Friday, January 16, 2026
Advertise with us
Support us
Write for us
No Result
View All Result
claws
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Director General
    • Additional Director General
    • Jottings by Director General Emiritus
    • CLAWS Membership
    • Faculty
  • Publication
    • Web Articles
    • Issue Briefs
    • Manekshaw Papers
    • Newsletter
    • Essay
    • CLAWS Journal
    • Scholar Warrior
    • Books
    • Intern Articles
    • External Publications
  • Research Areas
    • Global & Regional Security
      • China
      • Pakistan
      • Afghanistan
      • South Asia
      • Indo Pacific
      • US, EU & Russia
      • MENA
      • CAR
    • National Security
      • National Security Strategy
      • Nuclear Deterrence
      • Non Traditional Threats
      • Intelligence
      • Terrorism & Internal Security
      • Grey Z & IW
      • Security Laws
    • Military Studies
      • Military Doctrine
      • Military Strategy
      • Peace Keeping Ops
      • Military History
      • Military Logistics
      • Out of Area Contingency Ops
      • Leadership
    • Military Technology & Defence Acquisition
      • Military Technology
      • Defence Acqn
      • Budgets & Finance
      • Defence Infrastructure
      • Human Resources
    • Multi Domain Studies
      • Jointmanship & Integration
      • Space
      • Cyber
      • Spl Operations
      • Energy & Environment
      • Defence Eco System
      • Defence Diplomacy
      • HADR
  • Web Archive
  • Events
    • Seminars
    • Webinars/RTD
  • PROMEX
  • University Cell
    • About The Initiative
    • Admission: Eligibility and Procedure
    • Guides | Supervisors in the PhD Programme:
    • Important Information
    • Administration
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Director General
    • Additional Director General
    • Jottings by Director General Emiritus
    • CLAWS Membership
    • Faculty
  • Publication
    • Web Articles
    • Issue Briefs
    • Manekshaw Papers
    • Newsletter
    • Essay
    • CLAWS Journal
    • Scholar Warrior
    • Books
    • Intern Articles
    • External Publications
  • Research Areas
    • Global & Regional Security
      • China
      • Pakistan
      • Afghanistan
      • South Asia
      • Indo Pacific
      • US, EU & Russia
      • MENA
      • CAR
    • National Security
      • National Security Strategy
      • Nuclear Deterrence
      • Non Traditional Threats
      • Intelligence
      • Terrorism & Internal Security
      • Grey Z & IW
      • Security Laws
    • Military Studies
      • Military Doctrine
      • Military Strategy
      • Peace Keeping Ops
      • Military History
      • Military Logistics
      • Out of Area Contingency Ops
      • Leadership
    • Military Technology & Defence Acquisition
      • Military Technology
      • Defence Acqn
      • Budgets & Finance
      • Defence Infrastructure
      • Human Resources
    • Multi Domain Studies
      • Jointmanship & Integration
      • Space
      • Cyber
      • Spl Operations
      • Energy & Environment
      • Defence Eco System
      • Defence Diplomacy
      • HADR
  • Web Archive
  • Events
    • Seminars
    • Webinars/RTD
  • PROMEX
  • University Cell
    • About The Initiative
    • Admission: Eligibility and Procedure
    • Guides | Supervisors in the PhD Programme:
    • Important Information
    • Administration
  • Careers
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
CLAWS
No Result
View All Result
Home External Publications

Why JeM Survives: Understanding Pakistan’s Long Game of Proxy Terrorism

Ashu MaanbyAshu Maan
December 9, 2025
in External Publications
A A
0
Post Views: 110

Each December, memories of the 2001 Parliament attack return with a familiar weight. The assault was foiled by brave security personnel.

Still, it also revealed something deeper about the security environment India inhabits, the presence of a state-enabled militant ecosystem across the western border, one that has endured for decades despite international scrutiny and domestic instability within Pakistan.

At the centre of this ecosystem stands Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM)—a group that has adapted, regenerated and continued to operate despite bans, sanctions and repeated diplomatic pressure.

Understanding why JeM has lasted as long as it has requires confronting a blunt reality: its survival is not accidental. It is tied to Pakistan’s long-standing reliance on proxy groups as tools of influence.

Strategy Rooted in Pakistan’s Civil–Military Structure

Proxy warfare is often portrayed as a tactical convenience. In Pakistan’s case, it has been closer to a structural choice, shaped by the military’s dominant political role and its perception of threats. For decades, Pakistan’s Army has viewed non-state actors as assets that offset conventional asymmetry with India, offering deniability while advancing strategic aims.

JeM emerged within this space. Though formally banned in 2002, the group’s leadership continued to operate out of Bahawalpur, and its networks remained largely intact. Multiple governments in Islamabad declared restrictions, yet JeM’s infrastructure—its madrassas, training circuits and mobilisation drives—continued to function.

This is not because the state lacks the capacity to dismantle such groups; rather, it reflects how deeply these organisations are woven into Pakistan’s internal power dynamics. So long as the military establishment sees value in certain proxies, formal bans do little more than create an administrative façade.

International Pressure Has Not Altered the Core Logic

Pakistan’s extended tenure on the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) grey list should have been a turning point. The global body had highlighted deficiencies in terror-financing controls, and JeM was repeatedly referenced in international discussions.

Yet, while Pakistan did make technical adjustments, the fundamental environment in which JeM operates did not change. Its leadership remained within Pakistan, its facilities remained identifiable, and its ideological apparatus continued uninterrupted.

The international community has, on occasion, misread Pakistan’s tactical compliance as strategic reorientation. In reality, the deeper civil–military equation—where militant groups serve as instruments of leverage—has remained largely intact.

Internal Instability Increases the Incentive to Use Proxies

Pakistan faces political turbulence and economic strain today. Historically, such periods have strengthened the military’s hand. They also increase the temptation to lean on low-cost instruments that offer strategic signalling without inviting full-scale war. Proxy groups fit that requirement.

For India, this means that moments of internal Pakistani crisis are not moments of reduced threat. They may, in fact, signal the opposite. When a state is under pressure, it may rely even more heavily on familiar tools—especially those that provide deniability.

JeM’s continued activity, including recent linkages uncovered in Delhi and elsewhere, fits this pattern. The group is not operating independently of the state’s internal constraints; it is responding to them.

India’s Challenge: Preparing for a Moving Target

India’s counter-terror capabilities have expanded significantly since 2001. Intelligence sharing through the Multi-Agency Centre is more structured. Investigations are more coordinated. The National Investigation Agency brings dedicated focus to complex, transnational cases. States have improved their own preparedness.

But the challenge posed by Pakistan’s proxy strategy is not simply operational; it is conceptual. Groups like JeM evolve in response to pressure. They shift from fidayeen units to distributed cells.

They recruit educated individuals. They move seamlessly between physical and digital spaces. They establish initiatives like Jamaat-e-Mominaat, which broadens the pool of ideological supporters. The difficulty lies in confronting an adversary that does not remain still.

A Stable Doctrine on the Other Side, Need for Clarity on Ours

Pakistan’s proxy doctrine has survived changes in government, shifts in geopolitical alignments and international censure. Its consistency stems from the institutional dominance of the military, which has long viewed proxies as instruments that expand strategic bandwidth without requiring decisive confrontation.

For India, the response must be equally stable. It requires sustained investment in intelligence, financial tracking, border management and cyber capabilities. It demands diplomatic engagement that keeps international focus on Pakistan’s obligations under UN frameworks.

And above all, it requires public clarity that the problem is not episodic, but structural. This is why anniversaries matter—not for ceremony, but for strategic recall.

The Real Lesson of 13 December

The Parliament attack remains instructive not because of what happened on that morning, but because of what enabled it. JeM could attempt an assault on India’s democratic core because it operated within a protected space across the border. That space still exists. The names of commanders may change; the methods may evolve; but the doctrine that sustains them has been remarkably consistent.

India’s task is to maintain a preparedness posture that reflects this reality. Proxy warfare thrives when its targets grow complacent. It falters when the intended victim recognises the strategy and invests accordingly.

Two decades on, the responsibility is clear. The threat persists because the strategy that produced it persists. Our response must be rooted in the same clarity—and the same continuity.

Previous Post

Drone Warfare And The Battle For The Air Littoral: How The Low Sky Became The Decisive Layer Of Modern Conflict – OpEd

Next Post

Drone-age warfare: Why Indian Army must command the air littoral battlespace

Ashu Maan

Ashu Maan

Ashu Maan is an Associate Fellow at the Centre for Land Warfare Studies. He was awarded the VCOAS Commendation card on Army Day 2025. He is currently pursuing his PhD from Amity University, Noida in Defence and Strategic Studies. He has previously worked with Institute of Chinese Studies. He has also contributed a chapter on “Denuclearization of North Korea” in the book titled Drifts and Dynamics: Russia’s Ukraine War and Northeast Asia. His research includes India-China territorial dispute, the Great Power Rivalry between the United States and China, and China’s Foreign Policy.

Next Post
Drone-age warfare: Why Indian Army must command the air littoral battlespace

Drone-age warfare: Why Indian Army must command the air littoral battlespace

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Support Us Donate Now

Web Updates

🚀 Applications Open | CLAWS Research Internship Programme – Winter Session

Promotion Exam Correspondence Pre Course (PROMEX)

FMMEC 2025 | Essay Competition | Results

Guidelines to Publish with CLAWS

Application Form – Study Mtrl for DSSC 2026

[NEW] Application Form for membership for PROMEX (PART B or D)

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Russia-Ukraine War: Lessons from an Electronic Warfare (EW) Perspective

Russia-Ukraine War: Lessons from an Electronic Warfare (EW) Perspective

May 31, 2025
Results | Field Marshal Manekshaw Essay Competition – 2024

Field Marshal Manekshaw Essay Competiton 2025

May 23, 2025
From Sword Clashes to Drone Strikes: A History of Changing Battlefields

From Sword Clashes to Drone Strikes: A History of Changing Battlefields

July 31, 2025
Op Sindoor 2.0: Why & How India Must Prepare for the Next Round?

Op Sindoor 2.0: Why & How India Must Prepare for the Next Round?

May 21, 2025
From Sword Clashes to Drone Strikes: A History of Changing Battlefields

From Sword Clashes to Drone Strikes: A History of Changing Battlefields

15
The Arakan Army and Its Impact on India: Rising Tensions Along the Eastern Frontier 

The Arakan Army and Its Impact on India: Rising Tensions Along the Eastern Frontier 

5

Thwarting  Pakistan’s Nefarious Designs in Bangladesh

4
The Primacy of Mind in Modern Conflict: Defending India Against Disinformation and Cognitive Warfare

The Primacy of Mind in Modern Conflict: Defending India Against Disinformation and Cognitive Warfare

3
Tactical Military Approaches to Counter Terror in J&K

Tactical Military Approaches to Counter Terror in J&K

January 14, 2026
Venezuela, Power Politics and Emergence of Unilaterism: Lessons for India in a Fractured World Order

Venezuela, Power Politics and Emergence of Unilaterism: Lessons for India in a Fractured World Order

January 14, 2026
Trump’s Negotiating Behaviour: The Art of Manufactured Crisis and Coerced Concessions

Trump’s Negotiating Behaviour: The Art of Manufactured Crisis and Coerced Concessions

January 14, 2026
Hybrid Plus and Grey Zone Strategy: The New Normal Post-Operation Sindoor

Hybrid Plus and Grey Zone Strategy: The New Normal Post-Operation Sindoor

January 14, 2026

Popular Stories

  • Russia-Ukraine War: Lessons from an Electronic Warfare (EW) Perspective

    Russia-Ukraine War: Lessons from an Electronic Warfare (EW) Perspective

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Field Marshal Manekshaw Essay Competiton 2025

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • From Sword Clashes to Drone Strikes: A History of Changing Battlefields

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Op Sindoor 2.0: Why & How India Must Prepare for the Next Round?

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Scholar Warrior Spring 2025

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

About us

CLAWS

The Centre for Land Warfare Studies (CLAWS), New Delhi, India is an independent think tank on strategic studies and land warfare. The mandate of CLAWS covers national security issues, conventional military operations and sub-conventional warfare.

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Articles
  • Autumn 2019
  • Autumn 2020
  • Books
  • Chanakya Defence Dialogue
  • CLAWS Focus
  • CLAWS Journal
  • Essay
  • Events
  • External Publications
  • FMMEC
  • Intern Articles
  • Issue Briefs
  • Jottings by Director General Emiritus
  • Manekshaw Papers
  • Newsletter
  • Round Tables
  • Scholar Warrior
  • Seminars
  • Uncategorized
  • Web Updates
  • Winter 2019
  • YouTube Podcast

Recent News

Tactical Military Approaches to Counter Terror in J&K

Tactical Military Approaches to Counter Terror in J&K

January 14, 2026
Venezuela, Power Politics and Emergence of Unilaterism: Lessons for India in a Fractured World Order

Venezuela, Power Politics and Emergence of Unilaterism: Lessons for India in a Fractured World Order

January 14, 2026
  • Site Map
  • Tenders
  • Advertise With Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Other Think Tanks

© 2008-2024 Centre for Land Warfare Studies (CLAWS).

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Director General
    • Additional Director General
    • Jottings by Director General Emiritus
    • CLAWS Membership
    • Faculty
  • Publication
    • Web Articles
    • Issue Briefs
    • Manekshaw Papers
    • Newsletter
    • Essay
    • CLAWS Journal
    • Scholar Warrior
    • Books
    • Intern Articles
    • External Publications
  • Research Areas
    • Global & Regional Security
      • China
      • Pakistan
      • Afghanistan
      • South Asia
      • Indo Pacific
      • US, EU & Russia
      • MENA
      • CAR
    • National Security
      • National Security Strategy
      • Nuclear Deterrence
      • Non Traditional Threats
      • Intelligence
      • Terrorism & Internal Security
      • Grey Z & IW
      • Security Laws
    • Military Studies
      • Military Doctrine
      • Military Strategy
      • Peace Keeping Ops
      • Military History
      • Military Logistics
      • Out of Area Contingency Ops
      • Leadership
    • Military Technology & Defence Acquisition
      • Military Technology
      • Defence Acqn
      • Budgets & Finance
      • Defence Infrastructure
      • Human Resources
    • Multi Domain Studies
      • Jointmanship & Integration
      • Space
      • Cyber
      • Spl Operations
      • Energy & Environment
      • Defence Eco System
      • Defence Diplomacy
      • HADR
  • Web Archive
  • Events
    • Seminars
    • Webinars/RTD
  • PROMEX
  • University Cell
    • About The Initiative
    • Admission: Eligibility and Procedure
    • Guides | Supervisors in the PhD Programme:
    • Important Information
    • Administration
  • Careers
  • Contact

© 2008-2024 Centre for Land Warfare Studies (CLAWS).