India, Israel, and the Taliban Have Formed a “Secret Coalition” Against Islamabad
Author: Dr. Khaledin Ziaei, Head of the Analytical Center "Educational Discourse of the Afghanistan Nation", Special for "Sangar"
Original article: پس از ایران نوبت پاکستان است
In recent decades, geopolitical shifts in South Asia have been marked by continuous competition in the fields of security, intelligence, and defense among key regional and transnational actors. Pakistan, as a nuclear power and a significant regional player, has repeatedly become the target of both direct and indirect threats to its national security. According to recent reports released by Pakistan’s security agencies, a highly dangerous sabotage group—receiving intelligence support from three sides: India, Israel, and the Taliban Emirate—was planning destructive operations targeting the country's key military and nuclear facilities.
Uncovering the Sabotage Network and the Role of External Actors:
Official reports indicate that this sabotage group, supported logistically and through intelligence by the intelligence services of India, Israel, and the Taliban Emirate, intended to carry out a series of explosions at sensitive locations across Pakistan, particularly nuclear facilities. Fortunately, Pakistan’s security forces managed to identify and arrest the group before it could execute its plans. However, this incident appears to be only part of a broader and phased conspiracy aimed at destabilizing Pakistan’s internal security.
Objectives and Hidden Strategy of the India-Israel-Taliban Coalition:
Security experts believe that after India fails in direct military confrontations with Pakistan—including recent defeats in aerial engagements—Indian strategy has shifted toward sabotage and proxy tactics. This shift, reinforced by collaboration with Israeli intelligence and ground-level support from the Taliban Emirate, has led to the formation of a trilateral alliance. The ultimate goal of this alliance is the gradual erosion of Pakistan’s defense, political, and social infrastructure.
During a short-term war between India and Pakistan, according to General Munir, Chief of the General Staff of Pakistan, all other countries remained neutral—except for Israel and the Taliban, who sided with India and openly opposed Pakistan’s interests. This unprecedented alliance between a Zionist regime, a nationalist state, and an Islamist fundamentalist group is a rare and highly alarming development from both strategic and security standpoints.
Exploiting Internal Divisions: A Strategy of Collapse from Within
This coalition focuses not on direct military aggression, but on exploiting Pakistan’s internal fault lines and tensions. Political, religious, ethnic, and regional conflicts provide fertile ground for intelligence operations, sabotage, and terrorism. Hostile intelligence services, through the use of media and social networks, aim to destabilize Pakistan’s social and political landscape and undermine public trust in the government.
In the past, this coalition has already achieved some success in striking Pakistan’s governmental and security institutions. Now, amid multiple economic, political, and security crises, the country’s vulnerability has increased even further.
Formation of a Joint Intelligence Command Center
Field reports suggest the establishment of a joint intelligence command center between India, Israel, and the Taliban. The goal is to facilitate intelligence sharing, coordinate actions, and meticulously plan a series of targeted attacks. This level of coordination among three parties with divergent political and ideological views indicates a deeply organized threat to Pakistan’s national security.
Conclusion
Recent developments reveal that Pakistan’s national security is threatened not only by traditional military dangers, but also through information warfare and complex sabotage operations. The intelligence alliance between India, Israel, and the Taliban Emirate symbolizes a shift in the nature of threats in the modern era—threats that, by exploiting internal fractures and employing hybrid warfare tactics, can dismantle a state without launching a single direct attack.
It is crucial for Pakistan to reassess its counter-hybrid threat strategies, prioritize preventive measures, strengthen national unity, and neutralize enemy intelligence operations. The future stability of the country depends on its level of awareness and internal coordination in confronting this complex and multilayered coalition.






