabul River at the Dahka trans-boundary station.”

The project “is not going to cause any significant harm to the downstream watercourse state [Pakistan],” he told The Diplomat.

Instead, according to Meelad, “Pakistan is more concerned about the growing relationships between Kabul and New Delhi on various fronts, including water.”

Indeed, reports in the Pakistani media focus on concerns over India’s central role in the dam project and its implications for Pakistan. Pakistan is already worried that in the event of war with India, New Delhi could choke the Pakistani economy by shutting off the waters of the Indus River, which originates in India. Will its strong relations with Kabul and its role in the Shahtoot and other dam projects on the Kabul River enable India to choke the flow of that river’s waters as well?

As for Afghanistan, Pakistan is worried about its own “unilateral water development strategy.” It is building “several storage dams” on the Chitral River “without notifying Afghanistan,” Meelad pointed out. This has “caused significant harm to water utilization in downstream Kunar Province,” he said.

In addition to tensions with Pakistan over the waters of the Kabul River, Afghanistan is struggling with another neighbor, Iran, over sharing of the waters of the Harirud and the Helmand Rivers.

The Indian-built $290 million Afghanistan-India Friendship Dam, known earlier as the Salma Dam, in Afghanistan’s Herat province has reduced Kabul’s dependence on its neighbors for electricity and is irrigating around 75,000 hectares of land. But downstream in Iran, it has evoked anger. The reduced flow of water into Iran — which used to receive 30 percent of the Harirud River’s waters is getting just 13 percent after the Friendship Dam’s construction — could turn the Hamoun wetlands into a dustbowl, impacting the lives and livelihoods of tens of thousands of people living there. Afghanistan’s expansion of the Kamal Khan Dam on the Helmand River will have a similar impact on Iran.

Iran and Pakistan blame Afghanistan’s “aggressive dam building” in recent years for the mounting tensions over water. Kabul is “not transparent about its plans for dams and is unwilling to enter into negotiations over river water sharing,” a Pakistani journalist told The Diplomat.

Such arguments fail to take into account the “aggressive dam building” that Pakistan and Iran indulged in for decades, even as Afghanistan, convulsed as it was in civil war for decades, was unable to pay attention to developing its water infrastructure.

It is only since 2014, when President Ashraf Ghani prioritized water management and building dams for economic growth and development, that Afghanistan rather belatedly began asserting its legitimate rights over its transboundary rivers. It is this assertion that is bringing Kabul into conflict with the lower riparian states.

If Afghanistan has been reluctant to enter into dialogue on water sharing with its neighbors, this is largely because of its insecurity vis-à-vis its larger neighbors. Data on Afghanistan’s surface water and demand and use of water is poor. Additionally, it suffers from a shortage of technical and diplomatic expertise, which could put it in a weak position at the negotiating table.

However, Afghanistan should pursue talks on its transboundary rivers with its neighbors as conflicts over water have the potential to turn violent. Neither Iran nor Pakistan is averse to creating trouble for Afghanistan. Iranian officials, for instance, are reported to have egged Taliban fighters to sabotage the Friendship Dam during its construction. Pakistan was reportedly involved in eliminating a local militia leader tasked with protecting Afghanistan’s Machalgho Dam in eastern Paktia province. The possibility of Pakistan doing this with the Shahtoot Dam cannot be ruled out.

Afghanistan’s transboundary rivers also run through restive regions in the lower riparian countries, through Iran’s Sistaan Baluchistan Province and Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Water conflicts could therefore ignite an already volatile region.

Afghanistan needs to overcome its insecurities to work toward water-sharing treaties with its neighbors.

Dr. Sudha Ramachandran is an independent analyst based in Bangalore, India. She writes on South Asian political and security issues.



https://thediplomat.com/2018/08/indias-controversial-afghanistan-dams/

:biggrin2:
 

sorcerer

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Talks on Indus Waters Treaty conclude; India rejects Pakistan's objections on 2 hydropower projects, says official


Lahore: India has rejected Pakistan's objections on its two hydropower projects on the Chenab river, a Pakistani official said on Thursday, as the crucial high-level bilateral talks on the Indus Waters Treaty concluded in Lahore.

After the conclusion of talks, the first official engagement between India and Pakistan since Imran Khan became the prime minister on 18 August, Pakistan's Commissioner for Indus Waters Syed Meher Ali Shah told reporters that there would be no briefing and statement on the issue.


https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...m_medium=HPTN&utm_campaign=AL1&utm_content=23
 

Butter Chicken

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US slaps sanctions on two Pak firms for nuke, missile-related activities

The US on Saturday slapped sanctions on two Pakistani companies by placing them on the export entities list for activities related to nuclear and missile trade. The two companies - Technology Links Pvt Ltd and Techcare Services FZ have been placed under the Entity List by the Export Administration Regulations (EAR).

In a federal notification, the US Department of Commerce said that the entities added to the EAR list have been determined by the US government to be acting contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the US.

The move comes days ahead of the visit of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to Pakistan.


The EAR determined that Technology Links Pvt. Ltd., located in Pakistan, be added to the Entity List based on the company's involvement in the supply of items subject to the EAR to nuclear and missile-related Entity List parties in Pakistan without the required license, the federal notification said.

In addition, the EAR determined that Techcare Services FZ LLC, located in the UAE, and UEC (Pvt) Ltd, located in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, made multiple attempts to acquire US-origin commodities ultimately destined for Pakistan's unsafeguarded nuclear programme and have provided false and misleading information during an end-use check, the federal notification said.
 

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