Third Eye OSINT & Analysis – Telegram
Third Eye OSINT & Analysis
4.1K subscribers
613 photos
207 videos
6 files
64 links
🇮🇳 |🪖
Download Telegram
Army soldier Suresh Biswal from Dhenkal, Odisha, died after his service rifle accidentally discharged at his battalion headquarters in Bhaderwah’s Sarna area, Doda district. Police have taken cognizance of the incident.
😢29😁1
On August 11, 2025, the U.S. Department of State designated the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) and its affiliate, the Majeed Brigade, as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO). The Majeed Brigade was also added as an alias to BLA’s existing Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) status, which BLA first received in 2019.
😢221
Surging geopolitical currents in South Asia.
👍224
Following a report from a local woman who spotted three suspicious individuals in the Kathua–Hiranagar sector last night, security forces have initiated a search operation to trace their movements and eliminate any potential threat. Authorities have enhanced patrolling, established checkpoints, and urged residents to stay alert and promptly report any suspicious activity.
👍23
J&K’s State Investigation Agency (SIA) has begun searches in Srinagar in connection with the 1990 abduction and killing of 27-year-old Kashmiri Pandit nurse Sarla Bhat by JKLF terrorists. Sarla was kidnapped from the SKIMS hostel on April 18, 1990, and discovered shot dead the following day in Umar Colony, after being falsely branded a police informer.
👍162
🚨Balochistan Update – Basima, Washuk District, August 12, 2025

At approximately 12:50 AM PKT (1:20 AM IST), militants affiliated with the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) ambushed a Quick Reaction Force (QRF) unit of the 328 Brigade along with a police van at Green Chowk in Basima, Washuk District, Balochistan.

Casualties:
• 9 security personnel killed, including Captain Asif (preliminary reports).
• 6 personnel wounded.
• Unconfirmed reports suggest three soldiers may have been taken captive by the BLA.

This marks the first major BLA attack since its designation as a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the U.S.
🔥27
Pakistani Terrorist Group Jaish-e-Mohammed has increased recruitment from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Some of their Jaish Commander who looks after recruitment & Training are currently in Syria.

There are multiple instances of recruitment of Afghan War Veteran from that KP province in ranks of Jaish.
👍122🔥1
Photos & Videos uploaded by Jaish-e-Mohammed Commanders who are visiting Syria.
👍10
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Current Status of Jaish Terror Camp which were destroyed during Ops Sindoor.
👍17😁2
🚨 TTP Bajaur UPDATE (1–12 Aug 2025)

📍 Location: Bajaur District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa – focus on Mamund & Lowi Mamund Tehsils

Timeline & Key Events

1–8 Aug: Ceasefire from late July holds but erodes; TTP militants seen in markets (unverified). 7th round of talks collapses on 8 Aug; militants refuse withdrawal to Afghanistan.

9 Aug: Leak of alleged mosque video showing TTP commander delivering anti-state speech; OSINT hints at regrouping.

9 Aug (Zhob): Army foils infiltration from Afghanistan; 14 TTP killed.

10 Aug: Ceasefire collapses; heavy clashes in Mamund. Reports of TTP using drones on army positions; air defence activated. Civilian displacement from Lowi Mamund begins.

11–12 Aug: Fighting continues; army claims key gains, but OSINT suggests militants remain entrenched.

TTP Tactics & Trends
- Use of civilian areas as shields.
- Small-scale drone strikes (23% of KP attacks in July involved drones).
- Suspected cross-border coordination from Afghanistan’s Kunar Province.

Pakistan Army Response
- Operation Sarbakaf relaunched 10 Aug with air & ground assets.
- Curfews, village sweeps, and crop-clearing orders for 100m along roads.
- Evacuation measures to reduce civilian casualties.

Areas Most Affected

- Mamund Tehsil: Epicenter of clashes; 16 villages under sweep.
- Lowi Mamund: Heavy fighting & displacement since 10 Aug.
- Khar: Logistical hub; past bombing site (2 Jul).

Situation Now (12 Aug, 12:58 PM IST)
- Army advancing in Mamund; TTP presence persists in pockets.
- Displacement ongoing; peace process frozen.
- Wider KP security ops active to prevent further infiltration.

⚠️ OSINT Note: Social media claims remain partly unverified; real situation may vary. Conflict remains fluid.
9
Unrest has gripped Islamabad after the Capital Development Authority (CDA) launched a crackdown on mosques and seminaries built illegally on the city’s protected greenbelt land.


1. Root of the Issue
-Dozens of mosques and seminaries in Islamabad were built without CDA approval on protected greenbelt land reserved for environmental preservation.
-These encroachments violated urban planning and environmental laws, sparking calls for enforcement.


2. Start of the Crackdown
-In early August 2025, the Capital Development Authority (CDA) launched an operation to demolish around 50 illegal structures.
-The action began with the Madni Mosque and its adjoining Madni seminary near Rawal Dam.
-The seminary was removed on August 8 after discussions with its management; the mosque was demolished on August 9.
-CDA’s Environment Wing immediately planted saplings at the site, but protestors uprooted them.


3. Government’s Justification
-CDA stated that the demolitions were in compliance with legal mandates and part of urban/environmental protection measures.
-Authorities had already constructed a replacement seminary for 200 students at a cost of Rs 40 million.


4. Political & Religious Backlash
-Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) leaders, including Naeema Kishwar, condemned the demolitions in the National Assembly and organized protests at the site.
-Mufti Owais Aziz (JUI-F) threatened to file blasphemy cases against Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi and other officials.
-Religious bodies like Wafaqul Madaris declared the move disrespectful to Islam.


5. Militant Group Reaction
-Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) called the demolitions un-Islamic and an insult to the Quran, urging resistance.
-Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) likened the incident to the 1992 Babri Masjid demolition in India and labeled it anti-Islamic.
-Pakistan-based terror groups encouraged mujahideen to confront the government.


6. Escalation of Tensions
-Maulana Abdul Aziz of Lal Masjid released a video from inside the mosque calling for jihad and civil disobedience.
-Other mosque and imambargah administrators, facing demolition notices, convened a meeting at Farooq-i-Azam Masjid (I-9) to coordinate legal challenges and obtain stay orders from courts.


7. Government Response & Negotiations
-Minister of State for Interior Talal Chaudhry held talks with JUI-F leaders, pausing demolitions for 48 hours starting August 10 to ease tensions.
-On August 12, the government accepted JUI-F’s demand to reconstruct the Madni Mosque and agreed to halt further demolitions in Islamabad.


8. Current Situation
-Although no violence has yet broken out, tensions remain high.
-The dispute underscores the conflict between enforcing urban planning laws and navigating Pakistan’s powerful religious, terrorist and militant networks.
👍7
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Time: Unknown
District/Place: Abdul Khel Interchange, Lakki Marwat, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

TTP gunmen reportedly blocked the CPEC Road for three hours at Abdul Khel Interchange before fleeing. Footage shared by pro-militant media sources.
😁14
Third Eye OSINT & Analysis
Read the BLA/Majeed Brigade update with the tagged post. A detailed analysis on the situation will be posted tomorrow.
As promised yesterday:


The Trump administration’s revived courtship of Pakistan, anchored in a publicly touted “oil” deal but in reality driven by Balochistan’s mineral wealth, coincides with a steep U.S. tariff escalation on India and the formal U.S. designation of the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) and its Majeed Brigade as terrorist entities.
For India, these moves indicate a shifting U.S. strategic calculus in South Asia, one that risks emboldening Pakistan, under American cover, to intensify counter-Baloch campaigns and potentially attempt a low-level misadventure across the Indian border to recalibrate the post-Op Sindoor status quo.

Key Developments
1. Renewed U.S.–Pakistan engagement: Trump hosted Pakistan’s army chief, General Asim Munir, in the White House, announcing cooperation on “oil reserves” and trade.
2. Reality check on ‘oil’: Pakistan is a net oil importer; the real strategic prize lies in Balochistan’s underexplored gold, copper (5th largest reserves globally), lithium, and other critical minerals essential for advanced defence tech.
3. Strategic driver: Countering China’s dominance in critical mineral supply chains, especially after CPEC’s mixed outcomes and Beijing’s rare earth export restrictions.
4. Tariff shock to India: The U.S. imposed a 50% tariff on Indian goods, citing energy ties to Russia, straining a strategic partnership that had deepened post-Op Sindoor.
FTO/SDGT designation (Aug 11, 2025): The U.S. labelled the BLA and Majeed Brigade as terrorist organisations, freezing assets, criminalising support, and aligning with Pakistan’s counter-insurgency narrative.


Connecting the Dots
1. Minerals over oil: The Trump administration’s true interest lies in securing critical minerals from Balochistan for the U.S. military-industrial base (drones, surveillance systems, directed-energy weapons). This aligns with broader U.S. competition with China.
2. FTO designation as an enabler:
-Gives Pakistan legal and diplomatic cover to intensify operations in Balochistan without facing major Western criticism.
-Facilitates U.S.–Pakistan intelligence sharing and operational cooperation, directly weakening insurgent capacity.
-Lowers reputational risk for U.S./Western mining investments by framing them as occurring in a “counter-terror” environment.
3. Tariffs as geopolitical signalling:
-The 50% tariff on India signals Washington’s willingness to penalise New Delhi despite its strategic value.
-The contrast, punitive economic measures against India, preferential security/economic engagement with Pakistan, alters Islamabad’s perception of U.S. alignment in the region.
4. Clearing the path for mining: Suppressing the Baloch insurgency becomes a shared U.S.–Pakistan priority, not for regional stability per se, but to make large-scale mineral extraction feasible and secure.
5. Impact on India:
-A militarily and diplomatically emboldened Pakistan, backed by renewed U.S. ties and security assistance, may test Indian resolve.
-With the U.S. more invested in Pakistan’s internal security (to protect its mineral stakes), Washington’s appetite to pressure Islamabad over cross-border actions could diminish.


India-Focused Risk Assessment
1. High probability: Pakistan undertakes low-intensity misadventures - proxy infiltration, targeted ceasefire violations, or cross-border provocations - banking on U.S. reluctance to jeopardise its mineral partnership.
2. Medium probability: Tit-for-tat escalations along the LoC or in sensitive sectors (e.g., Poonch-Rajouri, Jammu belt) as Pakistan tests red lines.
3. Low probability: Full-scale conventional war - nuclear deterrence and economic fragility still restrain Pakistan, but miscalculations remain possible if escalation spirals.
4. Strategic concern: Any sustained Pakistani aggression, under an umbrella of U.S. diplomatic tolerance, will force India to recalibrate its military readiness and foreign policy positioning, especially in forums where Washington’s influence has previously been a lever for Indian restraint.
👍101
Third Eye OSINT & Analysis
Read the BLA/Majeed Brigade update with the tagged post. A detailed analysis on the situation will be posted tomorrow.
Conclusion
The Trump–Pakistan mineral pivot, reinforced by the August 11 BLA/Majeed Brigade terrorist designation, represents more than resource economics - it’s a strategic re-alignment that strengthens Pakistan’s hand against Baloch insurgents while shielding it from major Western scrutiny.
Coupled with punitive tariffs on India, the net effect is to tilt the regional balance subtly toward Islamabad, emboldening Pakistan’s security establishment. For New Delhi, the real risk is not an immediate war, but a more confident, U.S.-backed Pakistan willing to engage in calibrated misadventures, testing India’s deterrence posture and seeking to undermine the gains of Operation Sindoor.
👍111
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Jaish-e-Mohammed has invested heavily on their Digital & Social Media presence after Ops Sindoor.

They are releasing old speech & audio clips of Maulana Masood Azhar on their social media handles on daily basis. They want to attract more young people into their terror ranks who are active on social media. They also want to boost morale of their cadres who are demoralized after Ops Sindoor.

They are also trying to catch up with Lashkar-e-Tayyiba aggresive PR policy to become mainstream politically in Pakistan.

Some of the Terrorists handling Jaish social media PR are sympathetic to TTP also.

PS:
🗣Even if Pakistan denied their role in Pulwama attack. Jaish-e-Mohammed is openly accepting their role in Parliament attack, IC 814 Hijacking and Pulwama attack in their latest Video.
😁12👍2😢2