Afghanistan Afghanistan has provided sanctuary and training to Baloch separatists in 1948, in the mid-1950s, and more vigorously under the regime of Afghan President
Mohammed Daoud Khan. In the 1970s, Daoud Khan's government established training camps in Afghanistan, at
Kabul and
Kandahar, for Baloch rebels. These were the first modern training camps in the country. The camps in Kabul were under the supervision and control of Republican guards. According to a student paper, "Pakistan's fear that a communist Afghanistan would embolden the Baloch and Pashtun Marxist separatists in the western Pakistani province of Balochistan was confirmed when Daoud began supporting Marxist Baloch and Pashtun groups in eastern Afghanistan". Daoud Khan ended hostilities against Pakistan following the
1975 Panjshir Valley uprising led by
Ahmad Shah Massoud against Khan's government. Visiting Pakistan in 1976, and again in 1978, Daoud Khan expressed his desire for peace between the two countries. In 1978, however, he was removed from office by a
communist coup in 1978, after which
Nur Muhammad Taraki seized power and established the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan. Nur Muhammad Taraki reopened the Baloch training camps in Afghanistan and once again started offering arms and aid to Baloch rebels. as well as receiving financial and ideological support directly from
Saudi Arabia in collusion with other hard-line elements within
Pakistan and
Afghanistan. According to
WikiLeaks cables published in 2010, the then-president of Afghanistan,
Hamid Karzai, had been providing shelter to
Brahumdagh Bugti for several years. Brahumdagh Bugti, along with some 20 separatists, had fled to Afghanistan in 2006, and his presence in Afghanistan had created tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan. In 2007 Pakistan's president, Pervaiz Musharraf, stated that Bugti was freely travelling between Kabul and Kandahar, raising money and planning attacks against Pakistani security forces. Musharraf repeatedly asked Hamid Karzai to hand over Bugti, which Karzai refused to do. In public, Afghan officials denied providing shelter to Bugti, but later, following a 2009 meeting between UN officials and Karzai, admitted that Bugti was indeed living in Kabul. While speaking to
The Guardian, Bugti admitted that he was leading the fight against Pakistan's army. In June 2012, the then-Chief of the
Frontier Corps troops in Balochistan,
Major General Obaidullah Khan Khattak, said that "over 30 militant camps" had been established in Afghanistan. The camps receive support from Afghanistan and are used "to launch terrorist and anti-state activities in Balochistan".
Malik Siraj Akbar, a Washington-based analyst, states that Afghanistan has always been a relatively safe hideout for the Baloch nationalist militants. On 25 December 2018,
Aslam Baloch, alias Achu, and six other Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) commanders were killed in a suicide attack in
Kandahar, Afghanistan. A BLA spokesman confirmed their deaths. Moreover, the Afghan news channel
TOLOnews reported that Aslam Baloch had been residing in Afghanistan since 2005. According to
Kandahar police chief Tadin Khan Achakzai, Aslam Baloch and Abdul Raziq Achakzai were 'close friends' and that 'Afghans will continue supporting separatist groups in their fight against the government of Pakistan'. On 23 May 2019, a similar attack took place in Aino Mina,
Kandahar. Laghari Bugti and three other Baloch insurgents were killed, while a further twelve were injured. Afghan provincial council member Yousaf Younasi . said it was the second attack on Baloch Liberation Army members in recent years in
Kandahar's posh Aino Mina residential area, and that
Aslam Baloch, alias Achu, had been killed in the same area. On 10 April 2025, an explosion in Kandahar’s Aino Mina neighbourhood reportedly killed 12 members of Pakistani militant groups, including the
Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) and the
Pakistani Taliban (TTP), and wounded five others, according to local sources. The blast occurred as militants were leaving a gathering, but Taliban officials denied any airstrike, attributing the explosion to old or decaying munitions stored near the anti-narcotics department. Residents reported hearing a powerful blast followed by gunfire, and that local emergency crews responded to contain the incident.
India Avinash Paliwal claims that in the 1970s, Junior level Indian intelligence officers were actively involved in operations in Balochistan. In a book he authored, Paliwal says these officers claim that "we gave Baloch everything, from money to guns, during the 1970s, everything". Jitendranand Saraswati, the founder of the Hind Baloch forum, claimed that Indians were actively contributing to the "freedom struggle of Balochistan". According to
Malik Siraj Akbar, a Baloch journalist living in exile, there is a consensus among Pakistani authorities that India is behind the insurgency in Balochistan, without feeling a need to share evidence of Indian involvement. Wright-Neville writes that the Pakistani government and some Western observers believe that India secretly funds the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA). The former American Af-Pak envoy
Richard Holbrooke said in 2011 that while Pakistan had repeatedly shared its allegations with Washington, it had failed to provide any evidence to the United States that India was involved with separatist movements in Balochistan. He did not consider Pakistan's accusations against India credible. Holbrooke also strongly rejected the allegation that India was using its consulates in Afghanistan to facilitate Baloch rebel activity, saying he had "no reason to believe Islamabad's charges", and that "Pakistan would do well to examine its own internal problems". In 2009, a
Washington-based think tank, the
Center for International Policy, published a report stating that no evidence of Indian involvement in Balochistan had been provided by Pakistan, and that the allegations made by Pakistan lacked credibility, as Baloch rebels had been fighting with "ineffectual small arms". When asked about the alleged links between his group and India, he is reported to have laughed and said, "Would our people live amid such miserable conditions if we enjoyed support from India?"
Baloch National Front secretary
Karima Baloch claims that the allegations against India are an "excuse to label [the] ingrown Balochistan freedom movement as a proxy war to cover up the war crimes [the] Pakistani state has committed in Balochistan". On 29 March 2016, the Pakistani government announced that it had apprehended a serving Indian naval officer,
Kulbhushan Yadav, who, in a video interview, admitted that he had been tasked by the
Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) with destabilizing Pakistan. The
Indian government confirmed that Yadav was a former naval officer but denied that "this individual was involved in subversive activities in Pakistan at our [the Indian government's] behest", In 2017,
Kulbhushan Jadhav, was charged with espionage and sabotage and was
sentenced to death. He was accused of operating a
covert terror network within Balochistan. Jadhav had confessed that he was tasked by India’s intelligence agency, the
Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), “to plan and organize espionage and sabotage activities” in Balochistan and
Karachi. Pakistan condemned Modi's remarks, calling it an attempted diversion from
violence in Kashmir and a reiteration of Pakistani allegations vis-a-vis Indian involvement in Balochistan. Modi's comments were welcomed by exiled Baloch separatist leaders but sparked anti-India protests by political organizations and locals in Balochistan. On 8 October 2015, the Indian newspaper
The Hindu confirmed the presence of Balaach Pardili, a representative of the
Balochistan Liberation Organization (BLO), in India. Balaach Pardili hails from
Afghanistan Naela Quadri Baloch and her son Mazdak Dilshad Baloch also live in India. Mazdak Dilshad Baloch organises campaigns in India to support the Baloch cause, while his mother, Naela Quadri Baloch, is trying to gain support for the establishment of a Baloch Government-in-exile in India. However, Naela Quadri Baloch's proposal for a Government-in-exile has been strongly opposed by other Baloch separatist leaders, such as
Brahamdagh Bugti, who claim that Naela Quadri does not represent the Baloch people. India officially denies the supporting Baloch separatists. In the 1980s, the
Iraqi Intelligence Service, encouraged by
CIA, supposedly helped Pakistani Sunni extremist group
Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan, and the
Mujahedin e-Kalq against Iran. In January 2012, an article by
Mark Perry questioned the validity of the previous allegations, asserting that the U.S.
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) "had barred even the most incidental contact with Jundallah." The rumors originated in an
Israeli
Mossad "
false flag" operation; Mossad agents posing as CIA officers supposedly met with and recruited members of Jundullah in cities such as
London to carry out attacks against Iran. President
George W. Bush "went absolutely ballistic" when he learned of Israel's actions, but the situation was not resolved until President
Barack Obama's administration "drastically scaled back joint U.S-Israel intelligence programs targeting Iran" and ultimately designated Jundallah a terrorist organization in November 2010. by Dr. Wahid Baloch, a graduate of
Bolan Medical College who had gone into self-imposed exile in the United States in 1992. Between 2004 and 2014, his group had been trying to gain American (as well as Israeli) support for the independence of Balochistan. He held meetings with several American Congressmen and allegedly had meetings with several
CIA officials. Dr. Baloch had long claimed that the Pakistani government was committing acts of genocide against the Baloch people, and that Islamabad's aim was to plunder the province's vast mineral resources. In January 2014 he released a letter appealing to the United States and
Israel for direct assistance in preventing an alleged "killing spree of Baloch people" by the "Pakistani army". In May 2014, Dr. Baloch disbanded the BSNA, claiming that the War of Independence of Balochistan was actually a "war of independence of Khans, Nawabs and Sardars". He has since formed the Baloch Council of North America (BCNA), which has dedicated itself to working with all democratic and nationalist forces in Pakistan to secure Baloch rights through democratic, nonviolent means, within the federation of Pakistan.
Saudi Arabia Iran had considered
Jundallah as a group connected to
Taliban and their
opium revenues, American journalist
Dan Rather had traveled to
Pakistan,
United Arab Emirates,
Sweden, and
France investigating Jundallah and its funding sources. On the US cable channel
HDnet's television news magazine
Dan Rather Reports, he indicated that support comes from Balochis in Sweden where Radio Baloch FM is broadcast from
Stockholm.
Soviet Union Pakistani scholar Syed F. Hasnat alleged that during the
Soviet–Afghan War (1979–1989), the
Soviet Union helped establish the
Balochistan Liberation Army which chiefly operates from southern Afghanistan. According to some sources, two former
KGB agents
code-named "Misha" and "Sasha" were among the BLA's chief architects. According to them, the BLA was built around the
Baloch Student Organization (BSO). The BLA disappeared following the
withdrawal of the Soviet Union from Afghanistan as the
USSR withdrew funding.
Syria During the
1960s insurgency in Balochistan,
Syria had provided support to the
Balochistan Liberation Front. BLF itself was founded by
Jumma Khan Marri in 1964 in
Damascus, the capital of Syria, and had played an important role in the 1963–1969 in
Sistan and Baluchestan province of Iran, which had later spilled over into
Pakistani Balochistan.
United Kingdom Iranian authorities had accused the United Kingdom of supporting
Jundallah. In a
BBC production "Panorama: Obama and the Ayatollah", a terrorist organization which had carried out acts of terror leading to death of civilians and children in Iran is briefly mentioned but not named, with the official prosecution files and their
Interpol warrants blacked out in video. The international warrants call for their arrest under international anti-terrorism laws, which had not happened and Tehran blames western governments particularly the British government for protecting them from an international arrest.
United States In the 1980s, the
Iraqi Intelligence Service, encouraged by
CIA, supposedly helped anti-Shia Sunni Pakistani extremist group,
Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan, and the
Marxist-
Islamist Iranian opposition group,
Mujahedin e-Kalq, against Iran. A report by
Brian Ross and
Christopher Isham of
ABC News in April 2007 alleged that Jundallah "had been secretly encouraged and advised by American officials" to destabilize the government in Iran, citing
U.S. and Pakistani tribal and intelligence sources. The report alleges that U.S Vice President
Dick Cheney discussed the activity of the group against Iran during his visit to Pakistan. but
ABC stood by their claim despite the denial.
Alexis Debat, one of the sources quoted by Ross and Isham in their report alleging U.S support for the Jundullah, resigned from ABC News in June 2007, after ABC officials claimed that he faked several interviews while working for the company. Ross went on to say the Jundullah story had many sources, adding, "We’re only worried about the things Debat supplied, not about the substance of that story." According to Ross, ABC had found nothing that would undermine the stories Mr. Debat worked on. However, he acknowledged that as the stories of fabrications continue to roll in, the network "at some point had to question whether anything he said can be believed."; this caused the network, in 2007, to send a second team of producers to Pakistan investigating the original reports. On April 2, 2007, Abdolmalek Rigi appeared on the
Persian service of
Voice of America, the official broadcasting service of the United States government, which identified Rigi as "the leader of popular Iranian resistance movement" and used the title of "
Doctor" with his name. This incidence resulted in public condemnation by the Iranian-American community in the U.S, many of whom are opponents of the Iranian government, as well as Jundallah. Investigative journalist
Seymour Hersh revealed another report in July 2008 that alleged that US congressional leaders had secretly agreed to former president
George W. Bush's USD 400 million funding request, which gives the US a free hand in arming and funding terrorist groups such as Jundullah militants. Three days after the 2009 terror attack against Zahidan mosque, Iranian speaker of parliament
Ali Larijani claimed, that
Iran had
intelligence reports regarding the United States links with certain
terrorist groups operating against Iran and accused the United States of commanding them. He also said that the United States is trying to start a
civil war between Shia and Sunni segments of Iranian society. Regarding the investigation of the terrorist act he added that Iran would want
Pakistan to cooperate fully and not become a mere part of the designs against Iran. According to a 2007 article in
The Daily Telegraph, Jundallah is just one part of a
Black Operation Plan involving
psychological operations and other
covert operations to support dissents among minorities (Baloch, Arab, Kurds, Azeris, etc.) in Iran, which along with tactics of military posturing, risky maneuvers and occasional conciliatory gestures are designed to improve United States bargaining position in any future negotiation with Iran. Furthermore, these
Black Operations build upon a coordinated campaign consisting of disinformation, placement of negative newspaper articles, propaganda broadcasts, the manipulation of Iran's monetary currency and international banking transactions. Iranian Interior Minister
Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi had said United States intelligence operatives have been meeting and coordinating with Anti-Iranian militants in
Afghanistan as well as encouraging drug smuggling into Iran. A former
Chief of Army Staff of the
Pakistan Army General Aslam Beg had accused the
Coalition Forces in
Afghanistan of training and supporting Jundallah against
Iran. After Rigi was arrested on 23 February 2010, Iran's intelligence minister
Heydar Moslehi at a press conference in Tehran claimed that Rigi had been at a US base in
Afghanistan 24 hours before his arrest. At a press conference, he flourished a photograph which he said showed Rigi outside the base with two other men, though he gave no details of where the base was, or how or when the photograph was obtained. Photographs were also shown of an Afghan passport and identity card said to have been given by the Americans to Rigi. Moslehi also alleged that Rigi had met the then
NATO secretary-general,
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, in Afghanistan in 2008, and had visited European countries. He said agents had tracked Rigi's movements for five months, calling his arrest "a great defeat for the US and UK". On February 25 Iranian state television broadcast a statement by Rigi stating he had had American support and that"The Americans said Iran was going its own way and they said our problem at the present is Iran… not al-Qaeda and not the Taliban, but the main problem is Iran. We don't have a military plan against Iran. Attacking Iran is very difficult for us (the US). They [Americans] promised to help us and they said that they would co-operate with us, free our prisoners and would give us [Jundullah] military equipment, bombs, machine guns, and they would give us a base."
BBC News carried a report on the statements, noting that "It is not possible to say whether Abdolmalek Rigi made the statement freely or under duress." The US had denied having links with Rigi's group, Jundullah. Reuters also reported that Geoff Morrell,
Pentagon press secretary, dismissed claims by the Iranian government that Mr. Rigi had been at an American military base just before his arrest. Morrell called the accusations of American involvement "nothing more than Iranian propaganda." According to a former U.S. intelligence officer, Rigi was captured by Pakistani officials and delivered to Iran with U.S. support: "It doesn't matter what they say. They know the truth." In January 2012, an article by
Mark Perry questioned the validity of the previous allegations, asserting that the U.S.
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) "had barred even the most incidental contact with Jundallah." On November 9, 2014,
The New York Times published an article on the front page of its Late Edition, which states that an FBI counterterrorism task force officer by the name of Thomas McHale "had traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan and developed informants inside Jundallah's leadership, who then came under the joint supervision of the FBI and CIA." In late 2011, the Balochistan conflict became the focus of dialogue on a new US South Asia strategy brought up by some US congressmen, who said they were frustrated over Pakistan's alleged continued support to the Afghan
Taliban, which they said led to the continuation of the
War in Afghanistan. Although this alternative to the
Obama Administration's Af-Pak policy has generated some interest, "its advocates clearly do not yet have broad support". The
US State Department's official policy rejects secessionist forces in the Pakistani part of Balochistan, in support of the country's "unity and territorial integrity". The US in 2016, however, expressed concerns over human rights issues and urged parties in Pakistan to "work out their differences peaceably and through a valid political process." The US State Department designated the Balochistan Liberation Army as a global terrorist organization on 2 July 2019. ==Decline in insurgency==