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Balochistan Train Hijack Still Not Over
The Sunday Guardian
|March 16, 2025
It has been over 100 hours since militants from the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) hijacked the Jaffar Express in Balochistan.
Still, Pakistan's elite security forces are without answers. Islamabad's Special Services Group (SSG), domestically celebrated as crack commandos, spectacularly failed to mount even a basic rescue operation, leaving over 200 hostages—including its own military and intelligence personnel—at the mercy of insurgents.
Instead of decisive action, Pakistan's military pumped resources into the infamous Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) to manage perceptions, concealing the true scale of human losses and spinning a fictional narrative of triumph.
That narrative has now been brutally shattered: On Saturday morning, the BLA announced that they had escaped with 214 hostages—all of whom they executed since the 48-hour "deadline" to exchange said captives for Baloch political prisoners lapsed.
The military's inability to rescue hostages or even safeguard its personnel points an unwavering finger toward deeper institutional weaknesses. Security experts say that the BLA operation's sheer scale, coordination, and precision clearly indicate a massive intelligence failure within Pakistan's much-vaunted security agencies.
The Jaffar Express route, traversing the Bolan Pass, has long been a known strategic faultline, frequently targeted by Baloch insurgents through bombings and ambushes. A train journey through this volatile corridor should have been subject to maximum intelligence surveillance, especially given Pakistan's self-projected global image of possessing near-omniscient security oversight.
The fact that Pakistani agencies failed catastrophically in detecting such meticulous preparations exposes systemic failures that question the effectiveness and credibility of Islamabad's intelligence apparatus.
OPERATIONAL PARALYSIS
Despite failure on the detection front, Islamabad still had time to save the lives of the hostages. Rescue operation and negotiation were both on the table.
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