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Pakistan Leader Admits to Attacks: "We Hit India from Red Fort to Kashmir's Forests"

Pakistan has once again exposed its direct role in promoting terrorism across the border after a senior political figure openly credited his country for attacks in India. In a newly surfaced video, Chaudhry Anwarul Haq boasted that terror groups carried out strikes across Indian territory, including Delhi and Kashmir.

Pakistan Leader on Red Blast
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In a video, Pakistani politician Chaudhry Anwarul Haq claimed Pakistan's involvement in attacks in India, including the Red Fort explosion and the Baisaran Valley massacre; India has rejected these claims and launched a diplomatic campaign, while new details about the Faridabad-based terror module linked to the Red Fort explosion, including Operation D 6, have emerged.

Admission Links Pakistan to Major Attacks

Haq referred explicitly to the November 10 car explosion near the Red Fort in Delhi, a blast that killed 14 people. Investigators later traced the conspiracy to Dr Umar Un Nabi, connected to a Jaish-e-Mohammed affiliated terror module that authorities dismantled in Faridabad shortly before the attack. His mention of the forests of Kashmir pointed to the massacre in Baisaran Valley in Pahalgam earlier this year, where gunmen opened fire on tourists, claiming 26 lives.

In the viral video, Haq declared, "I earlier said that if you keep bleeding Balochistan, we'll hit India from Red Fort to the forests of Kashmir. By the grace of Allah, we've done it and they're still unable to count bodies."

India Rejects Pakistan's Claims on Balochistan

Islamabad continues to accuse India of destabilising Balochistan in order to divert global attention from its own financial troubles and internal unrest. New Delhi has consistently dismissed these allegations, calling them baseless attempts to mask Pakistan's long-standing support for terrorism.

Following the Pahalgam attack, India launched a diplomatic campaign against Pakistan. This included freezing the Indus Waters Treaty until Islamabad halted its backing of cross border terror networks.

More Leaders Expose Islamabad's Strategy

Haq is not the only Pakistani politician to speak openly about the state's covert operations. Recently, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi stated that Islamabad has benefited from "fake" terror attacks staged within the province. Citing a report from TOLO News, Afridi accused the federal government of "manufacturing terrorism" while obstructing peace efforts in the Khyber region.

Plot Behind Red Fort Blast and Operation D 6

Meanwhile, fresh details have emerged about the Faridabad based terror module linked to the Red Fort explosion. According to security agencies, the group had been preparing for a large suicide attack on December 6, the anniversary of the Babri Masjid demolition. This operation was internally referred to as Operation D 6.

Sources revealed that the module consisted of nine to ten recruits, including several doctors from Al Falah University in Faridabad. Using their professional credentials, they allegedly procured chemical substances required for manufacturing explosives.

Interrogation reports show that Dr Shaheen Shaheed and Dr Umar played a central role in the Red Fort bombing. Dr Shaheen is suspected of being assigned the job of creating and leading a women's wing for JeM in India under the banner of Jamaat ul Momineen, a newly formed female recruitment outfit for the banned organisation.

Her arrest came soon after the detention of Dr Muzammil Ahmad Ganai, another academic linked to Al Falah University. The institution remains under intense scrutiny as investigators track the wider network behind the terror plot.

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