India will reveal the secrets of ‘Operation Sindoor’, Pakistan may return to FATF gray list
New Delhi:The troubles of Pakistan, which is patronizing terrorism and turning a blind eye to terrorist organizations growing on its soil, are going to increase once again. India is fully prepared to push Pakistan into the ‘grey list’ again in the full meeting of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to be held in the coming October. New Delhi is going to present such strong digital evidence and video evidence on this global platform, which will expose Islamabad’s claims.
Videos of ‘Operation Sindoor’ will reveal secrets
This time India has a lot of evidence to expose Pakistan at the international level. Indian security forces had launched ‘Operation Sindoor’, in which many terrorists were killed. Many senior officials of Pakistani Army and intelligence agency ISI participated in the funeral of these terrorists. India will raise these videos obtained from social media and intelligence as a main issue in the FATF meeting. This evidence shows that the government machinery of Pakistan is still working in collaboration with terrorist organizations.
India’s tough stance at diplomatic level
India will take a very tough stance in this FATF meeting, which is being held in Paris. Recently, Vivek Aggarwal, Secretary of the Ministry of Culture of India, has been made the Vice President of FATF, which has further strengthened India’s position. New Delhi’s main objective is to exert global pressure to make Pakistan accountable for the misuse of its financial system and funding to terrorist organizations.
Pakistan’s economy will be adversely affected
Worth noting is that in October 2022, Pakistan was removed from the ‘grey list’ after it claimed to have completed the 34-point action plan. At that time, Islamabad had made tall claims to stop money laundering and terrorism financing. But the situation on the ground is the opposite. If FATF again puts Pakistan in the ‘grey list’ on the basis of new evidence from India, then its economic condition will worsen. Countries included in the ‘Grey List’ face great difficulty in obtaining loans or financial assistance from the International Monetary Fund, World Bank and other global financial institutions, which will be a major blow to Pakistan’s already weak economy.
role of peacemaker
In recent times, Islamabad has tried to project itself as a ‘peacemaker’ globally and has also tried to strengthen ties with the Donald Trump administration in the US. But its past history of promoting terrorism and the new evidence presented by India are enough to thwart this attempt. Now it will be important to see how Pakistan saves itself in the face of India’s aggressive diplomacy in this October meeting.
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