The flames of rebellion in Balochistan burn brighter than ever, as the Baloch Raaji Aajoi Sangar (BRAS) alliance publicly assumed responsibility for 174 precision strikes on Pakistan’s military and intelligence units in 2025. Their audacious claim: 167 enemies neutralized, 95 officers left bleeding across the province.
Sourced from local press like The Balochistan Post, the group’s slick infographic breaks down a symphony of sabotage—35 detonations, 14 infiltrations, 35 blockades yielding 26 captures (spies included), alongside the torching of 15 facilities, 30 rides, and haul of 51 guns.
August’s crown jewel? A month-long domination of Khuzdar’s Jihri town, complete with patrols, public speeches, and loot of vehicles, weaponry, and gear from a ‘fully controlled zone.’
This isn’t isolated. Baloch Liberation Army’s (BLA) ledger shows 521 engagements slaughtering 1,060 troops, maiming 556, vaporizing quadcopters and posts, snagging 208 firearms.
Balochistan Liberation Front (BLF) tallied 581 clashes, 929 corpses (647 uniformed), 282 casualties, with spokesperson Major Gwahram Baloch toasting 2025’s pivotal gains in the ‘national resistance.’
Baloch Republican Guards (BRG) chimed in with 88 multi-province ops dismantling rail lines, checkpoints, cops, pipes, and signals towers—22 dead, 35 hurt.
Plagued by allegations of military-orchestrated abductions, death squads, and lawless imprisonments, Balochistan’s plight underscores a humanitarian crisis fueling the insurgency. These aggregated reports from unified factions herald a strategic pivot, challenging Islamabad’s authority and amplifying calls for independence on the world stage.