Jaish-e-Mohammed
Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) is a Pakistan-based militant Islamist organization founded in early 2000 by Masood Azhar, a former senior leader of Harakat ul-Mujahideen, immediately following his release from Indian prison in a hostage exchange.[1][2][3] The group, which operates training camps and recruitment networks primarily in Pakistan's border regions with Kashmir, pursues the violent expulsion of Indian forces from Jammu and Kashmir to achieve unification with Pakistan under strict Islamic governance.[1][2] JeM has orchestrated numerous high-impact terrorist operations, including suicide bombings and fidayeen assaults against military installations and civilian targets, contributing to ongoing sectarian and insurgent violence in South Asia.[1][2] Designated a foreign terrorist organization by the United States in 2001 and sanctioned by the United Nations—whose listings encompass the entity and its leader for facilitating attacks and cooperating with al-Qaida-linked networks—JeM persists despite intermittent Pakistani actions, reflecting deeper state tolerance or incapacity against embedded jihadist infrastructure.[2][4][5]Origins and Founding
Establishment and Masood Azhar's Role
Masood Azhar, a Pakistani Deobandi cleric from Bahawalpur, joined the jihadist movement in the late 1980s after studying at seminaries in Pakistan and fighting in Afghanistan against Soviet forces as a member of Harkat-ul-Ansar, which later became Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HuM). By the early 1990s, Azhar had risen to a senior leadership role in HuM, overseeing recruitment and operations aimed at insurgency in Indian-administered Kashmir. On January 29, 1994, he entered Kashmir using a forged Portuguese passport under the alias Vali Adam Issa to expand HuM's training and militant networks, but was arrested by Indian authorities shortly thereafter in Anantnag district on charges of terrorism and conspiracy.[6][7] Azhar was detained in Indian prisons for over five years until his release on December 31, 1999, as one of three militants exchanged for the 155 hostages from Indian Airlines Flight IC 814, which had been hijacked by HuM operatives on December 24, 1999, and flown to Kandahar under Taliban control. Returning to Pakistan amid hero's welcomes from jihadist circles, Azhar capitalized on his notoriety to establish Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM, "Army of Muhammad") in early 2000, splintering from HuM due to ideological disagreements over tactics and alliances. The group set up its headquarters in Bahawalpur, leveraging local madrasas for recruitment and training, with Azhar authoring tracts like God Fights for the Poor to propagate its Salafi-jihadist vision of liberating Kashmir through armed struggle.[8][9][10] As JeM's founder and lifelong emir, Azhar has shaped its structure and strategy, directing cells from Bahawalpur while evading capture through Pakistan's tribal areas and urban hideouts. He has issued fatwas endorsing suicide operations against Indian security forces and civilians, drawing initial cadres from HuM defectors, Afghan Taliban veterans, and Pakistani seminary students—estimated at several hundred fighters by mid-2000. Reports indicate early JeM received seed funding from private Gulf donors and indirect state tolerance in Pakistan, enabling it to conduct its first claimed attack, a suicide bombing on an Indian army camp in April 2000. Azhar's personal charisma and prior imprisonment narrative fueled rapid growth, positioning JeM as a vanguard for escalated jihad in South Asia.[11][5][12]Ideology and Objectives
Core Beliefs and Jihadist Framework
Jaish-e-Mohammed's ideology is rooted in Deobandi Sunni Islam, a revivalist movement originating from the 19th-century Darul Uloom Deoband seminary in India, which emphasizes strict adherence to Hanafi jurisprudence, rejection of Western influences, and militant resistance against perceived threats to Muslim sovereignty. The group interprets jihad as both a defensive obligation to counter Indian control over Kashmir—viewed as historically Muslim land under unlawful occupation—and an offensive imperative to impose Sharia law, rejecting secular democracy and Indian sovereignty as un-Islamic innovations. Founder Masood Azhar, influenced by his participation in Afghan mujahideen campaigns during the 1980s Soviet invasion and subsequent training under Osama bin Laden, promotes this framework through sermons and publications that glorify martyrdom and frame Hindus and Indian forces as aggressors akin to historical crusaders.[13][14][15] Central to JeM's jihadist doctrine is the concept of fard al-ayn (individual duty) for jihad in Kashmir, articulated in Azhar's fatwas and writings like Fatah-ul-Jawad, a multi-volume treatise spanning over 4,000 pages that extols armed struggle, suicide operations, and takfir (declaring opponents apostates) as legitimate tools for restoring Islamic rule. The group justifies targeting military installations, civilians, and infrastructure—such as the 2019 Pulwama bombing that killed 40 Indian paramilitary personnel—as proportionate responses to alleged Indian atrocities, including demographic changes and suppression of Muslim identity in the region. This selective religious justification draws from Deobandi scholars who endorsed anti-Soviet and anti-Taliban fights but adapts it to regional irredentism, blending local grievances with transnational jihadist rhetoric.[1][15] JeM's framework aligns with broader Salafi-jihadist networks through shared anti-Western and sectarian animus, evidenced by operational ties to Al-Qaeda and the Afghan Taliban, though it prioritizes Kashmir over global caliphate ambitions. Recruitment leverages Pakistan's Deobandi madrasas, where Azhar's speeches portray victory in Kashmir as a stepping stone to liberating other Muslim territories, such as Palestine or Chechnya, while decrying alliances with non-Muslims. Despite occasional intra-militant rivalries, the ideology sustains resilience against state crackdowns by framing suppression as further proof of a cosmic battle between faith and infidelity.[1][13][14]Goals in Kashmir and Beyond
Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) primarily seeks to end Indian control over Jammu and Kashmir through armed jihad, targeting Indian security forces, government installations, and civilians perceived as supporting New Delhi's administration.[10] [11] The group's foundational objective, articulated by founder Masood Azhar upon his 2000 release from Indian custody, is to establish Pakistani sovereignty over the disputed territory, framing the conflict as a religious duty to liberate Muslim lands from non-Islamic rule.[11] [16] JeM's operations in Kashmir emphasize suicide bombings, ambushes, and assassinations to disrupt Indian governance and demoralize forces, as evidenced by claims of responsibility for attacks like the 2019 Pulwama bombing that killed 40 Indian paramilitary personnel.[10] Azhar has publicly rallied followers with speeches invoking Quranic imperatives for jihad against India, positioning Kashmir as the frontline for broader Islamic revivalism in South Asia.[17] Extending beyond Kashmir, JeM espouses anti-Western ideology, calling for jihad against the United States, Israel, and other perceived enemies of Islam, including through rallies in Pakistan-administered Kashmir where leaders have urged attacks on these targets.[10] The group supports global jihadist efforts by providing training and ideological alignment, with Azhar's recent addresses vowing continued operations in Kashmir while hinting at strikes against Israel amid regional conflicts.[17] This expansion reflects JeM's Deobandi roots, which prioritize offensive jihad to impose Sharia governance and counter secular or non-Muslim influences, though primary resources remain directed at India.[18]Historical Timeline
Initial Operations (2000–2001)
Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) began militant operations in Jammu and Kashmir shortly after its formation in late 2000, emphasizing fidayeen (suicide squad) tactics inspired by Masood Azhar's ideology of aggressive jihad against Indian forces. The group, drawing recruits from Pakistani madrassas and former Harkat-ul-Mujahideen networks, targeted security installations to disrupt Indian administration and provoke escalation. Early activities included ambushes and bombings attributed to JeM militants, though precise claims were often contested amid overlapping group operations in the region.[11][9] A significant escalation occurred on October 1, 2001, when three JeM operatives executed a coordinated suicide car bombing against the Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly in Srinagar. The attackers drove explosive-laden vehicles into the assembly complex during a session, detonating blasts that collapsed parts of the building and killed 38 people, including one legislator, security personnel, and civilians, while injuring around 70 others. Indian authorities identified the perpetrators as JeM members, linking the plot to Azhar's directives for high-impact strikes on symbols of governance. This attack highlighted JeM's shift toward spectacular assaults beyond routine insurgency.[19] The period culminated in the December 13, 2001, assault on the Indian Parliament in New Delhi, JeM's most audacious operation to date. Five armed militants, reportedly trained in Pakistan and affiliated with JeM under Azhar's oversight (in coordination with Lashkar-e-Taiba elements), breached the heavily guarded complex using vehicles and firearms, engaging in a gun battle that lasted over an hour. The attack resulted in nine deaths, including the five attackers, a gardener, security guards, and a Delhi Police constable, with 18 others wounded. JeM publicly claimed responsibility via Azhar's statements, framing it as retaliation for perceived Indian aggression in Kashmir; the incident prompted India to mobilize troops along the border, averting war only through international mediation. U.S. and Indian intelligence corroborated JeM's central role, leading to the group's designation as a foreign terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department on December 26, 2001.[11][20][12]Bans, Internal Splits, and Suppression Attempts
Jaish-e-Mohammed was designated a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the United States Department of State on December 26, 2001, subjecting it to asset freezes and travel bans for its members.[21] The United Nations Security Council added the group to its al-Qaida sanctions list under Resolution 1267, imposing similar financial and arms restrictions, with the entity's summary updated as of October 7, 2011.[5] Pakistan officially banned JeM on January 12, 2002, as part of President Pervez Musharraf's broader crackdown on militant groups following the December 2001 attack on India's Parliament, which included arrests of over 2,000 suspected extremists and asset seizures.[22] Other nations, including the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia, subsequently proscribed JeM under domestic anti-terrorism laws, aligning with UN measures.[23][10] Pakistan's suppression efforts intensified in specific instances but yielded limited long-term results. In 2003, following two assassination attempts on Musharraf attributed to JeM operatives, Pakistani authorities raided camps and arrested key figures, including founder Masood Azhar, though many were released shortly thereafter.[24] After the 2016 Pathankot airbase attack, Pakistan briefly detained Azhar and demolished some JeM-linked structures, but operations resumed soon after.[24] In March 2019, post-Pulwama suicide bombing, Pakistan announced a crackdown, detaining Azhar's family members and aides, sealing a JeM madrasa, and placing the leader under house arrest; however, these measures were temporary, with releases occurring within weeks amid claims of ongoing monitoring.[25] The UN's May 1, 2019, listing of Azhar personally further restricted funding channels, prompting JeM to rebrand domestically as entities like Majlis Wurasa-e-Shuhuda Jammu wa Kashmir in 2019 and Al-Murabitun by September 2025 to evade sanctions and sustain fundraising.[26][27] No major internal splits have fractured JeM's core leadership under Azhar, with the group maintaining operational cohesion despite external pressures; instead, bans prompted tactical adaptations such as front organizations (e.g., Al Rehmat Trust, designated by the US Treasury in 2010) and relocation of bases from Pakistan-occupied Kashmir to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[28][29] These rebrandings and underground shifts allowed persistence, as evidenced by continued attacks, underscoring the incomplete efficacy of suppression amid alleged state tolerance.[30]Revival and Sustained Activity (2002–2015)
Following international pressure after the December 13, 2001, attack on the Indian Parliament, Pakistan banned Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) in January 2002 and initiated a crackdown, arresting over 2,000 suspected militants and detaining founder Masood Azhar on December 29, 2002.[31][32] Azhar was released in April 2003 amid reports of insufficient evidence, allowing him to resume leadership from Bahawalpur, Punjab.[32] JeM reorganized rapidly under front organizations such as Tehrik-e-Khuddam-ul-Islam (TKI) and Tehrik ul-Furqaan (TF) to evade the ban, which was extended in 2003.[33] By leveraging the pre-existing Al Rahmat Trust (ART)—established in 2001 as a supposed charitable entity—JeM sustained funding and recruitment; ART, headed by Azhar, constructed mosques, supported families of imprisoned or deceased militants (numbering around 850 by 2011), and channeled resources to operations in Kashmir, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.[33] The U.S. Treasury sanctioned ART on November 4, 2010, for facilitating JeM's militant activities, yet it continued public fundraising in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces.[33] Despite the crackdown, JeM maintained operational tempo in Jammu and Kashmir through infiltrations from Pakistan, fidayeen (suicide) squads, and grenade attacks. On May 14, 2002, militants ambushed a bus and army camp near Kaluchak in Jammu, killing 31 civilians and injuring over 45, with Indian authorities attributing the assault to JeM based on recovered weapons and militant affiliations.[32] Similarly, on September 24, 2002, two JeM-linked terrorists attacked the Akshardham Temple in Gandhinagar, Gujarat, killing 33 and wounding 80 before being neutralized.[32] JeM publicly claimed responsibility for a November 2, 2005, car bomb in Srinagar that killed 10 and injured dozens, targeting security forces.[32] From 2003 to 2015, JeM's presence persisted via low-intensity operations, including ambushes on security convoys and attempts to rebuild cadre strength, often in collaboration with Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen.[32] Security forces neutralized numerous JeM commanders in encounters, such as Abdul Gani Dar (December 2007, Pulwama), Barkatullah Ansari (September 2008, Baramulla), and Yasir Tunda (November 2012, Baramulla), many of whom were Pakistani nationals, underscoring ongoing cross-border support.[32] By 2010–2015, activities shifted toward sporadic grenade throws and recruitment drives, with arrests revealing plots against urban targets in India, though overall fatalities from JeM-linked incidents declined amid intensified counterinsurgency.[32] JeM's propaganda outlets, like the magazine Al-Qalam, resumed operations with official certifications, aiding sustained ideological outreach.[33]Escalation in 2016 and Pathankot Attack
In 2016, Jaish-e-Mohammed demonstrated renewed operational vigor following a period of constrained activity due to prior crackdowns and international designations. The group's "Guru squad" executed multiple fidayeen (suicide) assaults that year, marking an escalation in cross-border militancy aimed at Indian military installations.[34] The Pathankot attack epitomized this upsurge, commencing on January 2, 2016, when four to six JeM operatives infiltrated the Indian Air Force base in Pathankot, Punjab, near the Pakistan border.[35] The militants, armed with automatic weapons, grenades, and explosives, targeted strategic assets including aircraft and command centers, leading to a protracted four-day operation involving Indian special forces.[35] Indian security personnel neutralized all six attackers, but the siege resulted in seven Indian fatalities, comprising five security force members and two civilians, alongside multiple injuries.[35] JeM publicly claimed responsibility through its spokesman, attributing the operation to retaliation against perceived Indian aggression in Kashmir.[34] Indian investigations identified the perpetrators as Pakistani nationals trained in JeM camps, with forensic evidence linking them to the group's Bahawalpur headquarters.[36] In response, Pakistan arrested over a dozen JeM affiliates, including relatives of founder Masood Azhar, and formed a joint investigation team that visited the site, though subsequent releases of detainees underscored persistent sanctuary concerns.[35][36] The incident exacerbated bilateral tensions, prompting India to suspend the Indus Waters Treaty talks and highlight Pakistan's inadequate action against JeM infrastructure, despite UN sanctions on the group since 2001.[35] Analysts noted the attack's sophistication as evidence of JeM's enduring logistics and ideological recruitment, sustained amid allegations of tacit state tolerance in Pakistan.[37]2019 Pulwama Attack and Indian Response
On 14 February 2019, a suicide bomber attacked a convoy of Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) vehicles traveling on the Jammu-Srinagar National Highway near Lethpora in Pulwama district, Jammu and Kashmir, India, killing 40 personnel and injuring at least 35 others, marking the deadliest attack on Indian security forces in the region since 1989.[38] The bomber, identified as Adil Ahmad Dar, a 22-year-old resident of Kakapora village in Pulwama who had joined Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) in 2018, rammed an explosive-laden vehicle into the lead bus carrying CRPF jawans returning from duties ahead of Republic Day.[39] JeM publicly claimed responsibility through a video released shortly after the attack, in which Dar pledged allegiance to JeM leader Masood Azhar and justified the operation as retaliation for alleged Indian atrocities in Kashmir.[40] Indian investigations, supported by forensic evidence and digital tracking, confirmed JeM's orchestration, including the sourcing of over 300 kilograms of explosives (primarily ammonium nitrate-based) smuggled from across the Line of Control and assembled locally under JeM directives.[40] The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) assisted by tracing the IP address of the video upload to a device in Pakistan, linking it directly to JeM handlers, while interrogations of arrested JeM operatives revealed Dar's training at JeM camps in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir before his infiltration back into India.[40] India accused Pakistan of providing safe haven to JeM leadership and infrastructure, presenting a dossier to the UN Security Council and international partners detailing JeM's complicity, though Pakistan denied state involvement and claimed the attack stemmed from indigenous Kashmiri grievances.[41] In response, India revoked Pakistan's most-favored-nation trading status, imposed a 200% tariff surcharge on Pakistani imports, and attempted to list Masood Azhar as a global terrorist at the UN (initially blocked by China).[38] Militarily, on 26 February 2019, the Indian Air Force launched Operation Balakot, striking a JeM training facility in the forested hills of Balakot town, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Pakistan—deep inside Pakistani territory—claiming to have neutralized a camp capable of training 300-500 militants and eliminated over 200 terrorists, including high-value targets, based on pre-strike intelligence of planned attacks.[42] Pakistan contested the strike's impact, asserting minimal damage to an empty site and no militant casualties, while retaliating with airstrikes across the Line of Control on 27 February, leading to an aerial engagement where India downed a Pakistani F-16 fighter jet and captured pilot Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, who was repatriated two days later amid international calls for de-escalation.[43] The Balakot action represented a doctrinal shift for India, moving beyond reactive measures along the Line of Control to preemptive strikes on terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan's mainland, signaling intolerance for state-sponsored proxy warfare, though assessments of the strikes' tactical success remain debated due to limited independent verification amid fog-of-war claims from both sides.[44] Post-crisis, India intensified counter-terrorism operations in Kashmir, neutralizing several JeM modules, while JeM vowed further reprisals, underscoring the group's resilience despite international sanctions.[10]Activities from 2021 to Mid-2020s
Following the 2019 Balakot airstrikes and subsequent international pressure on Pakistan, Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) shifted to lower-profile operations, emphasizing recruitment, propaganda, and infiltration into Jammu and Kashmir rather than high-visibility suicide bombings. Indian security forces reported multiple arrests of JeM operatives attempting cross-border infiltration and involvement in ambushes on military convoys, with at least 15 such incidents linked to the group between 2021 and 2023.[45] These activities included the provision of arms and explosives to local militants, sustaining sporadic violence amid a reported decline in overall infiltration attempts from Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.[46] In 2024, JeM leader Masood Azhar resurfaced publicly with threats against India, signaling organizational resilience despite Pakistani crackdowns under Financial Action Task Force scrutiny. The group maintained training facilities in Punjab and Bahawalpur provinces, focusing on ideological indoctrination and youth mobilization through madrasas.[47] By early 2025, tensions escalated after the April 22 Pahalgam attack in Indian-administered Kashmir, which killed 25 civilians and was claimed by The Resistance Front—a proxy often tied to Pakistan-based networks including JeM affiliates—prompting India to attribute it to state-sponsored terrorism.[48][49] On May 7, 2025, India initiated Operation Sindoor, conducting precision airstrikes on nine suspected terrorist camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, including JeM strongholds in Bahawalpur and Sialkot sectors. The strikes reportedly killed over a dozen militants, including relatives of Masood Azhar and senior commander Abdul Rauf Azhar, disrupting infrastructure used for training and logistics.[50][51] JeM commanders acknowledged the losses but vowed retaliation, framing the strikes as justification for intensified jihad.[51] Post-strikes, JeM launched a public recruitment drive in September 2025 ahead of an India-Pakistan cricket match, rebranding elements as Al-Murabitun to evade scrutiny, while soliciting funds to rebuild its Bahawalpur headquarters damaged in the operation. These efforts underscore JeM's adaptability, with ongoing propaganda via audio messages from Azhar emphasizing Kashmir liberation. Despite Pakistani denials of support, U.S. assessments noted persistent threats from India-focused groups like JeM amid incomplete dismantlement of their networks.[52][53][54]Organizational Framework
Leadership Structure
Jaish-e-Mohammed operates under a centralized leadership dominated by its founder, Maulana Masood Azhar, who holds the position of emir and exerts strategic and ideological control from bases in Bahawalpur, Pakistan.[11] Azhar, designated a global terrorist by the United Nations Security Council in 2019, founded the group on January 31, 2000, shortly after his release from Indian imprisonment in a December 1999 hostage exchange involving IC-814 hijackers.[55] [10] As of 2025, Azhar remains actively involved, overseeing propaganda, recruitment, and major operations despite international sanctions and bounties exceeding $5 million from the U.S. Rewards for Justice program.[28] [56] The structure includes a shura (consultative council) comprising close associates and family members, which advises on policy and resource allocation, though ultimate authority rests with Azhar.[10] Family ties reinforce loyalty and continuity; Azhar's brothers, including Abdul Rauf Azhar, have occupied senior operational roles, with the latter coordinating cross-border infiltrations until his reported death in Indian airstrikes on May 7, 2025, targeting JeM facilities in Pakistan.[57] Other relatives, such as sisters involved in a 2025 women's recruitment initiative under the group's first female brigade, indicate expanding familial influence in auxiliary functions like training and funding.[8] Below the central leadership, JeM employs a cellular network of regional commanders managing training camps, logistics, and Kashmir-focused fidayeen (suicide) squads, often recruited from madrasas in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces.[10] These commanders, frequently replaced due to counterterrorism operations—such as U.S. drone strikes eliminating figures like Mufti Abdul Rauf in 2015—handle tactical execution while reporting to Azhar's inner circle.[2] The group's resilience stems from this blend of ideological centralization and operational decentralization, allowing adaptation amid Pakistani crackdowns and international pressure.[11]Recruitment and Membership
Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) primarily recruits from Pakistan, drawing on a pool of individuals radicalized through Deobandi religious networks, with membership estimates indicating several hundred active fighters, though precise figures remain elusive due to the group's operational secrecy and fluctuating alliances.[58] The core cadre originated from defections by Harkat ul-Mujahideen (HuM) members following founder Masood Azhar's release from Indian custody in December 1999, providing an initial base of experienced operatives focused on jihad in Kashmir.[2] Membership overlaps with other Sunni extremist entities, such as Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan, facilitating shared recruitment pools among sectarian and jihadist militants in Punjab province, where JeM's Bahawalpur headquarters is located.[10] Recruitment emphasizes ideological appeals to Salafi-jihadist interpretations of Islam, portraying attacks on Indian targets as religious duty to liberate Kashmir and establish Islamic rule. Traditional methods involve indoctrination via mosques, madrassas, and public gatherings, where Azhar's speeches and propaganda videos glorify martyrdom and recruit disaffected youth from low-income backgrounds with promises of purpose and stipends. In September 2025, JeM conducted a public recruitment drive dubbed "Operation Sindoor" in Dubai, coinciding with an India-Pakistan cricket match to exploit nationalist sentiments among expatriates.[52] Since October 2025, JeM has expanded recruitment online, launching "Tufat al-Muminat," a virtual course targeting women for radicalization and potential support roles, including logistics and fundraising, with sessions starting November 9, 2025, at a fee of 500 Pakistani rupees and instruction by Azhar's sisters and relatives of slain commanders.[59][60] This initiative marks JeM's first structured effort to form a women's brigade, "Jamat-ul-Murabitat al-Nisai," amid broader trends of jihadist groups adapting digital tools to evade state crackdowns and reach isolated sympathizers. Operatives are often trained in suicide tactics or infiltration, with family ties reinforcing loyalty, as seen in cases where relatives of past attackers join subsequent operations.[58]Training Camps and Infrastructure
Jaish-e-Mohammed maintains its primary infrastructure in Pakistan, with headquarters located at the Markaz Subhanallah complex in Bahawalpur, Punjab province, which encompasses a mosque, seminary, and areas used for operational planning and recruit indoctrination.[53][16] This facility, also known as Jamia Masjid Subhan Allah, has served as a central hub since the group's founding in 2000, integrating religious education with militant preparation under the guise of charitable and educational activities.[61] Training camps operated by the group are concentrated in Punjab province, including Bahawalpur, and extend to Pakistan-administered Kashmir regions such as Kotli and Muzaffarabad, where facilities provide instruction in guerrilla tactics, explosives handling, and suicide operations.[62][16] Madrasas affiliated with JeM, particularly in recruitment-heavy districts like Multan, Bahawalpur, and Rahim Yar Khan, function as ideological training grounds, emphasizing Deobandi interpretations of jihad against Indian control in Kashmir and preparing fidayeen (suicide) bombers through a curriculum blending religious doctrine with combat skills.[16] Prior to 2001, the group dispatched fighters to Taliban-run camps in Afghanistan for advanced training, but post-U.S. invasion, operations shifted to sites in Balakot (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), Peshawar, and border areas.[16][5] A notable facility in Balakot housed hundreds of militants and was targeted by Indian airstrikes on February 26, 2019, following the Pulwama attack, with Indian officials reporting the elimination of a significant number of trainees.[63] Pakistani authorities conducted raids on JeM sites, including Bahawalpur, in 2020, claiming suppression, yet intelligence assessments indicate persistent activity and reconstruction efforts.[62] In May 2025, Indian strikes under Operation Sindoor targeted nine JeM-linked locations, including training and logistics hubs in Bahawalpur and Muridke, confirming the group's reliance on these fixed infrastructures for sustaining operations despite intermittent crackdowns.[62][53] Funding for maintenance and expansion is channeled through front organizations like Al-Rashid Trust, which procure arms and materials under humanitarian pretexts.[16]Publications and Propaganda
Jaish-e-Mohammed maintains an active propaganda apparatus centered on print media, online platforms, and multimedia content to promote its Deobandi jihadist ideology, glorify martyrdom operations, and recruit fighters primarily targeting Indian-administered Kashmir. The group's primary publication is the Urdu-language weekly magazine Haftroza Al-Qalam, which features articles exhorting violence against Indian forces and Hindu civilians, often authored under pseudonyms attributed to leader Masood Azhar, such as Sa'adi.[64][65] This magazine, distributed in Pakistan and accessible online despite periodic bans, has published over 250 such pieces, framing attacks as religious duty and criticizing perceived apostasy in Muslim societies.[65] Publication ceased briefly in April 2019 following international pressure after the Pulwama attack but resumed, underscoring the outfit's resilience in sustaining narrative control.[66] JeM's digital propaganda extends to videos and social media, where it claims responsibility for attacks to amplify impact and attract recruits. For instance, following the 2019 Pulwama suicide bombing that killed 40 Indian paramilitary personnel, the group released footage of the perpetrator vowing jihad, disseminated via affiliated channels to portray the operation as a divine victory.[38] More recently, in July 2024, JeM circulated a propaganda video incorporating elements from Indian media, such as a film poster, to mock security forces and incite unrest in Jammu and Kashmir.[67] Proxies like the People's Anti-Fascist Front (PAFF), established in 2019 as a JeM front, further this effort by publicizing IED blasts and ambushes on platforms like Telegram, blending claims of success with calls for Indian Muslims to revolt.[68][69] Financiers and recruiters affiliated with JeM, such as Farhatullah Ghauri, leverage Facebook networks to broadcast anti-India messages and solicit funds, evading platform moderation through layered accounts.[70] The group has also experimented with targeted online courses, including a 2025 "crash course" for women promoting ideological indoctrination, signaling efforts to broaden its base amid crackdowns on physical infrastructure.[71] These materials consistently emphasize Kashmir's "liberation" through armed struggle, drawing on Azhar's speeches and writings that invoke historical jihadist precedents while decrying Indian "occupation." Despite Pakistani bans, such content proliferates via sympathetic madrasas and informal distribution networks, sustaining JeM's operational tempo.[10]Funding and External Support
Sources of Financing
Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) primarily obtains financing through front charitable organizations that solicit donations under the pretext of humanitarian aid, religious welfare, and reconstruction efforts, which are then diverted to support militant activities. The Al-Akhtar Trust International, established in mid-2000, serves as a key facade, collecting funds purportedly for medical camps, orphanages, and mosques while channeling resources to JeM's operational needs, including training and procurement.[72][73] Designated by the United Nations in 2001 and the U.S. Treasury in 2003, the trust has been linked to transfers benefiting JeM leadership and infrastructure in Pakistan's Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces.[74] Private donations from sympathizers, including diaspora networks in the Gulf states and the United Kingdom, constitute another stream, often routed via informal hawala systems to evade banking oversight. These contributions, estimated in the millions of Pakistani rupees annually, support recruitment drives and propaganda dissemination.[75] Hawala operators, leveraging ethnic and kinship ties, facilitate cross-border flows without formal records, a method historically abused by South Asian militant groups for terrorist financing.[75] In response to international sanctions and Financial Action Task Force (FATF) scrutiny, JeM has adapted by incorporating digital tools for fundraising since at least 2023. Digital wallets such as EasyPaisa and SadaPay enable micro-transactions from Pakistani donors, including fees from online "jihadi courses" charged at 500 Pakistani rupees per participant, aggregating to substantial sums for rebuilding facilities like the Bahawalpur headquarters destroyed in prior operations.[76][60] Intelligence assessments indicate campaigns targeting PKR 3.9 billion (approximately USD 14 million) for establishing 313 new "markaz" centers, exploiting unregulated fintech to bypass traditional hawala risks.[77] This shift reflects JeM's resilience against asset freezes, though it heightens vulnerabilities to cyber monitoring by agencies like India's National Investigation Agency.Alleged State Sponsorship by Pakistan
Jaish-e-Mohammed has operated primarily from bases within Pakistan since its founding in 2000 by Masood Azhar, with allegations of state sponsorship centered on protection afforded by Pakistani authorities despite multiple domestic bans. The United States Department of State has designated Pakistan as a safe haven for JeM, noting that the group maintains operational freedom in parts of the country even after a 2002 ban, with insufficient Pakistani actions to dismantle its networks.[78] The UN Security Council describes JeM as an extremist organization based in Pakistan, where its leadership, including Azhar, has evaded arrest under international sanctions requiring member states to freeze assets and prohibit travel.[5] Pakistan briefly detained Azhar under house arrest following international pressure after the 2019 Pulwama attack but released him without charges, allowing public appearances.[79] Accusations of direct involvement by Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) include facilitating JeM's creation as a proxy for operations in Indian-administered Kashmir, drawing from ISI's prior support for precursor groups like Harkat-ul-Mujahideen.[80] Training camps attributed to JeM, such as the one targeted by Indian airstrikes in Balakot on February 26, 2019, have been cited as evidence of state tolerance, with India claiming satellite and intelligence data showed 300-400 militants present; Pakistan contested the camp's existence and reported no significant casualties.[81] US congressional testimony has highlighted JeM among "vicious terrorist groups" operating from Pakistan, implying selective non-interference by security agencies.[82] Financial support allegations point to lax oversight enabling JeM's fundraising through donations and businesses in Pakistan, despite FATF scrutiny of terror financing risks including state sponsorship in cases like Pulwama, where JeM operatives acquired materials via e-commerce.[83] Pakistan has conducted sporadic raids, such as the 2001 Bahawalpur operation yielding weapons and documents linking JeM to attacks, and convicted a member for the 2002 Daniel Pearl murder, but US reports assess these as inadequate to curb resurgence.[78] Pakistani officials deny sponsorship, attributing persistence to non-state actors and border challenges, while critics, including Indian and Western intelligence assessments, argue ISI's strategic use of such groups for regional leverage sustains their viability.[1] Recent relocations of JeM infrastructure to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa following Indian strikes in 2025 have been linked by intelligence sources to Pakistani facilitation.[84]International Designations and Sanctions
The United Nations Security Council designated Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) under its 1267/1989 sanctions regime targeting al-Qaida and associated entities, imposing asset freezes, travel bans, and arms embargoes on the group and its affiliates.[5] This listing, which applies to UN member states, recognizes JeM's role in terrorist activities primarily in Kashmir and cooperation with other extremist groups.[5] The United States Department of State designated JeM as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) on December 26, 2001, following its involvement in attacks such as the December 13, 2001, assault on the Indian Parliament.[8][21] This FTO status, administered under Section 219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, prohibits material support to JeM and renders its members ineligible for U.S. visas. Additionally, the U.S. Department of the Treasury designated JeM as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) under Executive Order 13224, enabling broader financial sanctions.[28] The European Union listed JeM as a terrorist entity on October 19, 2001, via Commission Regulation (EC) No 2062/2001, subjecting it to freezing of funds and economic resources across member states.[85] The United Kingdom proscribed JeM under the Terrorism Act 2000, criminalizing membership and support, with the group included in the schedule of international terrorist organizations maintained by the Home Office.[86] India banned JeM under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967, shortly after its formation and early attacks, with formal notification as a terrorist organization issued in response to escalating violence in Jammu and Kashmir.[87] Pakistan initially proscribed JeM in January 2002 under its Anti-Terrorism Ordinance but faced criticism for inconsistent enforcement, as the group reemerged with operations despite the ban.[19] Other nations, including Australia and Canada, have similarly listed JeM, aligning with UN measures to disrupt its financing and operations.[10][23]| Designating Entity | Designation Type | Key Date | Measures Imposed |
|---|---|---|---|
| United Nations (1267 Committee) | Sanctions regime entity | October 2001 (initial alignment; ongoing) | Asset freeze, travel ban, arms embargo[5] |
| United States | FTO/SDGT | December 26, 2001 | Material support ban, visa ineligibility, financial sanctions[21][8] |
| European Union | Terrorist list | October 19, 2001 | Funds freeze, resource restrictions[85] |
| United Kingdom | Proscribed organization | Post-2001 (Terrorism Act 2000 schedule) | Membership/support criminalization[86] |
| India | Banned under UAPA | Early 2000s (post-founding attacks) | Operational prohibition[87] |
| Pakistan | Proscribed | January 2002 | Nominal ban (enforcement variable)[19] |