JK News: Not in local homes makes terrorist shelters in dense forests bunkers; New challenge has come to the security forces - terrorists who make shelters in bunkers in dense forests, not in local homes, a new challenge for security forces

Updated: Sun, 14 Sep 2025 05:23 PM (IST) in Jammu and Kashmir, terrorist organizations now make underground bunkers in forests instead of local homes. It was unveiled during a meeting in Kulgam. Security officials are concerned because the terrorist instructions have received instructions to live in the High Hills. The army makes a new strategy. Due to a lack of local support, terrorists use to bunkers. Jagran Correspondent, Jammu. Terrorists have now changed their strategy in Jammu and Kashmir, which designed underground bunkers in dense forests and high peaks instead of taking shelter in local homes. This strategic change due to decrease in local support presents a new challenge for the army and other security forces. Remove the ad, just read the news, it came out last week during a meeting in the highlights of the Kulgam district where two terrorists died. As the campaign continued, security forces received ration, small gas stoves and pressure cakes, as well as a secret cave full of weapons and ammunition. A senior security officer said on condition of anonymity that the trend became widespread in southern Culgam and Shopian Districts, as well as Pir Panjal in the Jammu region where dense forests become the right place for terrorists. Although the security personnel have succeeded in finding out some of these new locations, the authorities are concerned about the intelligence that the terrorists have been asked to stay in the high and central hills and attack on the border, they are concerned and also make a new strategy to handle it. An official said it was disturbing that terrorists are now well established in these underground bunkers. According to retired Lieutenant General Rev. Hooda, who led the successful surgical strike of 2016, these high -brave and bunkers remind them of the strategies used by terrorists in the early 1990s and early 2000s. Lieutenant General Hooda, who took over the strategic northern commando, also pointed to a major issue of a lack of human intelligence, which was an important resource in previous terrorism operations. He is confident that the army will re -evaluate its strategy to face this new challenge. The retired director general of Puducherry police, B. Srinivas, who spent three decades with Jammu and Kashmir police, also repeated the same assessment and said the terrorists are forced to build these bunkers as they can no longer depend on shelters in towns and towns. Along with the separatist ideology by the people, infiltrating terrorists now use these secret caves to avoid the eyes of the local population. They now consider local people as informants. This will repeat the incident seen in 2003 in the operation snake destruction, when the security forces were successful in directing terrorist camps in the Poonch area. To compete with this new challenge, security agencies intend to use technology to combat danger and it intends to deploy drones and earthquake sensors with soil radar during anti -terrorism operations. The immediate purpose of the safety network is clearly to improve intelligence information in these forest areas and use this new equipment to neutralize the remaining terrorists. In the past, the army faced the danger of underground bunkers and man-made caves, but it was mainly in residential areas in Pulwama, Kulgam and Shopian in 2020-22.