Tag: Pathankot Attack

Shashi Tharoor, a serving member of the Indian Parliament lately known for his anti-British position has ironically been recruited by the son of a Pakistani British spy in his firm CTD Advisors, heavily infested with former British intelligence chiefs...
This excerpt from the History Of Narco-Terrorism In India explains the roots of Chinese distaste to India which has a far-reaching foreign policy implications to India today and which also laid the foundation for the destruction of American society. The British reasoned that rather...
हिंदी में पढ़ें: भारत में नारको-आतंकवाद का इतिहास This extensively researched report covers the following subjects: 1 The Beginning of the Drug Narcotics Trade The more than 200 year history of the first ever organized drug running syndicate – the British Empire and...
In its 197th report the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs observed that “something is seriously wrong with our counter-terror security establishment” commenting in regards to the Pathankot Airbase Attack. Pradip Bhattacharya, the Chairman of the Standing Committee said "We...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qr2I-nCc3U Read full report here Pathankot Attack: Oil, Globalization & Terror
Punjab, for many years, has been a transit point for drugs from Afghanistan. The drug money has become a major source of funding of elections in Punjab and over the time a well-organized drug cartel has come into existence...
Featured in this issue: 1. Energy Crisis: India’s Dependence On Oil & A Solution For A Sustainable Future 2. Independence Or Dominion? 3. East India Company Series Part III: Ideology & Methodology 4. Pathankot Attack: Oil, Globalization & Terror 5. FDI Series Part II:...
Poppy is used to make narcotics - opium, brown sugar and heroin. It is big business in West Bengal's ‪#‎Malda district, involving big money and big names, where a lakh-strong mob set fire to the local police station in...
A story that stretches across three countries, and confirms the kind of power and influence that corporates can bring to politics where war talk is replaced by peace, and wherein supposed ‘enemy’ nations twist the rules in close cooperation...