New Delhi : Reports indicate a significant leadership reshuffle within the Pakistan-based banned terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), with its founder Hafiz Muhammad Saeed stepping back from active operational control and assuming a more advisory or “mentor-like” role. His son, Talha Saeed, is reportedly being positioned to take over the organisation’s leadership responsibilities.
According to sources, the transition is not the result of a formal election but part of an internal restructuring process within the group. Talha Saeed has already been assigned increasing responsibilities in the organisation’s activities, and his role is now being consolidated at the top leadership level.
Reports suggest that Lashkar-e-Taiba is also restructuring its operational framework by creating decentralised command structures across different regions. The move is being viewed as a generational transfer of leadership, where the older leadership is being gradually limited to ideological and advisory roles.
Sources further indicate that Talha Saeed is no longer confined to administrative duties alone and is now increasingly involved in decision-making processes. Meanwhile, Hafiz Saeed continues to maintain influence in the organisation’s ideological and patron role.
Experts believe this restructuring is part of LeT’s broader attempt to rebuild and adapt its structure amid sustained pressure and changing circumstances. However, the development also highlights a clearer pattern of dynastic succession within the group’s leadership, with control increasingly concentrated within the family.


