Saturday, October 25, 2025

Another Sensationalisation

Was There a CIA Plot Against PM Modi?

This week, social media is full of one more shocking story — that the CIA planned to kill Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

People who follow history know that the CIA has often tried to remove world leaders who opposed America’s policies.

Names like Fidel Castro, Patrice Lumumba, Rafael Trujillo, Ngo Dinh Diem, and Salvador Allende are not new.

Even in the US, people still wonder who really killed President John F. Kennedy.

The attempt on Donald Trump’s life before the last election also remains under tight cover.

And the mysterious death of former PM Lal Bahadur Shastri still has unanswered questions.

Now the rumours say, Modi was also on their list.

The Story Going Around

According to social media posts, a US Special Forces officer named Terrence Arvelle Jackson was given two jobs —

1. to assassinate PM Modi during the SCO summit, and

2. to press Bangladesh’s government to hand over St. Martin’s Island to the US.The story further says that Terrence was “killed” in Dhaka after his mission failed.

But if we think carefully, this story does not make much sense.

Why It Sounds Unbelievable


1. The wrong person for the job

The US would never send a Black American soldier to China for a secret hit — he would be easily noticed.

Such missions are done by people who can blend in, usually of Asian background, and not directly linked to the US.

2. No country uses ex-servicemen for big hits

Retired soldiers can be traced easily. If caught, it exposes the country behind the plot. So using Terrence Jackson makes no logic.

3. Spies don’t mix missions

An agent sent to Bangladesh for diplomatic pressure or to train groups in Chittagong would not travel to China for a high-profile murder.

Real spy work doesn’t mix two risky missions like that.


So, even if there was any real threat to Modi during the SCO, it’s very doubtful that Terrence Jackson had anything to do with it.



What Could Be Going On

Some experts think that linking Jackson’s death with the Modi story may be a kind of message or signal — not a literal truth.

When unrelated incidents are connected and spread online, it can serve many purposes:

It tells certain people, “We know what’s happening.”

It makes the public start asking questions that governments prefer to keep quiet.

It can also make people angry at another country, shaping public opinion.


So Many Things Happening Around the Same Time

Just look at the timing:

China is quietly removing top army officers.

Modi skipped the ASEAN meet, avoiding a meeting with Trump.

Putin skipped the G20 summit.

US and India announced a trade deal soon after this story came out.

Dhaka airport was hit, affecting exports and a Russian project the US dislikes.

Rebel camps in Myanmar were attacked.

All these are big and unusual events.

Across the world — from Ukraine to the Middle East, Australia, and East Asia — many such changes are happening at once.

To believe that none of them are connected would be too simple.

History is not just written in books — it is being made right now.

We may not see the full picture, but the signs are clear.

Big powers are moving their pieces, and every small tremor we feel could be part of a much larger game.

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