Pakistan’s Diabolic Agenda Resurfaces: Rebuilding Terror Camps Destroyed in Operation Sindoor to Fuel Fresh Infiltration into India
In a disturbing revelation, intelligence sources have confirmed that Pakistan is actively and deliberately working to revive the terror infrastructure decimated by the Indian Army during the highly successful Operation Sindoor in May.
Launched in retaliation for the brutal Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 innocent Indians on April 22, Operation Sindoor had dealt a decisive blow to the terror ecosystem thriving in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). But now, with alarming speed,
Pakistan is once again baring its true face — that of a nation entrenched in state-sponsored terrorism.
Far from reining in extremist elements, Pakistan’s military establishment, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and political apparatus are reportedly working in unison to reconstruct the very launchpads and training camps that were surgically struck by Indian forces.
Intelligence inputs suggest that the Pakistani deep state is pumping vast resources, manpower, and advanced technology into re-establishing these terror hubs, with the singular motive of pushing more militants across the Line of Control (LoC) and into India.
On May 7, Indian air and missile strikes had targeted nine major terror installations, including the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) headquarters in Bahawalpur, a long-standing epicentre of anti-India terror planning.
Camps associated with Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Hizbul Mujahideen were also reduced to rubble. Yet, rather than dismantling these terrorist networks, Pakistan is doubling down on its commitment to terror, now attempting to build smaller, high-tech camps camouflaged deep in forested terrain near the LoC, sources told India Today.
These mini camps, designed to evade satellite surveillance, thermal imagers, and radar detection, are reportedly under construction in locations such as Luni, Putwal, Taipu Post, Jamila Post, Umranwali, Chaprar, Forward Kahuta, Chota Chak, and Janglora.
Each facility is expected to feature independent perimeter security, monitored by specially trained Pakistani Army personnel using low-frequency radars, anti-drone systems, and thermal sensors — all in a bid to ensure their operatives can infiltrate India undetected.
Even more concerning is the redevelopment of 13 terror launchpads in PoK, including in Kel, Shardi, Dudhniyal, Athmuqam, Jura, Leepa Valley, and Chakoti, among others.
These launchpads serve as key staging grounds for infiltrating terrorists into Jammu and Kashmir. Additionally, four previously dismantled launchpads along the International Border are being revived, including one at Shakargarh, which intelligence sources believe is being turned into a drone and surveillance hub for cross-border terror operations.
A State Still Married to Terrorism
Despite repeated international pressure and economic distress, Pakistan continues to toe the line of terrorism, refusing to abandon its decades-old strategy of using extremist proxies to bleed India. Intelligence intercepts have confirmed that a recent high-level meeting in Bahawalpur — attended by top commanders of JeM, LeT, Hizbul Mujahideen, and The Resistance Front (TRF) along with ISI operatives — discussed strategies for the resurrection of terror networks.
At this meeting, ISI pledged financial support and logistics for rebuilding camps and enhancing infiltration tactics. Sources say the new strategy involves splitting large camps into decentralized, smaller facilities, each designed to house fewer militants, thus reducing potential damage from precision strikes.
The goal is chillingly clear: to launch coordinated, low-visibility, high-impact terror operations inside Indian territory.
The TRF — which claimed responsibility for the April 22 Pahalgam massacre — is believed to be a key player in these fresh infiltration plans, working closely with ISI handlers and receiving direct support for logistics and manpower.
India’s Vigilance Must Continue
While Operation Sindoor dealt a powerful blow to Pakistan’s terror machinery, Islamabad’s determined attempt to resurrect its proxy war against India exposes the hollow nature of its diplomatic rhetoric. Behind every peace overture lies a calculated effort to destabilise India, using terror as a tool of statecraft.
The latest intelligence paints a grim but familiar picture — a nation unwilling to let go of its obsession with fomenting unrest in Kashmir, still sheltering terrorists as strategic assets, and actively nurturing plans to spill more Indian blood.
India’s security forces remain on high alert, and counter-infiltration operations are being intensified. But the world must take note: Pakistan is not just harboring terror — it is nurturing and exporting it with renewed vigour. And as long as this state-sponsored duplicity continues, regional peace will remain an illusion.