Bangladesh Watch - News, Updates and Discussions


Why is no one interested in drilling gas there?

 

A rag rag militia can't challenge a professional army even if its BD Senabahini even if they can cause them massive headaches. I'd say India is behind the Arakan Army egging it on to poke BD lungibahinis now with Tatmadaw out of the picture & the Arakanese being natural enemies of the Rohingya Lungis there.

Why ? Coz since day 1 , the opposition there has been belligerently anti India , anti minorities & what's more seems to be currying favour with Paxtanis in an attempt to deliberately provoke India.

This is us telling the Lungis there if we've fault lines so do you & you're a 100 times more fragile than India.
 
A rag rag militia can't challenge a professional army even if its BD Senabahini even if they can cause them massive headaches. I'd say India is behind the Arakan Army egging it on to poke BD lungibahinis now with Tatmadaw out of the picture & the Arakanese being natural enemies of the Rohingya Lungis there.

Why ? Coz since day 1 , the opposition there has been belligerently anti India , anti minorities & what's more seems to be currying favour with Paxtanis in an attempt to deliberately provoke India.

This is us telling the Lungis there if we've fault lines so do you & you're a 100 times more fragile than India.
Surely it's india backing behind, India Russia China will never allow US proxy in Asia.
 
Bangladesh faces escalating economic and civil unrest, putting the nation’s stability at significant risk.

Currently, the country is governed by an Islamic regime backed by the military. The ousted, democratically elected government, led by Sheikh Hasina, was perceived as weak and failing to align with U.S. interests. Allegedly, the U.S. Deep State collaborated with Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to orchestrate her removal. The ISI’s primary goal was to counter India and sever Bangladesh from Indian influence. To this end, the ISI recruited and indoctrinated “Madrassa Chaap” youth, training them in Pakistan a year before the upheaval. Neither the Hasina administration nor India’s Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) detected these preparations.

China’s role remains ambiguous, though some speculate that Beijing was fully aware of the plot to remove Sheikh Hasina.

The plan to destabilize Hasina’s government unfolded over two months. ISI-trained operatives were equipped with arms and funds to incite civil unrest, specifically targeting Hindu properties and temples to inflame tensions. Predictably, police crackdowns followed, fueling public outrage against the government. With the media unaware of the larger conspiracy, they blamed the unrest on Hasina’s administration and law enforcement.

Each time the unrest abated, additional funds flowed into Bangladesh through intermediary nations, reigniting tensions. Over the two-month period, clashes resulted in casualties, though Western media significantly exaggerated the numbers.

Eventually, the Bangladeshi Army intervened, seemingly unaware of the ISI plot. Holding Sheikh Hasina responsible for the chaos, they demanded her resignation and arranged her departure. Hasina, offered a plane to flee, left the country within two hours, a move that raised suspicions about possible Army complicity.

The current economic outlook is dire. Bangladesh’s textile export industry, a cornerstone of its economy, is relocating to other countries. The Indian Adani Group has cut off power supplies, shuttering factories and halting export activities. Meanwhile, the Hindu population is increasingly scapegoated for the nation’s troubles, facing heightened risks and discrimination.

For Bangladesh, the path forward seems bleak. Stability may only be achievable by removing the Islamists and considering Sheikh Hasina’s return to power.
 
Bangladesh faces escalating economic and civil unrest, putting the nation’s stability at significant risk.

Currently, the country is governed by an Islamic regime backed by the military. The ousted, democratically elected government, led by Sheikh Hasina, was perceived as weak and failing to align with U.S. interests. Allegedly, the U.S. Deep State collaborated with Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to orchestrate her removal. The ISI’s primary goal was to counter India and sever Bangladesh from Indian influence. To this end, the ISI recruited and indoctrinated “Madrassa Chaap” youth, training them in Pakistan a year before the upheaval. Neither the Hasina administration nor India’s Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) detected these preparations.

China’s role remains ambiguous, though some speculate that Beijing was fully aware of the plot to remove Sheikh Hasina.

The plan to destabilize Hasina’s government unfolded over two months. ISI-trained operatives were equipped with arms and funds to incite civil unrest, specifically targeting Hindu properties and temples to inflame tensions. Predictably, police crackdowns followed, fueling public outrage against the government. With the media unaware of the larger conspiracy, they blamed the unrest on Hasina’s administration and law enforcement.

Each time the unrest abated, additional funds flowed into Bangladesh through intermediary nations, reigniting tensions. Over the two-month period, clashes resulted in casualties, though Western media significantly exaggerated the numbers.

Eventually, the Bangladeshi Army intervened, seemingly unaware of the ISI plot. Holding Sheikh Hasina responsible for the chaos, they demanded her resignation and arranged her departure. Hasina, offered a plane to flee, left the country within two hours, a move that raised suspicions about possible Army complicity.

The current economic outlook is dire. Bangladesh’s textile export industry, a cornerstone of its economy, is relocating to other countries. The Indian Adani Group has cut off power supplies, shuttering factories and halting export activities. Meanwhile, the Hindu population is increasingly scapegoated for the nation’s troubles, facing heightened risks and discrimination.

For Bangladesh, the path forward seems bleak. Stability may only be achievable by removing the Islamists and considering Sheikh Hasina’s return to power.
But what about US angle, doesn't US wants to setup base here to watch on India, how will India repulse that.?
 

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