Pakistan army chief considered coup leaked cables «absolutely crucial» to probe corruption at Delhi Police, sources said

Pakistan army chief considered coup leaked cables «absolutely crucial» to probe corruption at Delhi Police, sources said.

In an email sent on March 19, 2012 to his deputy chief of staff (DC), a senior army officer in charge of the counter-insurgency campaign in Kashmir, army chief General Bipin Rawat warnednatyasastra.com: «There is no need to speculate on the content of the emails, as the contents are absolutely critical.»

The email, based on conversations leaked by whistleblower Army Inspector General (IG) B S Sonthavong, stnatyasastra.comates that the information it leaked to the Times was «extremely critical» on the state of the Army in the aftermath of the May 29 terror attacks. It is a copy of a transcript of a phone call between then PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee and then Army Chief Javed Akhtar in May 2009, which is alleged to have prompted Modi to declare war on terror in 2010. A second of the documents is from an alleged confidential US CIA meeting with a senior Pakistani officer, which was recently leaked in New York by Edward Snowden.

A day before the leak, a special officer working for Army’s counter-insurgency unit warned the then PM that the leaks by the media on March 19 were «extremely important». It was «very important that the Army gets the truth», wrote Capt. Dharunath Prasad.

In another email, Lt Gen Rajnath Singh, who became army chief in June 2011 after Modi’s removal, was critical about Pakistan.

The NSA intercepted the messages and released them in response to a Freedom of Information request by Times of India in June 2014.

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A new batch of emails also suggests that intelligence agencies in the U.S. and England had intelligence of a large arms haul coming from Pakistan, in particular the Jaish-e-Mohammad terrorist group.

The Times of India was given three documents, includi바카라사이트ng a memo by Major General Inderjit Singh, a joint chief of operations of the RAW. It was published in a series of articles on June 10. The emails are from the JTME (Joint Task Force Operations), which has been in the post for over a year. It has a staff of 6,000 and a mission of «disrupting terror networks across border areas and conducting intelligence gathering». According to the intelligence sources, the Indian agencies are also investigating the possibility of foreign terror financing.

The emails reveal the extent of cooperation between Pakistan and the Indian agencies in trackin

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