India Pakistan asserted India was covertly intervening in Balochistan in the same way it had intervened in East Pakistan before the secession of Bangladesh. India denied the assertions, replying that it was fearful of further balkanisation of the subcontinent after Bangladesh. In retrospect, Avinash Paliwal, in his book ''My Enemy's Enemy: India in Afghanistan from the Soviet Invasion to the US Withdrawal
, cites a junior Indian intelligence officer participant in these operations who recalled that "we gave Baloch everything, from money to guns, during the 1970s, everything". Paliwal further claims that just as Pakistan and India were bitter rivals, so were Iran and Iraq. In the pursuit of their respective rivalries, Pakistan and Iran developed closer relations, as did India and Iraq. Arming Baloch insurgents in Iran and Pakistan was in the interest of both Iraq and India. The militant group Pasthun Zalmay'' was responsible for a series of bomb blasts and other insurgent activities in Pakistan; it comprised Balochs and Pashtuns and was in direct contact with
Kabul as well as with the Indian and
Iraqi missions in Afghanistan. As a consequence, relations between
Iran and India deteriorated so much that in 1975, Indian diplomat Ram D. Sathe sent a secret letter to the Indian ambassador in
Tehran in which Sathe predicted that "it will be a few more days before the Iranians will stridently back the Pakistanis (on Kashmir) ... Personally I do not think we should be under any illusion about this matter. I think Iranians will definitely back the Pakistanis".
Iran It was after visiting Iran in 1973 that President
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had dissolved Balochistan's provincial government in the run-up to the operation. When the operation was begun,
Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, the
Shah of Iran and an ally of Bhutto, feared a spread of Baloch ethnic resistance into Iran. The
Imperial Iranian Army began providing Pakistan with military hardware and financial support. Among Iran's contributions were 30
HueyCobra attack helicopters and $200 million in aid.
United States During the conflict, US provided training and military equipment to Pakistan, most notable is the Marine training program to train the Pakistan Army soldiersagainst Baloch separatists. Moreover many military officers were trained in US as well as many in Pakistan by American forces in this conflict. In 1974, an embargo was imposed on Pakistan due to its
weapon of mass destruction projects, but due to intensification of the insurgency, it was lifted in 1975 and weapons were sent to Pakistan to deal with the situation.
Republic of Afghanistan The
Republic of Afghanistan, under the leadership of
General Mohammed Daoud Khan, provided covert support to
Pashtun and
Baloch militants.
Iraq Relations between
Baloch separatists and
Ba'athist Iraq had historical roots and were strong up until the
2003 U.S-led invasion of Iraq. Following the
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, Iraq had begun to collaborate with the
Soviet Union in launching a covert operation to provide military aid to Baloch insurgents operating in
Pakistan and
Iran. The aim of this operation was to destabilize the two countries by helping dissident Baloch rebels in their fight against the Iranian and Pakistani states that were
close allies with the
United States. The operation remained modestly successful during the early 1970s, but ultimately failed when there was unrest amongst the Baloch nationalist leaders involved in the
insurgency due to internal disputes. This disorder accompanied by an extremely tough crackdown by the
Pakistan Army (supported by Iran) in its
Balochistan province crippled the joint Iraqi-Soviet attempts to destabilize the two key U.S. allies in the region and pave the way for Iraq's dominance over Iran as well as more favourable circumstances for
India against Pakistan, with the goal of the region completely falling under the Soviet
sphere of influence. The disputes took place when Baloch politicians
Ghaus Bakhsh Bizenjo and
Ataullah Mengal of the
National Awami Party refused to accept the demands of
Akbar Bugti to establish himself as the
Governor of Pakistani Balochistan.
Oman During the
Dhofar war, Baloch militants (including
BSO) started supporting the
Dhofari rebels. In a shootout in Balochistan, a Dhofari recruiter from Oman, who came to recruit Balochi mercenaries, was seriously wounded. This incident prompted Oman to provide financial support to Pakistan against insurgents. Moreover, Pakistani troops were also trained in Oman to fight against Baloch separatists.
Soviet Union Due to communist ideology of the insurgents and in an attempt to destabilize Pakistan, a western aligned nation, the
Soviet Union had started supporting groups like
Balochistan Liberation Front, enabling them to regroup. They also provided financial assistance and training to the separatists. American defence aid to Pakistan also promoted further Soviet support to the separatists to gain a stronghold in the region in the form of an independent Marxist Balochistan. Moreover a Marxist state in the region could break the
Green belt isolating Pakistan and breaking direct connection with western aligned states. ==End of action==