Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

Fake Wikileaks cables containing anti-Indian propaganda. Who was responsible? ISI, Military or the Government? The media should be held responsible for these actions… Pakistan is trying its best to portray India in bad light and creator of trouble in Pakistan to win local hearts.

Wikileaks: Pakistan hoaxed by bogus anti-India cables - BBC News

Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

They read like the most extraordinary revelations. Citing the WikiLeaks cables, major Pakistani newspapers this morning carried stories that purported to detail eye-popping American assessments of India’s military and civilian leaders.

According to the reports, US diplomats described senior Indian generals as vain, egotistical and genocidal; they said India’s government is secretly allied with Hindu fundamentalists; and they claimed Indian spies are covertly supporting Islamist militants in Pakistan’s tribal belt and Balochistan.

“Enough evidence of Indian involvement in Waziristan, Balochistan,” read the front-page story in the News; an almost identical story appeared in the Urdu-language Jang, Pakistan’s bestselling daily.
If accurate, the disclosures would confirm the worst fears of Pakistani nationalist hawks and threaten relations between Washington and New Delhi. But they are not accurate.

An extensive search of the WikiLeaks database by the Guardian by date, name and keyword failed to locate any of the incendiary allegations. It suggests this is the first case of WikiLeaks being exploited for propaganda purposes.

The controversial claims, published in four Pakistani national papers, were credited to the Online Agency, an Islamabad-based news service that has frequently run pro-army stories in the past. No journalist is bylined.

Shaheen Sehbai, group editor at the News, described the story as “agencies’ copy” and said he would investigate its origins.

The incident fits in with the wider Pakistani reaction to WikiLeaks since the first cables emerged.
In the west, reports have focused on US worries for the safety of Pakistan’s nuclear stockpile, or the army’s support for Islamist militants such as the Afghan Taliban and Lashkar-e-Taiba, the group blamed for the Mumbai attack.

But Pakistan’s media has given a wide berth to stories casting the military in a negative light, focusing instead on the foibles of the country’s notoriously weak politicians.

Editors have pushed stories that focus on president Asif Ali Zardari’s preoccupation with his death, prime minister Yousaf Raza Gilani’s secret support for CIA drone strikes and tales of a bearded religious firebrand cosying up to the US ambassador.

Among ordinary citizens, the coverage has hardened perceptions that Pakistani leaders are in thrall to American power.

Pakistan has become “the world’s biggest banana republic”, wrote retired diplomat Asif Ezdi last week.
Military and political leaders, portrayed as dangerously divided in the cables, have banded together to downplay the assessment.

"Don’t trust WikiLeaks," Gilani told reporters in Kabul last weekend. Beside him president Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan, also tarred in the dispatches, nodded solemnly.

On Saturday the army, having stayed silent all week, denied claims that army chief General Ashfaq Kayani “distrusted” the opposition leader Nawaz Sharif. Kayani “holds all political leaders in esteem”, a spokesman said.

Meanwhile conspiracy theorists, including some journalists, insist Washington secretly leaked the cables in an effort to discredit the Muslim world; the Saudi ambassador described them as propaganda.

But senior judges favour their publication. Dismissing an attempt to block WikiLeaks last week, justice Sheikh Azmat Saeed said the cables “may cause trouble for some personalities” but would be “good for the progress of the nation in the long run”.

The lopsided media coverage highlights the strong influence of Pakistan’s army over an otherwise vigorous free press.

This morning’s stories disparaging Indian generals – one is said to be “rather a geek”, another to be responsible for “genocide” and compared to Slobodan Milosevic – is counterbalanced by accounts of gushing American praise for Pakistan’s top generals.

The actual WikiLeaks cables carry a more nuanced portraits of a close, if often uneasy, relationship between the US and Pakistan’s military.

But the real cables do contain allegations of Indian support for Baloch separatists, largely sourced to British intelligence assessments.

Pakistan’s press is generally cautious in reporting about its own army. But some internet commentators said the latest WikiLeaks story was a bridge too far.

Noting that the story was bylined to “agencies” – a term that in Pakistan means both a news agency and a spy outfit – the blogger Cafe Pyala asked: "How stupid do the ‘Agencies’ really think Pakistanis ar

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

Security agencies at work again... Do these people not realise that in this day and age, these sort of actions cannot be hidden from public view for a long time.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

What do you expect from the people whom qualification is only intermediate.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

Kapoor alleged that there are 43 terrorist camps in Pakistan, 22 of which are located in Pakistan-administered Kashmir. Although the Pakistanis raided some camps in the wake of 11/26, Kapoor averred, some camps have reinitiated operations. Kapoor further asserted infiltration across the Line of Control cannot occur unless there is some kind of assistance and/or degree of support that is institutional in nature. He described several incidents of infiltration that occurred this year, including that of 40 terrorists in March who were found possessing significant ammunition and other equipment. India is worried, Kapoor said, that some part of the huge U.S. military package to Pakistan will find its way to the hands of terrorists targeting India.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

I knew that the news in "The News" was a plant!
Here is the original article, i have highlighted one "Leak" that told me it was a ISIleak :D

A cable from Kabul termed Afghan President as the “patron-in-chief” of the Afghan drug mafia. The cable, citing certain verified UNODC figures, stated that Karzai was living at the mercy of Afghan warlords who, with the passage of time, had transformed into drug lords. The cable stated that there was an annual drug trade of 3 trillion dollars from Pakistan while the Karzai administration was keeping mum over the same.

The goons dont even know algebra! If afghanistan can ship annual drug trade of 3 trillion dollars from Pakistan...Afghanistan will be worlds 3rd largest economy :D. If pakisan even got 20% of that cut it will be $400 billions ...twice the GDP of pakistan :D

Seriously, all the ISI guys should be subjected to IQ and algebra tests.

WASHINGTON: A cable from US Embassy in Islamabad leaked by whistle-blower website WikiLeaks disclosed that there were enough evidences of Indian involvement in Waziristan and other tribal areas of Pakistan as well as Balochistan.
The Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) chief Ahmed Shuja Pasha’s extension in services was termed as a good omen in one such cable and it was added that his further presence on the scene would enhance the agency’s abilities to combat anti-terror war.
An earlier cable ruled out any direct or indirect involvement of ISI in 26/11 under Pasha’s command while Mumbai’s dossier, based on prime accused Ajmal Kasab’s confessional statement was termed funny and “shockingly immature”.
WikiLeaks revealed that a cable sent from a US mission in India termed former Indian Army chief General Deepak Kapoor as an incompetent combat leader and rather a geek.
His war doctrine, suggesting eliminating China and Pakistan in a simultaneous war front was termed as “much far from reality”. Another cable indicates that General Kapoor was dubbed as a general who was least bothered about security challenges to the country but was more concerned about making personal assets and strengthening his own cult in the army. The cable also suggested that a tug-of-war between Kapoor and the current Indian Army chief had divided the Indian Army into two groups.
General Singh has also been described as “Pakistan, China centric”, with an added aggression towards China. The cable mentioned General Singh as an egotist, self-obsessed, petulant and idiosyncratic general, a braggadocio and a show-off, who has been disliked (and barely tolerated) by all his subordinates.
An earlier cable described Indian Army involved in gross human rights violations in Indian-held Kashmir while some Lt Gen HS Panag, the then GOC-in-Chief of the Northern Command of the Indian Army, was equated with General Milosevic of Bosnia with regard to butchering Muslims through war crimes.
The cable urged Washington to secretly divert UN attention towards the genocide of innocent civilians in held Kashmir at the hands of Indian Army and also suggested that US should avoid holding any joint drill with Indian Army until it stops inhuman activities in Kashmir. The cable termed one Lt Col AK Mathur as “devil’s advocate” at Srinagar.
Another cable indicated involvement of top Indian Army leadership in engaging Hindu extremist militants to carry out certain terror operations to keep Indian Muslims on the back foot and to keep pressure on neighbouring Pakistan’s Army and intelligence agencies, particularly the Inter-Services Intelligence.
The cable confirmed the active presence of ISI in India but it refused to confirm any involvement of ISI in any terror incident across India and did confirm intelligence collection by its agents and operatives. Another cable confirmed that there was a nexus of top Indian Army officials and extremist Hindu outfits. This cable suggested that an Indian police officer, a counter-terror specialist with the name of Hemant Karkare, had exposed this nexus to some extent when he arrested a serving colonel of Indian army, Lt Colonel Purohit, for blazing a Pakistan bound train (Samjhota Express).
The cable suggested that Hemant Karkare held a secret meeting with a senior US diplomat in New Delhi during the national day reception of a friendly country and briefed him about the gravity and the growing depth of the nexus between top Indian Army leadership and the militant Hindu fanatic groups. Karkare sought security for him and his family from the said American diplomat as he feared that the army and establishment would eliminate him as he intended to move further to expose the network. He had further briefed the said US diplomat that a former commander-in-chief of the Central Command of the Indian army, Lt Gen PN Hoon, was heading the militancy wing of the Hindu extremists and was getting full tactical, logistic and financial support from senior army officers. The day, Karkare was eliminated in a pre-planned ambush during the Mumbai attacks, a cable sent to the US read “we have lost an important link and a vital evidence”.
Another cable sent to Washington termed Hindutva brotherhood in general and Shiv Sena in particular, as ticking time bombs with regard to militancy and terrorism. It was suggested that fundraisers like Hindu Students Council of America etc should be banned to raise funds as they were generating funds for the Hindu militant outfits under the garb of charity. Another file dubs Hindutva Brotherhood as a far bigger threat to regional and global peace than Taliban, al-Qaeda and LeT and the later three were declared as “peanuts” if equated with Hindutva Brotherhood and Sangh Parivaar and Washington was urged to take up the issue with New Delhi. Another cable expressed grave concern over the Indian government’s ability to handle Naxal insurgency movement as 80 per cent of Indian nuclear and missile facilities were present in the insurgency hit areas of India while the Indian security forces were totally helpless in ensuring the writ of the government in that particular area, known as the “Red Corridor of India”.
A cable sent from Israel described the then Israeli Military Intelligence chief, Major General Amos Yadlin as an aggressive general. He was quoted in the cable as a dire seeker of “annihilation” of Islamic Republic of Iran. In a meeting with an American diplomat, General Yadlin dubbed Iranian, Syrian and Hezbollah’s weapons as “tools of terrorism” and not war weapons. He also showed immense eagerness to attack Syrian nuclear facilities.
General Yadlin also told American diplomat that timeframe of Iran nuclear weapons preparation and timeframe to attack Iran were to be totally different issues. He also differed with Americans over the ability of Iran to prepare nuclear weapons and instead said that Iran had sufficient enriched uranium to manufacture a single nuclear device and may soon have enough for making another bomb.
Iran is busy setting up two new nuclear installations, Yadlin told the US diplomat adding that M-I has indications that work has began on the installations, but did not comment on the sources. Yadlin, who was later-on replaced by Brigadier General Aviv Kochav, also spoke of Iran as the greatest threat facing Israel, not only in the nuclear respect. “Iran is sending its long arms to aid anyone who is working against Israel,” Yadlin said. “Such assessments are undoubtedly weighing on Prime Minister Netanyahu’s mind as he considers the possible need for an Israeli pre-emptive strike on Iran,” the cable said.
Mossad chief Meir Dagan very proudly told Americans that his special team had eliminated Hamas top military strategist Izzadin Sheikh Khalil through a terror plot. The cable informed Washington that in fact Dagan had established a number of “hit teams” through which he was getting engaged in non-intelligence operations and also used these hit men for certain personal vendettas as well.
Dagan, in a meeting with US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, William Burns, proposed Americans a five point agenda to fix Iran. The focus of the agenda was to change the regime at Tehran and to launch an ethnic movement throughout Iran to destabilise the country before launching the final attack.
A cable from Kabul termed Afghan President as the “patron-in-chief” of the Afghan drug mafia. The cable, citing certain verified UNODC figures, stated that Karzai was living at the mercy of Afghan warlords who, with the passage of time, had transformed into drug lords. The cable stated that there was an annual drug trade of 3 trillion dollars from Pakistan while the Karzai administration was keeping mum over the same.
Another cable stated that Indian involvement in Afghanistan was increasing considerably and all was going on with the consent and knowledge of President Karzai and his administration. The cable further reads that growing Indian influence and presence in Afghanistan was focused towards Pakistan and China, both simultaneously.
Saudi Arabia proposed setting up an Arab force to fight Hezbollah militants in Lebanon with the help of the US, UN and Nato, according to a leaked document. In a meeting in May 2008 with a US diplomat in Iraq, David Satterfield, Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal said a “security response” was needed to the “military challenge” posed to Beirut by the Iran-backed militants.
The Saudi prince feared a Hezbollah victory against the Lebanese government, led by then prime minister Fuad Siniora, would eventually lead to Iran’s takeover of the country.
There was a need for an “Arab force” to create and maintain order in and around Beirut, he argued, saying the Lebanese army was “too fragile to bear more pressure,” according to the cable from the US embassy in Riyadh.
Such a force would be aided by UNIFIL troops deployed in southern Lebanon, while the “US and Nato would need to provide movement and logistic support, as well as naval and air cover,” the cable added.
According to a leaked document, Saudi armed forces killed Yemeni civilians when fighting Shia rebels in a brief border war despite assurances that only rebel targets were hit.
Saudi Arabia fought Yemeni rebels for several months in a border war that ended with a ceasefire in February.
In public statements during the fighting, Saudi Arabia said that only rebel positions in the border area were attacked. But the leaked cables suggest civilians died.
“Obviously some civilians died, though we wish that this did not happen,” the prince, who is also assistant defence minister, said in the meeting requested by the ambassador to relay US concerns about civilian casualties in the conflict.
Prince Khaled confirmed that Saudi forces hit a building the United States believed to be a clinic but the Saudis thought it was being used as a base by rebels.
He also said the Yemeni military had helped recommend rebel targets, the cable said.The Saudi military used “massively disproportionate force” in a campaign last year against guerrillas seen by the army as “embarrassingly long,” according to another leaked cable.
“Day and night aerial bombardment and artillery shelling have been the main instruments of what is increasingly regarded within the Saudi military as an embarrassingly long campaign,” said the memo from the US embassy in Riyadh.
The three-month operation against the lightly armed Huthi guerrillas on the border areas with Yemen was also seen as “poorly planned and executed” and “brought unexpectedly high Saudi casualties”.
“Nonetheless, the conflict has been carefully spun as a heroic and successful struggle to protect Saudi sovereignty,” the memo added.
Britain faced threats from Libya of dire consequences if the ailing Lockerbie bomber died in a Scottish prison. Threats included the cessation of all British commercial activity in Libya and demonstrations against British facilities, as well as suggestions Britons in the country could be put at risk, according to the cables.
And despite London’s attempts to publicly distance itself from the decision to release Abdelbaset Ali Mohmet al-Megrahi — which was made by the devolved Scottish government — the cables show enormous British relief at the move.
Libyan officials warned their British counterparts that “consequences for the UK-Libya bilateral relationship would be dire were al-Megrahi to die in Scottish prison,” read one dispatch from the US ambassador to Tripoli in January 2009.
And if Washington publicly opposed the release, “the US Embassy and private Americans in Libya could face similar consequences,” read the cable from the ambassador, Gene A Cretz.
Megrahi was the only person ever convicted over the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am Jumbo jet over Lockerbie, Scotland, which killed 270 people, most of them US nationals.
He was released in August, 2009, on compassionate grounds after doctors diagnosed him with prostate cancer and gave him just three months to live, sparking outrage in the United States. More than a year later he remains alive in Tripoli, however, renewing anger in the US.
One cable showed Britain’s then justice minister, Jack Straw, told US diplomats that although Megrahi might have up to five years to live, the Scottish government appeared inclined to release him. “Megrahi could have as long as five years to live,” said the correspondence, cited in Britain’s Guardian newspaper.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

ROFL. These people are professionals in attracting embarrassment. Ye national dailys hain ya comics? :p

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

Some things which I knew personally but I never disclose the things which is against Pakistan.
Some things which I knew personally but I never disclose these things because I live in Rawalpindi just close to ................................................................
But ISI chief is really a good man. One of the reasons. His name is Pasha.
No actually he is quite different learned man. He belongs to a Pakistan loving family. His brother Brig Taj served Pakistan in a great way but I can not disclose it till retirement of Gen Pasha. This family didn't made money. Their children don't live beyond .......... like other ...........
I feel that he tried his best but the system is so complicated that reforms are not possible easily.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

Idiots.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

People who knew reading Urdu can know much more.
WikiLeaks Used for Army Propaganda?

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

ChaapaMaar qaum

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

The Blame Game has begun… Meanwhile Pakistani media has lost its credibility. Thanks to ISI/Army… Was Sajid made a scapegoat?

After a few days of Pakistani newspapers blaming each other for being the origin of fake WikiLeak reports, many of which disparaged India, it’s still unclear who exactly is to blame for the fabricated stories published last week.

The Online International News Network, a Pakistani news portal, said in a statement at the weekend that it fired online editor, Siddique Sajid, for fabricating a story based on purported U.S. diplomatic cables which showed India meddling in Pakistani affairs.

“The Online management regrets the release of the said story by Online, its subsequent publication by media and the consequent erosion of their public credibility,” Online said in a statement.

On Friday, Mr. Sajid had attempted to defend himself by saying he had simply lifted the “WikiLeaks” from The Daily Mail, another Pakistan newspaper.

Adding to the confusion, The Daily Mail, a vehemently anti-Indian news Website, appeared to stand by its report in a confusing statement posted last week.

“The Daily Mail takes immense pride and pleasure in leaking the actual American mindset about India,” said the paper in a statement it titled “Hats Off to the Nation.”

The incident is likely to further deepen suspicion in India over the role of Pakistan’s media in pushing conspiracy theories about India’s meddling in Pakistani affairs.
The Indian Express has this item today about The Daily Mail, which it says is “thought to be funded by the ISI,” Pakistan’s military spy agency.

The fake WikiLeaks reports were made-up diplomatic cables from the U.S. embassy in New Delhi.

One cable spoke of India’s role in fomenting insurgencies in Pakistan’s tribal regions and Baluchistan province. Another talked of rifts in India’s top army command and another of “Bosnia-like genocide” by the Indian army in Jammu and Kashmir state.
After appearing on Online, the documents were reported by leading Pakistani newspapers on Thursday.

The Express tribune and The News published front-page apologies Friday once it emerged the documents were fake. The News, an English-language daily which is part of the Jang Group of newspapers, apologized for printing an “unverified news item.”

It blamed Online, to which it subscribes, saying the publication of the news hurt its credibility.

http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/2010/12/13/confusion-over-origin-of-fake-pakistan-wikileaks/

The question remains why Pakistani newspapers are printing such stories without checking their veracity.

The error came to light when Britain’s Guardian newspaper reported it was unable to find reference on the whistle-blowing website to the WikiLeak documents reported in Pakistan.

India’s newspapers, meanwhile, are feeling rather smug after a month thatraised lots of doubts about Indian journalism as well.
On Saturday, the Times of India ran a headline saying: “Red-faced, Pak dailies regret fake India report.”](Red-faced, Pak dailies regret fake India report - Times of India)

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

I read somewhere...the editor of Online News has been fired...

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

May be . People beyond this all are qualified killers

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

lol, its what india does all the time, now there getting a taste of their own medicine.

anyway dnt let all that baffle you, this is from the same article written in the guardiam

[QUOTE]

But the real cables do contain allegations of Indian support for Baloch separatists, largely sourced to British intelligence assessments.
[/QUOTE]

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

so you found one storey which you say is true .

so it is fare to publish false news against india.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

india does it all the time so yes its ok to give them a taste of their own medicine

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

It's a big relief to know that India is not supporting separatism, insurgency and terrorism in Pak.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

I also heard that the 17 Indian Consulates in Afghan are really dance academies opened to teach Afghan boys Bharatnatyam.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

hadd hai besharmi ki false wiki leak is justified because india has consulates in afghanistan?

if any of your wild imagination born afghanistan based indian academy trained bharat natyam dancer afghan to kill pakistanis have been caught you are free to open bhangara or disco academy in kashmir but ensure they are not caught red handed killing right and left like kasab . but your image is being blackend by the false stories like wiki leaks ,dont point towards indian consulates or buissines establishments. your fake methods are very much open in front of international audiences. still you have time to eat the humble pie.

Re: Pakistani media publish fake WikiLeaks cables attacking India

---------------------cvabn-------------------

That would be some sight !! lmao

I thought they were aiding road building operations ,,? kkkk