
Islamabad, Warsaw set to deepen ties across key sectors
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Pakistan and Poland have agreed to strengthen bilateral cooperation through high-level visits, parliamentary exchanges, and sustained dialogue, as the two countries seek to broaden engagement across multiple sectors.
The understanding was reached during the 9th Round of Bilateral Political Consultations (BPC) held in Warsaw on July 4. Additional Foreign Secretary (Europe) Ambassador Muhammad Ayub led the Pakistani delegation, while Poland's Secretary of State at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Władysław Teofil Bartoszewski, headed the Polish side.
The two sides reviewed the full spectrum of bilateral relations and reaffirmed their commitment to boosting collaboration in trade, investment, energy, defence, science and technology, agriculture, migration, and higher education.
The 9th Round of Bilateral Political Consultations (BPC) between Pakistan and the Republic of Poland was held in Warsaw on 4 July 2025. The Pakistani delegation was led by Ambassador Muhammad Ayub, Additional Foreign Secretary (Europe), while the Polish delegation was headed by… pic.twitter.com/bbVLS0fNJk — Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Pakistan (@ForeignOfficePk) July 5, 2025
Pakistani Ambassador to Poland Muhammad Sami-ur-Rehman and Polish Ambassador to Pakistan Maciej Pisarski also attended the talks.
Regional and global developments, including those in South Asia, the Middle East, and Europe, were discussed in detail. Both delegations noted alignment on key issues and agreed to continue working closely at multilateral forums, including the United Nations.
It was agreed that the next round of consultations will be held in Islamabad in 2026.
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Express Tribune
4 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Students of tomorrow — a teacher's thoughts
Having taught sociology for fourteen years at the high school level in Pakistan, I have found many of my students to be lacking in three areas in particular; originality of thought, lack of analytical output in the class and indifference to the value of the social sciences. The three problems identified above are not only restricted to the private sector of primary and high school education in Pakistan but are more acute in the country's public schools and colleges. Our students need to be inspired by teachers themselves to come up with original ideas and innovative thoughts. While having classroom discussions with them on a variety of issues from rising divorce rates in Pakistani society to the qualitative input which might be of use in designing a research outlay for a school project, I have found many of them to be restricted in their thinking and consequently, in their effort put into the particular task. This can be due to, amongst other factors, the years of social conditioning by both their families and households and the society that they witness. To counter this, a teacher must know that students in the vital age group of 10-16 must not be held back in their creative and valuable contributions to class discussions. The administrative hierarchy of educational administrators should realise this too. At the same time, students must realise that it is important to not only be novel in the presentation of an idea to the class but that it should also be analytically worthy of thoughtful reflection. For that, they will have to forget stereotypical images, centred on class, gender, racial and ethnic divisions and preconceived (and untrue) notions of what it means to be a human in relationship to the society around us in the modern/postmodern world of today. This is the task that teachers of today need to be well aware of, if they want to guide the original minds of tomorrow. Beautiful minds such as Stephen Hawkings, John Nash and Sayyed Hossein Nasr of today and Leo Tolstoy, Faiz Ahmad Faiz and Rabindranath Tagore of yesteryears need to be taken on board to build a 'collective conscience' for the world of tomorrow. Poets such as Hu Shi, Yosano Akiko, Goethe, Wordsworth and Iqbal must be read and reread if we are to succeed in this huge task in front of us. Shakespeare must be contextualised in the Pakistani society around us if the country's students of today are to build bridges of understanding and humanity with the world of tomorrow. In this world, knowledge should not have a 'price tag' and it must be imparted for the intrinsic good it entails. They should be made to understand how curiosity, guided in the right direction, leads to an inquisitive mindset, which knows no boundaries at all, when it comes to reaching the frontiers of information. This yearning for knowledge must be nurtured and respected both within and outside the country's classrooms. Lastly, the need for us to understand the value of social sciences and social scientists for today's Pakistan. Social sciences need to be emphasised as very important if the Pakistani state and its future (the students of today) are to take head-on the challenges that afflict the nation and the obscure mindset of its citizens today. Social sciences such as economics, sociology and liberal arts subjects such as historiography have built nations. Unfortunately, Pakistani academia has yet to realise the full potential of an education in social sciences. Our students need to be liberated from the conventional paradigm of a sciences-commerce duality and need to be made to understand the primacy of social sciences in today's world. As AI transforms the education sector today, social sciences offer a huge insider view of the changes that will be wrought on the education sector both within and outside the classroom. It offers us a window into the view that society will be massively impacted by the new information age and in order to succeed in this information age, students will have to decouple themselves from conventional ideas of classroom education. Social sciences are bound to offer careers of tomorrow ranging from research, academia and the changing face of government and public policy. And the human will stand at the primal chord of these massive societal fissures. Appropriate would it be that Pakistani students recognise the potential of this huge transformation. Lastly, ethics will be a fundamental part of this new scope of education. Pakistani parents, teachers and the students themselves should be made to remember this valuable lesson. It means that education and the process of imparting it in Pakistan must have an ethical angle too. Ethics and morality do play an important part in all didactic goals and this aspect of education can no longer be ignored, especially in the age of AI. If it is considered, then education should be imparted in a value-free way (perfection over here cannot be reached) since all positive philosophy, interactionist experiments and laboratory products need to be associated with the 'Ultimate Good', that is, the pursuit of education for its intrinsic worth. Ethics and morality infused with humanism will go a long way to answer the gripping questions that are bound to emerge in the society of tomorrow. In this discourse, education cannot be constrained from ethics and a humanistic pedagogy. For instance, taking just one cue of the question of what knowledge is, in the future will involve a lot of ethical dilemmas and queries. There needs to be given a global perspective to education in Pakistan today. If it is not granted, then historiography will remain scribe versions of actual history, geography will continue to ignore significant monuments of interest to the geologist of the future and the social sciences will miss out on the things that need to be 'taught' in a classroom environment. The coming world of education will ask us fundamental questions of what knowledge is, how should it be pursued and what it means to be a knowledgeable human. AI will transform the education sector and the world beyond education to a huge degree. In this sense, our students need to be made aware of the challenges of tomorrow and the innovative and engaging ways to overcome them. It is an age of knowledge. And knowledge will remain powerful in this age. Taimur Arbab is a teacher of Sociology and a writer based in Karachi All facts and information are the sole responsibility of the author


Express Tribune
4 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Doval Doctrine: India's trail of terror
Over the past decade, India has barely made the effort to conceal its insatiable appetite for destabilising Pakistan. That ambition has pulsated beneath every wave of anti-Pakistan vitriol — a chorus that has only grown more pronounced with time. But its most obvious display surfaced in 2014, shortly after the inauguration of Narendra Modi, when his newly appointed National Security Advisor, Ajit Doval, laid out the cards in a speech at Sastra University that left little to the imagination. 'Pakistan's vulnerability is many, many times higher than (that of India's). Once they know India has shifted to defensive offense, they will find it is unaffordable for them,' he cautioned. 'You can do one Mumbai, you may lose Balochistan.' Doval spoke without mincing words. 'There is no nuclear war involved in that. There is no engagement of troops,' he added, his tone laced with hubris. 'They know the tricks. We know the tricks better.' That speech would come to define what is now known as the Doval Doctrine — India's muscular reimagination of its policy toward its nuclear-armed neighbour, Pakistan. It reclassified terrorism as an existential national security threat and cast Pakistan not just as a rival, but as the epicentre of that threat. The battlefield, however, was no longer confined to traditional war zones. This was the language of covert operations, information warfare, and calibrated destabilisation. What Doval hinted at — almost with disdain — was India's willingness to stir unrest within Pakistan. His reference to Balochistan served as a smoking gun, exposing New Delhi's role in exploiting the fault lines of Pakistan's underbelly through a covert war pursued for strategic ends. For Islamabad, this was an open admission of a clandestine conflict that had long been suspected. In the years that followed, Islamabad compiled a trove of intelligence — some shared publicly, some through backchannels, and some privately with The Express Tribune — tracing a pattern of sabotage, psy-ops, and support for insurgent groups. At the heart of these claims sits India's spy agency RAW. While the Indian government never admitted to any of this officially, behind the scenes the Doval Doctrine had already taken root — a new phase in its hardline agenda against Pakistan was taking shape, waged not with tanks and battalions, but with proxy fighters, digital manipulation, and plausible deniability. What is Doval Doctrine? According to Pakistan's former National Security Adviser Moeed Yusuf — arguably the official most familiar with his Indian counterpart's mindset — the doctrine rests on a false premise -- first, that India has the right to hegemonise the region, and, second, that it has the capacity to do so. 'This doctrine has a deep and dangerous ideological underpinning,' Yusuf warned, adding that both assumptions are flawed. 'As we've seen in the most recent crisis, all of India's neighbours harbour misgivings about how it has sought to impose its ideology — or its vision of what the region should look like.' Initial signs of India's covert maneuvers came to the fore in 2016, following the arrest of Kulbhushan Jadhav — an Indian spy and serving naval officer — from Mashkel, a remote town in the Washuk district of Balochistan, near the Iran border. Jadhav confessed to being an operative of Delhi's espionage engine, orchestrating sabotage operations inside Pakistan. Operating as 'Hussein Mubarak Patel,' Jadhav was responsible for dozens of terrorist attacks, including the ones on Mehran Naval base and Sui gas pipelines, and assassination of senior counterterrorism police officer SSP Aslam Chaudhary, according to officials. 'Jadhav was assisted by Sub Inspector Rakesh, alias Shaikh Rizwan Hussain, and handled by former RAW joint secretaries Anil Kumar Gupta and Alok Joshi.' China's interests in crosshairs Pakistan's deepening strategic alliance with China has long been a thorn in India's side — economically, geopolitically, and ideologically. If anything, this became even more apparent during a recent briefing by India's deputy army chief, who in May accused China of using Pakistan as a proxy — just as the two nuclear-armed rivals edged dangerously close to the brink. That said, nothing irks New Delhi more than the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a cornerstone of Beijing's massive Belt and Road Initiative. In 2015, RAW set up a covert operations cell with an initial funding of $500 million to sabotage CPEC, according to intelligence sources. The cell, which functions under the direct supervision of the Indian Prime Minister's Office, has been involved in destabilising Pakistan by supporting terrorist activities, particularly in Balochistan and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. The operation, previously facilitated through Indian diplomatic missions in Afghan in the Afghan cities of Jalalabad, Kandahar, and Mazar-e-Sharif, provided weapons, training, and financial support to insurgents, reveal intelligence sources. The primary objectives of the cell included exploiting political divisions, targeting key CPEC infrastructure such as power plants and economic zones, and disrupting digital networks in Gilgit-Baltistan and Azad Jammu and Kashmir. Terrorist groups, including Baloch sub-nationalists and the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), were reportedly recruited to carry out attacks. Details gathered by security officials indicate that RAW's support includes providing refuge, financial assistance, and operational coordination to terrorist outfits targeting Pakistani interests. The Indian spy agency has set up several hideouts for Baloch groups in Chasma Garm, Chitral, Kalat, and Jekigor, serving as springboards for attacks. In 2019, RAW intensified ties with separatist leaders, facilitating a merger of key groups like the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) and Baloch Republican Army (BRA), resulting in the creation of the Baloch Raaji Aajoi Sangar (BRAS) — a united front for terrorist and political activities. New Delhi's spy apparatus also mobilised self-exiled Baloch leaders, including Brahamdagh Bugti, Harbiyar Marri, and Javed Mengal, to orchestrate anti-Pakistan campaigns abroad, supported through Indian funding and logistics. On Jan 29, 2020, BRAS launched 'Operation Aas-Rech' against Pakistani forces. India allocated $60 million to fund a 700-man militia in Balochistan, reveal security officials. A 24-member commission, including 10 RAW operatives, oversaw operations. Separately, $9 million was paid to Baloch groups and Afghan collaborators, with financial transactions reportedly acknowledged by RAW-linked facilitators and the Indian Embassy in Kabul. Aslam, alias Achu, commander of the BLA's deadly Majeed Brigade, masterminded the 2018 attack on the Chinese Consulate in Karachi which was claimed by the group's spokesperson Jeeyand Baloch. The attackers were found to be in direct contact with Aslam Achu and Bashir Zeb from overseas, while Aslam was located in Afghanistan and later treated in India's Max Hospital with RAW's assistance. Moreover, ex-BLA leader Ghulzar Imam Shambay confirmed in his confessional statement the consulate attack was carried out on RAW's instructions. Achu also co-masterminded the 2019 Gwadar PC Hotel attack with BLF leader Dr Allah Nazar, planned by RAW handler Anurag Singh with $0.5 million in funding. Nazar had traveled to India under a fake identity created by RAW. Other BLF leaders, including Khalil Chairman and Muqaddam Marri, alias Jalat, also received medical cover in India while coordinating attacks. Similarly, BRA leader Brahamdagh Bugti visited India on an Afghan passport under a false identity to seek asylum. In 2022, a suicide bombing at Karachi University targeted a van carrying Chinese nationals, killing three Chinese citizens and one Pakistani. The attacker, Shari Baloch, was radicalised by BLA women trainers and her husband, Dr Haibtan, acted as the facilitator, while Bashir Zeb prepared the suicide vest and oversaw the attack with RAW's backing from overseas. Officials say the attack was a coordinated effort by RAW and BLA to drive a wedge between Pakistan and China. 'The loss of lives of Chinese citizens is deeply worrying for Pakistan which continues to take unprecedented measures to ensure their security,' says Hassan Akbar, former Pakistan Fellow at the Wilson Center. However, he adds that the bilateral relationship between both countries is deep, enduring and strategic, insulated from any attempts by adversaries to create disruption in ties. Officials say the hijacking of the Jaffar Express passenger train earlier this year was carried out by Majeed Brigade with RAW's support. 'Prior to the attack, BLA commanders Bashir Zeb and Fazal Sher met two RAW agents in a neighbouring country on Feb 21, followed by another meeting on Feb 26 with Indian officials in a third country, where the plan was finalised,' one official revealed. 'During the operation, the attackers maintained a direct contact with RAW handlers.' After the cinematically staged hijacking, Indian media amplified BLA propaganda by featuring its spokespersons Jeeyand Baloch and Bahot Baloch, who publicly celebrated the terrorist act. Officials also claim to have unearthed BLA-RAW nexus behind the May 21, 2025, deadly suicide car bomb attack on a school bus in Khuzdar. Just two months ago, during the Pakistan-India escalation, the BLA publicly declared its support for India, calling itself a willing 'military arm' in the confrontation. Experts believe this alignment of narratives and escalation of attacks during the standoff reflects a coordinated hybrid warfare strategy aimed at destabilising Pakistan. India's strategic calculus India's use of proxy warfare is neither a recent development nor confined to Pakistan. 'India began employing proxy tactics to advance its strategic objectives as early as the 1970s, by actively creating and supporting groups such as the Mukti Bahini in East Pakistan and the LTTE in Sri Lanka,' says Akbar. Some analysts speculate that Balochistan could be the new East Pakistan in India's strategic calculus. 'I really do not see how a comparison could be drawn between West and East Pakistan and Balochistan, because demographic realities are different and Balochistan doesn't border India,' says Abdul Basit, Pakistan's former ambassador in New Delhi. Akbar echoes that view. 'Comparing Balochistan with East Pakistan would be inaccurate due to differences in geography, demography, and political history. India has been involved in fomenting unrest in Balochistan in one way or another since the 1970s. Their objective is to destabilise Pakistan,' he says. Yusuf agrees that the bottom line is a clear and conscious policy decision led by India's NSA's office, in which destabilising Balochistan is a deliberate strategic objective. RAW-TTP nexus According to security officials, India's spy agency operated joint cells with Afghanistan's former intelligence service, the National Directorate of Security (NDS), coordinating cross-border attacks until the Taliban's takeover in 2021. Former NDS handlers — now either in hiding or rebranded under the Taliban regime — are said to continue collaborating with RAW in supporting TTP factions. A striking example came in Feb 2022, when the BLA launched coordinated attacks on Frontier Corps camps in Panjgur and Noshki. Officials cite the use of Afghan-origin weaponry and encrypted communications as evidence of cross-border involvement. Intelligence reports suggest that India dished out $820,000 to reunite splinter groups of the TTP and arm them via supply routes from Afghanistan's Herat province. This support, officials claim, has fueled a rise in IED attacks and targeted killings, particularly in North Waziristan tribal district. The 2023 assassination of ISI's Brigadier Mustafa Kamal Barki near Angoor Adda in North Waziristan was linked to RAW-enabled TTP elements. Moreover, the TTP's evolving propaganda campaign, including online platforms like Ummat-e-Islamiya, receives technical backing from Indian cyber operatives, according to the findings of the National Counter Terrorism Authority (NACTA). A 2025 UN report exposed the growing collaboration between the BLA, TTP, and Islamic State Khorasan (ISK), facilitated by networks operating out of Afghanistan. The report further notes that Afghan territory continues to serve as a coordination hub for TTP and BLA activities, identifying training camps in Spin Boldak and Nimroz allegedly used to prepare operatives in arms and explosives. The hijacking of the Jaffar Express stands out as the most brazen example of this RAW–TTP–BLA nexus. According to Pakistani intelligence, RAW employs a network of smuggling operations, offshore shell companies, and cryptocurrency transactions to fund these groups. The use of Afghan nationals, including people like Hazrat Ali, alias Ramzan, has also been flagged. He was accused of facilitating IED attacks in Quetta. Complicating counter strategy Bolstered by its nexus with RAW, TTP's operational and strategic profile has evolved in recent years. Once largely confined to Pakistan's western border regions, the group's footprint has now expanded into major urban centres, including Peshawar, Karachi, and Quetta, signaling a more coordinated and far-reaching threat landscape. Defence experts describe this evolution as not merely geographic, but also tactical. Where the group once relied on traditional guerrilla warfare, it has now adopted urban terrorism, employing advanced tactics such as drone reconnaissance and coordinated attacks in densely populated areas. Security officials interpret this shift as evidence of increased training, planning, and technological support — facilitated by external actors. TTP's funding stream has also shifted significantly. Earlier reliant on local extortion and informal funding methods, the group now reportedly taps into cryptocurrency channels and receives support from foreign intelligence networks, particularly via Afghan-based operatives allegedly linked to RAW. Another alarming development lies in the group's recruitment strategy. Where the TTP once drew fighters primarily from local tribal populations, it has now turned to digital radicalisation, targeting urban youth through encrypted apps and online propaganda. This shift has broadened its recruitment pool while making detection significantly more difficult. Moreover, the group has adopted a decentralised structure, enhancing its resilience. In contrast to previous years when the leadership was more vulnerable to counterterrorism operations, the current setup allows the TTP to operate from Afghan sanctuaries with greater freedom, making leadership decapitation far less effective. Together, these changes paint a troubling picture of a terror outfit that is not only surviving but adapting — both structurally and operationally — amid an evolving regional security environment. Pakistan's response Pakistan has intensified its counterterrorism efforts across multiple fronts — ranging from cross-border precision operations and internal crackdowns to cyber surveillance and financial disruption — aimed at dismantling RAW's coordinated hybrid warfare campaign. Security forces, in coordination with regional partners, have stepped up offensive measures against terrorist groups operating along the Pak-Iran border. Last year, they carried out targeted strikes on BLA safehouses in Iranian border towns, reportedly serving as logistical hubs. On the domestic front, Operation Green Bolan — launched in the aftermath of the Jaffar Express hijacking — resulted in the killing of 33 BLA terrorists. Simultaneously, a major arms cache was seized in Panjgur, while a media propaganda cell was dismantled in Turbat, disrupting the group's communication and logistics chain. The government has also moved to curtail financial channels allegedly fueling terrorist operations. Investigations revealed that several cryptocurrency wallets traced on Binance were linked to BLA operatives and coordinated from abroad. A massive clampdown on oil smuggling also bore fruit in 2024, when security forces intercepted 2.8 billion litres of smuggled Iranian oil, valued at around $800 million. Intelligence sources claim the proceeds were channeled into financing subversive activities. Following disclosures related to the Jadhav case, Pakistan has urged the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to closely monitor Indian-linked NGOs and shell companies suspected of laundering funds for destabilisation operations. In addition to this, Islamabad has presented fresh dossiers to the United Nations, International Court of Justice, and FATF, detailing evidence of RAW's alleged financing of terror groups and sabotage activities within Pakistan. To bolster border security, Pakistani officials have engaged both the Taliban regime in Afghanistan and Iranian authorities in intelligence sharing — particularly between 2024 and 2025 — focused on curbing militant mobility across porous frontiers. On the digital front, officials say that agencies have shut down several media cells and enhanced surveillance on encrypted platforms such as Telegram and Signal. While officials insist these steps are critical to national security, civil liberties groups have criticised the internet blackouts and privacy intrusions. Security along CPEC has also been tightened, with over 15,000 troops now deployed to guard critical infrastructure across restive regions. Meanwhile, officials have launched outreach efforts to engage non-violent Baloch political leaders in a bid to address longstanding grievances. Disinfo campaign Hybrid warfare isn't a distant, abstract strategy anymore — it's here, unfolding on Pakistan's soil in the form of cyberattacks, disinformation campaigns, covert assassinations, and steady destabilisation of national institutions. It's a conflict waged and fought without formal declarations, through proxies, pixels, and propaganda. In a speech at PMA Kakul, former army chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa cautioned about this emerging reality: 'Our enemies know that they cannot beat us fair and square and have thus subjected us to a cruel, evil and protracted hybrid war. They are trying to weaken our resolve by weakening us from within.' In 2020, EU DisinfoLab exposed India's 15-year-long disinformation campaign involving over 750 fake media outlets and dozens of NGOs, designed to malign Pakistan on international platforms like the UN and EU. The Brussels-based civil‑society watchdog's report revealed that fabricated events, forged identities, and manipulated media were deployed to shape Western narratives, especially around Kashmir and Balochistan. That same year, Pakistan's Foreign Office was targeted in cyberattacks traced to Indian IPs. These weren't isolated incidents. Intelligence officials observed sharp spikes in propaganda ahead of FATF reviews and periods of military tension. India also hired lobbying firms such as Cornerstone Government Affairs to manufacture diplomatic momentum abroad. The campaign points to a deliberate and coordinated hybrid warfare strategy aimed at undermining Pakistan's global standing — diplomatically, economically, and politically. Violation of international law At the heart of this operation is Doval Doctrine — a strategy of pre-emptive and offensive subversion targeting states India perceives as security threats. This posture has led to Indian footprints not just in disinformation, but in terrorist activities in Pakistan and beyond. The 2023 assassination of Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Canada, and a foiled plot to kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun in the US — both attributed to RAW operatives — have lent further credibility to Pakistan's longstanding claims. According to intelligence sources, RAW's so-called 'death squads' have carried out nearly two dozen extrajudicial assassinations of dissidents, activists, and political opponents, including on Pakistani soil. These targeted killings abroad and support for foreign terrorist groups violate international law and the sovereignty of other states. 'The Indian government's support and financing of terrorist activities constitutes a clear violation of Article 2(4) of the UN Charter, which prohibits the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state,' says international law expert Ahmer Bilal Soofi. 'Post-1945, any unauthorised intervention or support that undermines another country's sovereignty constitutes a serious breach of international law. Respect for territorial integrity, sovereignty, and non-intervention is not just a legal norm — it is a moral imperative,' he adds. According to Soofi, two legal principles flow from Article 2(4): the principle of non-intervention, and the principle of non-interference. India's material and operational support for terrorists and subnational armed groups constitutes a violation of both. The arrest of Kulbhushan Jadhav — a serving Indian naval officer and admitted intelligence operative — represents a direct breach of the principle of non-intervention. Financial trails, intercepted communications, and field evidence linking Indian handlers to acts of terror in Pakistan point to persistent violations of the principle of non-interference, says Soofi, who is also the founding President of the Research Society of International Law. 'Incidents such as the Jaffar Express attack, for which Pakistan has presented concrete and specific evidence of external involvement, constitute a blatant and unacceptable violation of international norms.' According to Soofi, there are several diplomatic and judicial forums available to Pakistan, including the UN Counter-Terrorism Committee and mechanisms under UN Security Council Resolution 1373, which obligates states to prevent and criminalise terrorism financing and support. 'But most important, Pakistan should register FIRs in cases where they have the evidence and they should undertake investigation and use mutual legal assistance framework internationally available and also under their own laws to send requests for taking statements from the Indian officials regarding their involvement and that is how they can make it clearer to the international community,' he says. The footprint of India, Soofi adds, will ultimately be converted into admissible evidence through documented police investigations. Muted global response While Pakistan has submitted multiple dossiers — addressed to the UN Secretary General, the OIC, FATF, and key international allies — laying out detailed evidence of India's support for terrorist activities, its appeals for accountability have largely fallen on deaf ears. Countries like China, Iran, and Turkey have voiced concern, but the West continues to maintain a strategic and telling silence. 'The international community is impervious because, a.) we have not been able to put up our case in a consistent and coherent manner; b.) India's clout is a reason states have [their own] interest [which] they pursue. So, they will not like to embarrass [India] or put their interest at the stake for Pakistan. It is as simple as that,' says Ambassador Basit. Yusuf believes India has banked on the fact that the Western world did not accept Pakistan's position on this issue for the longest period. 'I think Pakistan also got it wrong by not putting out dividends more forcefully for a number of years, even though this has been a concern for well over multiple years,' he says while referring to the 2009 Sharm el-Sheikh joint statement between Pakistan in India in which Balochistan was mentioned. 'This is a very deliberate strategy to keep Pakistan unstable and destabilised. It has managed to continue it because the Western world, because of its own problems with Pakistan, has bought India's position on terrorism, and because of this idea or illusion of India being a counterweight to China, etc,' he adds. Akbar agrees with Yusuf, saying that the international community is increasingly becoming aware of India's malign actions in Pakistan and other countries but because of its economic clout and centrality in Western attempts at containing China, international observers are reluctant to publicly call out India for its destabilising actions. 'This should not dissuade Pakistan, which should continue to call out India's active support for terrorism inside Pakistan and share evidence with global capitals,' he adds. Ambassador Basit stresses the need for a sustained diplomatic campaign. 'The problem with us is that we prepare dossiers, present them to the world, and then forget about them. Perhaps we lack the institutional capacity to sustain any long-term effort — and that, in my view, is the real issue.' Way forward Fault lines are a fact of geopolitics — and adversaries have always tried to exploit them. In Balochistan, those cracks are visible and widening. If Pakistan is to deny India the space to destabilise the region, it must address internal grievances rather than simply shield against external threats. That means rethinking its strategy — one that balances kinetic force with political outreach, governance reform, and a sharper media counter-narrative. The challenge is not just one of territorial control, but of winning hearts and rebuilding trust in a province long scarred by neglect and insurgency. 'Pakistan should never take its eye off the ball and continue to work on whatever can be done to address the issue in Balochistan, [I mean] the political aspect of the issue in Balochistan through dialogue and politically,' notes Yusuf. 'There is definitely a kinetic element to what is happening, but the stronger Balochistan is internally the more difficult it becomes for the enemy to do what it is doing. So, that has to be part of the parallel strategy and we should never overlook that.' Concurring with Yusuf's assessment, Ambassador Basit says: 'Deterrence, in fact, is internal. Deterrence in the sense that we need to focus on socio-economic development and do not allow space to these terrorist groups. We crack hard on them, ensure that more and more people do not join them, expose them to the people of Balochistan, and expose them internationally.' Ironically, BLA and BRA are proscribed terrorist groups, but their leaders have been granted political asylum in European countries where they live comfortably, while their groups perpetrate terrorist violence in Pakistan. 'Their leadership, like Brahamdagh Bugti, Harbiyar Marri, and many others, are sitting in the UK and Switzerland. We can build pressure on these countries to extradite them to Pakistan,' adds Ambassador Basit. 'But for that to happen, we need to build a strong case because these people have taken political asylum in these countries and these countries also use them [as] their assets to promote their interests in Pakistan.' The right time Amid shifting geopolitical currents, New Delhi's position is becoming increasingly tenuous, particularly in the wake of revelations about RAW's global assassination campaign, its ambivalent stance on the Ukraine conflict, and recent military setbacks against Pakistan. This presents a window of opportunity for Islamabad to assert its narrative with strategic precision and diplomatic finesse. By exposing India's hybrid warfare tactics and the broader implications of the dangerous Doval Doctrine, Pakistan has a chance to recalibrate global perceptions. With growing receptivity in the West — including from US President Donald Trump — this moment calls for a consistent, coherent, and deftly executed foreign policy anchored in long-term strategic vision.


Express Tribune
8 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Nawaz-Imran meeting pure fiction: Dar
Listen to article Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar on Saturday dismissed reports of a meeting between PML-N leader Nawaz Sharif and PTI founder Imran Khan, terming them baseless and part of a 'sponsored narrative' aimed at sowing political confusion. Speaking at the annual 982nd ceremonial bathing (ghusl) of the shrine of Hazrat Ali Hujwiri (Data Darbar) in Lahore, the DPM said such sponsored reports are propagated deliberately. 'These are all speculations. It must be someone's wish list as we don't want to meet anyone.' The foreign minister said the current government was initially formed with the critical support from the PPP. 'When we started, our numbers were incomplete without them. Now that we have a simple majority, there's no difficulty, but we will continue cooperating with the PPP even more than before,' he said. He also ruled out any rift within the ruling coalition, asserting that the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) had made no demands and remained a committed ally. 'The PPP did not demand any portfolio. They are our coalition partners and they supported us at hard time and companions are not left after the passage of trials and tribulations,' 'In difficult times, you don't abandon your partners,' he said, stressing that all coalition parties are working together on a shared economic agenda. Dar said the law will take its course and the government wants to work in synergy with all parties. He said the government had no war ambitions or hostility-driven agendas. 'We desire peace and stability in the region,' he said, adding that Iran had acknowledged Pakistan as a 'true friend', with chants of 'Shukria Pakistan' also echoing in their parliament. Highlighting the country's string of recent achievements, Dar noted that the country had been elected as a member of the UN Security Council and had signed a $2 billion agreement with Azerbaijan. 'Inflation has eased, interest rates have dropped from 22% to 11%, and per capita income will now rise,' he claimed. Dar accused Israel of engaging in terrorism and recalled how even at the funeral of Iran's military chief, slogans were raised in support of Pakistan. 'Iran has acknowledged Pakistan as a sincere friend. We do not seek war; our agenda is peace and regional security.' The deputy PM praised Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's relentless efforts, saying they had brought 'immense respect' to Pakistan on the global stage. He reminisced about the original inauguration of Data Darbar's development by Nawaz Sharif on May 31, 1999, and noted that the shrine's expansion was now near completion. On Pakistan-India ties, Dar said that the country responded firmly when provoked. 'During the India-Pakistan conflict, all political parties stood united. India started the war, but we brought down six of their aircraft and responded to 80 drone attacks within 36 hours. The ceasefire along the LoC is still intact,' he said. Commenting on the PDM's formation, Dar noted that Pakistan was on the brink of default at the time. 'If there had been no change, Pakistan would have defaulted. We took bold risks to steer the country back. Our foreign reserves have now reached $14 billion,' he revealed. Dar also warned of ongoing threats: 'Risk is always present; we must remain alert. Thirty militants were sent to hell. On the diplomatic front, talks with Saudi Arabia began seven to eight months ago and will resume on June 24. The general visa process has improved, and we request that Blue Passports be extended to include diplomats, MNAs, MPAs and senior bureaucrats.' Speaking on local developments, Dar said renovation work at Data Darbar had already begun. 'The dome has been elevated, and umbrellas like those in Masjid-e-Nabawi will be installed in the mosque. We hope all work will be completed before the next ceremonial bathing.' The ghusl ceremony was attended by Provincial Auqaf Minister Shafi Hussain and a large number of devotees.