
The remote-controlled bomb that killed three soldiers on the platform at the New Jalpaiguri railway station may be an indication that Pakistan, fighting a rearguard action both in Kashmir and on the diplomatic front, is falling back on its core strategy 8212; destabilising India from within.
The United Liberation Front of Asom has denied involvement with either the event or the ISI, claiming that Army intelligence is trying to quot;malignquot; it. Just for the record, it is not possible for anyone to drive the organisation8217;s image any lower than it already is. It plumbed the nadir after its dastardly treatment of Sanjoy Ghose, who was killed after being taken hostage by it. Besides, ISI operatives have recently been apprehended in the region. And there is substantial evidence of the organisation8217;s links with the ISI. The ULFA, along with other groups in the Northeast, was part of the narcoterrorist network developed by the ISI to move heroin out of northern Myanmar. Its denial of involvement in the blast is asunconvincing as Nawaz Sharif8217;s monotonous denial of Pakistani involvement in Kargil.
Having lost the initiative on the border, it is only natural for Pakistan to fall back on its core competency, developed over long years in the field. The Indian security agencies should be prepared for yet another terror offensive in the country. However, this is also an opportunity for them to launch an information offensive. The casualty figures of the battle behind the lines ought to be totted up now. The evidence for Pakistani involvement in the Bombay blasts ought to be collected, along with that for ISI links with various insurgent organisations in India. In particular, there is a fair amount of information about Pakistan8217;s narco-terrorist operations that will damn it for all time. These facts should be used to good effect in the war of words that is clearlyin the offing. Now that the world is prepared to give ear, let it know the real story of Indo-Pak relations.