HomeWorldFrom Lashkar to its proxy TRF: How NIA’s Pahalgam chargesheet lays bare Pakistan’s hand in terror attack

From Lashkar to its proxy TRF: How NIA’s Pahalgam chargesheet lays bare Pakistan’s hand in terror attack

TRF, widely recognised as a front for LeT, initially claimed responsibility for the assault, underscoring Pakistan’s attempt to mask its involvement through proxy entities even as it denies direct accountability.

December 16, 2025 / 17:55 IST
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Jammu: National Investigation Agency (NIA) team arrives to present a charge sheet in Pahalgam terror attack case before a NIA special court, in Jammu, Monday, Dec 15, 2025. (PTI Photo)
Jammu: National Investigation Agency (NIA) team arrives to present a charge sheet in Pahalgam terror attack case before a NIA special court, in Jammu, Monday, Dec 15, 2025. (PTI Photo)

The Pahalgam terror attack on April 22, 2025 was one of the most brazen assaults on Indian soil in decades, killing 26 innocent tourists. But beyond the horror of that massacre lies a damning revelation of the depth of Pakistan’s strategic sponsorship of terrorism against India. The National Investigation Agency’s 1,600-page chargesheet filed in a special court in Jammu makes clear that this was not a spontaneous local outrage. It was planned, orchestrated and facilitated by Pakistan-based terror groups with deep ties to Pakistan’s military and intelligence apparatus.

In a decisive development for India’s counter-terror campaign, the NIA has formally charged Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and its proxy The Resistance Front (TRF) along with seven individuals for their roles in the Pahalgam attack. What makes this chargesheet particularly significant is that the LeT has been charged as a legal entity for the first time, and the origin of terror communications was traced back to Pakistan. Investigators determined that digital messages issued by TRF were actually generated from within Pakistan’s territory, exposing not just individual involvement but institutional direction and support across the border.

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LeT and TRF are not ad hoc extremist cells. They are long-standing instruments of state-sponsored terrorism. Indian agencies have repeatedly highlighted how militant groups like LeT have been nurtured, funded, and supported for decades by Pakistan’s security establishment to wage asymmetric warfare against India. The NIA’s chargesheet now legally affirms what India has consistently asserted on the world stage: that Pakistan remains complicit in sponsoring terror attacks aimed at destabilising India and disrupting its social harmony.

The charge of “waging war against India” laid against the accused is appropriate given both the scale and the objective of the attack. TRF, widely recognised as a front for LeT, initially claimed responsibility for the assault, underscoring Pakistan’s attempt to mask its involvement through proxy entities even as it denies direct accountability.