Rebuilt Jaish Terror Complex Exposes Pakistan's Counter-Terror Failure

Pakistan's counter-terrorism compliance is questioned as satellite imagery reveals reconstruction of Jaish-e-Mohammed's Bahawalpur headquarters, struck during India's Operation Sindoor in 2025. The rebuilding highlights a pattern where Pakistan manages international scrutiny rather than dismantling jihadist infrastructure, according to geopolitical expert Sergio Restelli. Jaish-e-Mohammed, a UN-designated terrorist group, reportedly raised donations under a religious narrative to fund the reconstruction. The expert warns this global jihadist threat extends beyond India to the US, Israel, and Europe.

Key Points: Rebuilt Jaish-e-Mohammed Compound Exposes Pakistan's Terror Links

  • Jaish-e-Mohammed's Bahawalpur headquarters rebuilt after Operation Sindoor
  • Satellite imagery shows repair work at Jamia Subhan Allah compound
  • Expert warns of Pakistan's pattern of managing scrutiny over dismantling terror
  • Fundraising campaign used religious narrative to rebuild complex
3 min read

Reconstructed Jaish terror complex exposes Pakistan's counter-terrorism compliance

Satellite imagery shows reconstruction of Jaish-e-Mohammed's Bahawalpur HQ after Indian strike, raising concerns about Pakistan's counter-terrorism compliance and global jihadist threats.

"This is the old Pakistani bargain with jihadist organisations, dressed in a new language. - Sergio Restelli"

Tel Aviv, May 8

Pakistan has long portrayed itself as both a victim of terrorism and a partner in the global war on terror, yet the reported reconstruction of terror group Jaish-e-Mohammed's Bahawalpur headquarters following a major Indian military strike during Operation Sindoor last year goes far more than just a South Asian security concern.

It serves as a warning about how jihadist infrastructure can endure when states focus on managing international scrutiny rather than dismantling the machinery of terror, a report said on Friday.

Writing for the 'Times of Israel', Sergio Restelli, an Italian political advisor, author and geopolitical expert, said that the rebuilding of the facility underscores deeper concerns about Pakistan's counter-terrorism compliance as a UN-designated terrorist group appears to have restored its headquarters in plain sight.

Citing media reports, he said that recent satellite imagery showed reconstruction activity at the Jamia Subhan Allah compound in Bahawalpur, long-considered the headquarters of terrorist Masood Azhar's Jaish-e-Mohammed.

"Heavy machinery, repair work and restored domes are reportedly visible at a site India struck during Operation Sindoor in May 2025. In other words, a UN-designated terrorist organisation's symbolic and operational nerve centre appears not to have disappeared. It has been damaged, mourned, fundraised for and rebuilt," Restelli mentioned.

Emphasising that the damage did result in dismantlement but led to reconstruction, he said, "This is the old Pakistani bargain with jihadist organisations, dressed in a new language. Groups are banned but reappear. Leaders are restricted but remain reachable. Camps are denied but remain visible. Networks are disrupted but not destroyed. The state performs distance while the infrastructure survives."

Restelli stressed that terror infrastructure in Bahawalpur should be a concern not only for New Delhi but also for Washington, Jerusalem and Europe.

"Jaish-e-Mohammed is not a local militia with local ambitions. It belongs to the same global grammar of jihadism that turns grievance into recruitment, death into sanctity and state weakness into strategic depth. The names and theatres differ, but the operating logic is recognisable," he stated.

According to the expert, the fundraising trail of these Pakistan-based terror groups further worsens the situation, with reports following Operation Sindoor indicating that Jaish had begun raising donations to rebuild the Bahawalpur complex under a religious narrative.

"This is not the behaviour of a defeated organisation. It is the behaviour of a network that expects time, money and political cover to do what terror networks do best: absorb punishment, mythologise loss and regenerate. The scandal, therefore, is not only that Bahawalpur was struck. It is that Bahawalpur appears to be returning," he noted.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Ananya R
This is exactly why India's Operation Sindoor was necessary. But the real question is - how long will the international community keep giving Pakistan the benefit of doubt? Every satellite image tells a story, yet sanctions rarely follow. As an Indian, it's frustrating to see our security concerns being treated as just "bilateral issues" when this clearly affects global security.
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James A
Interesting analysis from an Israeli perspective. The "performative distance" concept mentioned is spot-on - Pakistan wants to appear cooperative while maintaining these networks as strategic assets. The US and Europe need to understand this isn't just India's problem anymore. When groups like JeM regenerate, they eventually target Western interests too.
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Rohit L
I appreciate the article pointing out that this is a global concern, not just Indian. But let's be honest - until a Paris or London gets attacked by a Jaish-linked group, the West will keep looking the other way. India has been raising this at every forum for years. Maybe now with Israeli analysts writing about it, the message will finally hit home. 🤷‍♂️
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Sarah B
This is deeply concerning but not surprising. The pattern is well documented - "banned" groups operating openly, "arrested" leaders giving interviews. The international community must impose real costs on Pakistan, not just statements. India's surgical strikes and Operation Sindoor sent a message, but without sustained global pressure, these groups will keep regenerating.
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Aditya G
The fundraising through religious narrative is the most dangerous part. These groups don't just survive on state support - they have deep social networks that keep them alive. India needs a comprehensive strategy: military deterrence

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