Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

New J&K terror outfit run by LeT brass: Intel

- Shishir Gupta letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI::The Resistance Front (TRF), a new terror group that has taken responsibi­lity for major attacks and gunfights in Jammu & Kashmir over the past few weeks, is controlled by three top handlers of the Lashkar-eTaiba (LeT) in Pakistan, according to an intelligen­ce report submitted to national security planners in New Delhi.

The idea behind TRF is to give terror in Kashmir an indigenous face, while also warding off internatio­nal pressure on Pakistan, particular­ly from anti-terror financing watchdog Financial Action Task Force (FATF) that is keeping a close watch on Islamabad’s activities, the report added.

Security officials aware of the matter said that TRF was launched late last year after Parliament nullified Jammu & Kashmir’s special status on August 5, and divided the state into two centrally administer­ed Union territorie­s — Ladakh and Jammu & Kashmir.

Attempts to put an India label on terror activities, one of the security officials cited above said, are reflected in the names Pakistani’s spy agency Inter Services Intelligen­ce (ISI) has picked for new groups -- such as TRF or the low-key JK Pir Panjal Peace Forum. These names don’t have a religious label, but suggest that they are India-bred, the official said on condition of anonymity.

The intelligen­ce report prepared by Indian security officials on TRF said Lashkar leaders formed the core of the group. At this point, it said, efforts appeared to be concentrat­ed on projecting TRF as a formidable force to attract local recruits.

“TRF is being controlled from Pakistan by top three Lashkar handlers: Sajad Jatt for South Kashmir, Khalid for Central Kashmir and Hanzala Adnan for North Kashmir,” said the report accessed by HT.

TRF’s social media managers in Pakistan claimed responsibi­lity after five terrorists and an equal number of army soldiers were killed in the Keran sector early April.

The group also claimed responsibi­lity for the gunfight in north Kashmir’s Handwara town that killed five security men, including the commanding officer of a Rashtriya Rifles battalion and a Major, over the weekend.

One of the two terrorists killed in the operation was later identified as Lashkar commander Haider, a Pakistani national.

The other person was a local terrorist, a resident of Handwara.

In Twitter posts on Wednesday, Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan accused India of trying to “find a pretext for a false flag operation” targeting his country even as he put emphasis on what he called indigenous “Kashmiri resistance” in the region.

His tweets were seen by security experts as a response to reports of Pakistan’s attempt to send terrorists into India.

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