Secret Pakistan Cable Documents U.S. Pressure to Remove Imran Khan

March 7, 2022 Pakistani Diplomatic Cypher (Transcription)

The Intercept is publishing the body of the cable below, correcting minor typos in the text because such details can be used to watermark documents and track their dissemination. The Intercept has removed classification markings and numerical elements that could be used for tracking purposes. Labeled “Secret,” the cable includes an account of the meeting between State Department officials, including Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs Donald Lu, and Asad Majeed Khan, who at the time was Pakistan’s ambassador to the U.S.

- Start of Cypher -

I had a luncheon meeting today with Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Donald Lu. He was accompanied by Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Les Viguerie. DCM, DA and Counsellor Qasim joined me.

At the outset, Don referred to Pakistan’s position on the Ukraine crisis and said that “people here and in Europe are quite concerned about why Pakistan is taking such an aggressively neutral position (on Ukraine), if such a position is even possible. It does not seem such a neutral stand to us.”
He shared that in his discussions with the NSC, “it seems quite clear that this is the Prime Minister’s policy.”
He continued that he was of the view that this was “tied to the current political dramas in Islamabad that he (Prime Minister) needs and is trying to show a public face.”

I replied that this was not a correct reading of the situation as Pakistan’s position on Ukraine was a result of intense interagency consultations. Pakistan had never resorted to conducting diplomacy in public sphere. The Prime Minister’s remarks during a political rally were in reaction to the public letter by European Ambassadors in Islamabad which was against diplomatic etiquette and protocol. Any political leader, whether in Pakistan or the U.S., would be constrained to give a public reply in such a situation.

I asked Don if the reason for a strong U.S. reaction was Pakistan’s abstention in the voting in the UNGA. He categorically replied in the negative and said that it was due to the Prime Minister’s visit to Moscow.

He said that “I think if the no-confidence vote against the Prime Minister succeeds, all will be forgiven in Washington because the Russia visit is being looked at as a decision by the Prime Minister. Otherwise, I think it will be tough going ahead.”
He paused and then said “I cannot tell how this will be seen by Europe but I suspect their reaction will be similar.”

He then said that “honestly I think isolation of the Prime Minister will become very strong from Europe and the United States.”
Don further commented that it seemed that the Prime Minister’s visit to Moscow was planned during the Beijing Olympics and there was an attempt by the Prime Minister to meet Putin which was not successful and then this idea was hatched that he would go to Moscow.

I told Don that this was a completely misinformed and wrong perception. The visit to Moscow had been in the works for at least few years and was the result of a deliberative institutional process. I stressed that when the Prime Minister was flying to Moscow, Russian invasion of Ukraine had not started and there was still hope for a peaceful resolution. I also pointed out that leaders of European countries were also traveling to Moscow around the same time.

Don interjected that “those visits were specifically for seeking resolution of the Ukraine standoff while the Prime Minister’s visit was for bilateral economic reasons.”
I drew his attention to the fact that the Prime Minister clearly regretted the situation while being in Moscow and had hoped for diplomacy to work. The Prime Minister’s visit, I stressed, was purely in the bilateral context and should not be seen either as a condonation or endorsement of Russia’s action against Ukraine. I said that our position is dictated by our desire to keep the channels of communication with all sides open. Our subsequent statements at the UN and by our Spokesperson spelled that out clearly, while reaffirming our commitment to the principle of UN Charter, non-use or threat of use of force, sovereignty and territorial integrity of States, and pacific settlement of disputes.

I also told Don that Pakistan was worried of how the Ukraine crisis would play out in the context of Afghanistan. We had paid a very high price due to the long-term impact of this conflict. Our priority was to have peace and stability in Afghanistan, for which it was imperative to have cooperation and coordination with all major powers, including Russia. From this perspective as well, keeping the channels of communication open was essential. This factor was also dictating our position on the Ukraine crisis. On my reference to the upcoming Extended Troika meeting in Beijing, Don replied that there were still ongoing discussions in Washington on whether the U.S. should attend the Extended Troika meeting or the upcoming Antalya meeting on Afghanistan with Russian representatives in attendance, as the U.S. focus right now was to discuss only Ukraine with Russia. I replied that this was exactly what we were afraid of. We did not want the Ukraine crisis to divert focus away from Afghanistan. Don did not comment.

I told Don that just like him, I would also convey our perspective in a forthright manner. I said that over the past one year, we had been consistently sensing reluctance on the part of the U.S. leadership to engage with our leadership. This reluctance had created a perception in Pakistan that we were being ignored and even taken for granted. There was also a feeling that while the U.S. expected Pakistan’s support on all issues that were important to the U.S., it did not reciprocate and we do not see much U.S. support on issues of concern for Pakistan, particularly on Kashmir. I said that it was extremely important to have functioning channels of communication at the highest level to remove such perception. I also said that we were surprised that if our position on the Ukraine crisis was so important for the U.S., why the U.S. had not engaged with us at the top leadership level prior to the Moscow visit and even when the UN was scheduled to vote. (The State Department had raised it at the DCM level.) Pakistan valued continued high-level engagement and for this reason the Foreign Minister sought to speak with Secretary Blinken to personally explain Pakistan’s position and perspective on the Ukraine crisis. The call has not materialized yet. Don replied that the thinking in Washington was that given the current political turmoil in Pakistan, this was not the right time for such engagement and it could wait till the political situation in Pakistan settled down.

I reiterated our position that countries should not be made to choose sides in a complex situation like the Ukraine crisis and stressed the need for having active bilateral communications at the political leadership level. Don replied that “you have conveyed your position clearly and I will take it back to my leadership.”

I also told Don that we had seen his defence of the Indian position on the Ukraine crisis during the recently held Senate Sub-Committee hearing on U.S.-India relations. It seemed that the U.S. was applying different criteria for India and Pakistan. Don responded that the U.S. lawmakers’ strong feelings about India’s abstentions in the UNSC and UNGA came out clearly during the hearing. I said that from the hearing, it appeared that the U.S. expected more from India than Pakistan, yet it appeared to be more concerned about Pakistan’s position. Don was evasive and responded that Washington looked at the U.S.-India relationship very much through the lens of what was happening in China. He added that while India had a close relationship with Moscow, “I think we will actually see a change in India’s policy once all Indian students are out of Ukraine.”

I expressed the hope that the issue of the Prime Minister’s visit to Russia will not impact our bilateral ties.

Don replied that “I would argue that it has already created a dent in the relationship from our perspective. Let us wait for a few days to see whether the political situation changes, which would mean that we would not have a big disagreement about this issue and the dent would go away very quickly. Otherwise, we will have to confront this issue head on and decide how to manage it.”
We also discussed Afghanistan and other issues pertaining to bilateral ties. A separate communication follows on that part of our conversation.

Assessment

Don could not have conveyed such a strong demarche without the express approval of the White House, to which he referred repeatedly. Clearly, Don spoke out of turn on Pakistan’s internal political process. We need to seriously reflect on this and consider making an appropriate demarche to the U.S. Cd’ A a.i in Islamabad.

- End of Cypher -

https://theintercept.com/2023/08/09/imran-khan-pakistan-cypher-ukraine-russia/
 
So the cypher details are here. We knew that the Americans hated IK but we didnt know Bajwa was fully on board. Last week Khwaja Asif said the Bajwa and Munir( who was the ISI chief at the time)were in contact to overthrow IK back in Apr 2019, offering Punjab straight away and the centre a few months later. Latif said we were forced to take power.

“All will be forgiven,” said a U.S. diplomat, if the no-confidence vote against Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan succeeds.

 
The contents of this are absolutely damning. This could change the entire landscape of our politics right now.

Most of the stuff here has been obvious since day 1. Everyone knew IK was getting on the US's bad side with him consistently undermining their demands. The Russia-Ukraine situation must've been the tipping point.
 
If Pakistan is known as Motherland, these people have sold out their own mothers to the US, a secular imperialist state.

The PDM and Generals will still have no shame and make up some lies.
 
If Pakistan is known as Motherland, these people have sold out their own mothers to the US, a secular imperialist state.

The PDM and Generals will still have no shame and make up some lies.
PK sold to criminals by criminal Generals working on Foreign agendas. History is unforgiving
 
If Pakistan is known as Motherland, these people have sold out their own mothers to the US, a secular imperialist state.

The PDM and Generals will still have no shame and make up some lies.

Just wait and see folks come out and still defend PDM and Generals.
Such a sorry state Pakistan has become!
 
The contents of this are absolutely damning. This could change the entire landscape of our politics right now.

Most of the stuff here has been obvious since day 1. Everyone knew IK was getting on the US's bad side with him consistently undermining their demands. The Russia-Ukraine situation must've been the tipping point.

This is normal modus operandi for the US. Send their diplomats to threaten other nations to tow the line or face consequences, in a school ground this would be bullying , in geo-politics its state terrorist threats.

We know about the US but Pakistanis selling out their nation even though they are thieves is still highly shameful. Even a poor nation like Niger, where the crazed woman Nuland went to threaten they laughed at her and told her to get the f out.

Imran did the right thing for his nation, Russia is the new power with the natural resources Pakistan needs. I'd wish Putin would send them(PDM , Generals) a message with laughing emojis and the word SLAVE.
 
Where are all those that called Kaptaan a liar. If we had a free press then this would be a national scandal and Bajwa, AZ and NS would be up for the noose.
 
Just wait and see folks come out and still defend PDM and Generals.
Such a sorry state Pakistan has become!

The KEY reason why Paksitan is a sorry state of affairs. When a large minority of people accept slavery, what is Imran Khan supposed to do?

I can understand those who are rich, scared of losing their ill gotten wealth but most are poor, struggling to pay bills , feed themselves. This is the ultimate tribal delusion.
 
What more needs to be said about a country where foreign powers can decide it's internal matters.
 
What more needs to be said about a country where foreign powers can decide it's internal matters.
Pakistan is one of many and for another thread but India is no different, apart from them not having an Imran Khan.

The Intercept have confirmed they received the document from an Army officer who is not pro or against Imran. An Army Coup may be brewing.
 
Pakistan is one of many and for another thread but India is no different, apart from them not having an Imran Khan.

The Intercept have confirmed they received the document from an Army officer who is not pro or against Imran. An Army Coup may be brewing.
Your Imran Khan has himself said in the past that no foreign power can dictate India’s internal matters.
 
Your Imran Khan has himself said in the past that no foreign power can dictate India’s internal matters.

Imran was trying to embarrass the crooks in power in Pakistan. If you read his detailed views, he clearly knows the partnership, strategy of US in India. "I think the Americans have decided that India is a strategic .." Of course we know its not a partnership, its US giving orders. India is a good puppet for its Anti-China strategy.

USA is a huge player in the world, it wants to dictate how others live. In Pakistan Imran is no good for them but in India Modi is just fine.

Now we wait for the PDM and Army to respond to this revelation.
 
Imran was trying to embarrass the crooks in power in Pakistan. If you read his detailed views, he clearly knows the partnership, strategy of US in India. "I think the Americans have decided that India is a strategic .." Of course we know its not a partnership, its US giving orders. India is a good puppet for its Anti-China strategy.

USA is a huge player in the world, it wants to dictate how others live. In Pakistan Imran is no good for them but in India Modi is just fine.

Now we wait for the PDM and Army to respond to this revelation.
"They (US) ordered India to not buy oil from Russia. India is US' strategic ally, Pakistan is not. Let us see what India's Foreign Minister said when the US asked them not to buy Russian oil."

Imran Khan then played out External Affairs Minister Jaishankar's video clip.

"Jaishankar is telling them who are you? Jaishakar said that Europe is buying gas from Russia and we will buy it as people need it. This is what an independent country is ('yeh hoti hai Azad Haqumat')," he said while praising India.
——————————————————-

No matter how hard you try to manipulate Imran’s words, the truth is there for all of us to see. A puppet country is someone who allowed the US to operate drones in it’s airspace, and bomb and kill it’s own citizens according to their whims and fancies.
 
It's true. PK under Millitary rule.

Its no excuse, journalism is only that if its independent. Why do these news channels bother to continue if they are only following orders reporting what is satisfactory to the traitors in power?

Most in Pakistan have smart phones now so the news cant be hidden.
 
"They (US) ordered India to not buy oil from Russia. India is US' strategic ally, Pakistan is not. Let us see what India's Foreign Minister said when the US asked them not to buy Russian oil."

Imran Khan then played out External Affairs Minister Jaishankar's video clip.

"Jaishankar is telling them who are you? Jaishakar said that Europe is buying gas from Russia and we will buy it as people need it. This is what an independent country is ('yeh hoti hai Azad Haqumat')," he said while praising India.
——————————————————-

No matter how hard you try to manipulate Imran’s words, the truth is there for all of us to see. A puppet country is someone who allowed the US to operate drones in it’s airspace, and bomb and kill it’s own citizens according to their whims and fancies.

Dude you're in cuckoo land.

India is part of the 'India Comprehensive Global and Strategic Partnership' .

This means your foriegn policy is dicated to by your Yank masters.

How did you think the Hindu extremists came to power in India? These non Hari Krishni , Saffron clad extremists have killed more of their fellow citizens than the drones have in Pakistan. Manipur is just the latest example.
 
Dude you're in cuckoo land.

India is part of the 'India Comprehensive Global and Strategic Partnership' .

This means your foriegn policy is dicated to by your Yank masters.

How did you think the Hindu extremists came to power in India? These non Hari Krishni , Saffron clad extremists have killed more of their fellow citizens than the drones have in Pakistan. Manipur is just the latest example.
Really? Then why did we buy oil from Russia despite the Yanks telling us not to?

Pakistanis speaking of saffron clad extremists, what has the world come to! A place where OBL was enjoying their hospitality, where a cricket team was attacked with guns and bombs, where suicide bombing doesn’t even surprises anyone anymore is speaking of Hindu extremism…..
 
Really? Then why did we buy oil from Russia despite the Yanks telling us not to?

Pakistanis speaking of saffron clad extremists, what has the world come to! A place where OBL was enjoying their hospitality, where a cricket team was attacked with guns and bombs, where suicide bombing doesn’t even surprises anyone anymore is speaking of Hindu extremism…..
Your bitterness towards Pakistan isnt the point here. It may please you to see attacks in Pakistan but more people will die by the hands of the RSS. The killings by them continue. Who needs foreign backed terrorists or foreign drones when the people themselves are ok to kill their own citizens.

Before Modi was elected, he was banned by the US. Nancy Powell went to meet him, knowing he would be good to do their bidding against China and also very good in their bidding to create communal hate, attacks. If it wasnt for Powell, Modi would be selling tea again.

I will leave this for another thread but the point is relevant, the US controls all Asian nations barring China/NK.
 
Your bitterness towards Pakistan isnt the point here. It may please you to see attacks in Pakistan but more people will die by the hands of the RSS. The killings by them continue. Who needs foreign backed terrorists or foreign drones when the people themselves are ok to kill their own citizens.

Before Modi was elected, he was banned by the US. Nancy Powell went to meet him, knowing he would be good to do their bidding against China and also very good in their bidding to create communal hate, attacks. If it wasnt for Powell, Modi would be selling tea again.

I will leave this for another thread but the point is relevant, the US controls all Asian nations barring China/NK.
Don't run away, now. I asked you a simple question. If the Yanks are our masters, why did we not listen to them and bought oil from Russia? Answer it, please.

As for Modi, we have seen what type of responce he has received in foreign countries over the years, which includes Islamic countries. Your opinion on him has as much significance as Imran's tenure as PM.
 
Don't run away, now. I asked you a simple question. If the Yanks are our masters, why did we not listen to them and bought oil from Russia? Answer it, please.

As for Modi, we have seen what type of responce he has received in foreign countries over the years, which includes Islamic countries. Your opinion on him has as much significance as Imran's tenure as PM.
What are you two on about?

Don't derail the topic of this thread with pointless off-topic arguments.
 
Don't run away, now. I asked you a simple question. If the Yanks are our masters, why did we not listen to them and bought oil from Russia? Answer it, please.

As for Modi, we have seen what type of responce he has received in foreign countries over the years, which includes Islamic countries. Your opinion on him has as much significance as Imran's tenure as PM.
Start a thread, Ill be happy to educate.
 
So PK media banned from discussion, all the lifafas waiting for a WhatsApp message on how to discredit the cypher
 
You can't, because you don't have an answer to my question. If you did, you would have given it here itself instead of asking me to open a new thread, which you know Mods won't allow.
Ive posted on the India thread, good luck.

Back on topic.

Pakistanis should make millions of copies and post on every corner of Pakistan.
 
So PK media banned from discussion, all the lifafas waiting for a WhatsApp message on how to discredit the cypher
That just gives this story more authenticity. Why would journos be asked not to report on this if it wasn't authentic? So far no one has reported on this, be it Dawn, Ary, Geo, Bol, or anyone else.

There's a clear ban on talking about this.
 
That just gives this story more authenticity. Why would journos be asked not to report on this if it wasn't authentic? So far no one has reported on this, be it Dawn, Ary, Geo, Bol, or anyone else.

There's a clear ban on talking about this.
But @Rana Sahib was telling me that the press was free and under IK they weren't.
 
Not surprised at all.

America wants puppets. Imran was not a puppet. So, they went after him.
 
WASHINGTON: In a startling revelation, a US-based news organisation has published what it claims is the text of a diplomatic cipher, sent to Islamabad last year by Pakistan’s former ambassador to the US and which former prime minister Imran Khan cited as proof of a US conspiracy to remove his government last year.

The purported cipher contained an account of a meeting between US State Department officials, including Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs Donald Lu, and Pakistani envoy Asad Majeed Khan, and was reproduced on Wednesday by The Intercept.

Dawn was unable to independently verify whether the contents of the cable reported by the US-based publication were indeed authentic.


Pakistan’s Foreign Office spokeswoman Mumtaz Zahra Baloch told Dawn the department “does not comment on alleged leaks”. Information Minister Marriyum Aurangzeb and Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal did not respond to requests for comment.

But the US State Department — while refraining from commenting on the veracity of the published cable — said its contents did not show the US taking a position on who the leader of Pakistan should be.

As per the purported contents of the cable, the US objected to Imran Khan’s foreign policy regarding the Ukraine war.

“Don[ald Lu] referred to Pakistan’s position on the Ukraine crisis and said that ‘people here and in Europe are quite concerned about why Pakistan is taking such an aggressively neutral position (on Ukraine), if such a position is even possible. It does not seem such a neutral stand to us.’ He shared that in his discussions with the NSC, ‘it seems quite clear that this is the prime minister’s policy’,” said the excerpt published by The Intercept.

In response, Asad Majeed Khan said that this was not a correct reading of the situation as Pakistan’s position on Ukraine was a result of intense interagency consultations.

“I asked Don[ald Lu] if the reason for a strong US reaction was Pakistan’s abstention in the voting in the UNGA [United Nations General Assembly]. He categorically replied in the negative and said that it was due to the Prime Minister’s visit to Moscow,” The Intercept quoted from the purported cable.

According to the text, Mr Lu then said “I think if the no-confidence vote against the Prime Minister succeeds, all will be forgiven in Washington because the Russia visit is being looked at as a decision by the Prime Minister. Otherwise, I think it will be tough going ahead.”

These words were ostensibly the threat that the former PM alluded to when he claimed there was a US conspiracy to overthrow his government.

“Obviously there is no conspiracy, but for a US official to use these words is unacceptable,” a senior diplomat commented, referring to Mr Lu’s remark that “all will be forgiven” if the vote of no confidence succeeds.

The purported text of the cable details how Asad Majeed Khan tried to dispel the impression that Mr Khan’s visit to the Russia was anything but a bilateral one that shouldn’t be seen as an endorsement of Moscow’s action against Ukraine. The ambassador also conveyed how there was also a “feeling that while the US expected Pakistan’s support on all issues that were important to the US, it did not reciprocate and we do not see much US support on issues of concern for Pakistan, particularly on Kashmir.

Asad Majeed Khan also asked the US diplomat that if Pakistan’s position on Ukraine was so important to Washington, why it had not engaged with Islamabad prior to the Russia visit by then-PM Imran Khan.

At this, Donald Lu replied that: “The thinking in Washington was that given the current political turmoil in Pakistan, this was not the right time for such engagement and it could wait till the political situation in Pakistan settled down.”

Subsequently, in his own assessment at the tail-end of the purported text of the cable, Asad Majeed Khan noted that Mr Lu could not have conveyed such a strong sentiment “without the express approval of the White House, to which he referred repeatedly.”

In the envoy’s own assessment, it was clear that Mr Lu “spoke out of turn on Pakistan’s internal political process. We need to seriously reflect on this and consider making an appropriate demarche” to the US charge d’affaires in Islamabad.

Timing and source

Although The Intercept has claimed in its report that they were provided with the document by an anonymous source in the Pakistani military “who said that they had no ties to Imran Khan or [Mr] Khan’s party,” many believe that the source of the leak could be the PTI itself.

The timing of the purported cable’s publication seems quite significant, as it comes in the wake of the imprisonment of Imran Khan over charges of graft in the Toshakhana case.

As per protocol, only a handful of key officials had access to the confidential document. These included the foreign minister, the prime minister and the army chief. After the document’s existence was first revealed by Mr Khan in a public meeting in Islamabad, a meeting of the National Security Committee was held in which the cipher’s contents were shared with the participants.

In addition, that is the question of a copy of the cipher which was provided to the prime minister. According to his former principal secretary Azam Khan, Mr Khan reportedly ‘misplaced’ his copy of the cipher, something the former PM also admitted. However, Mr Khan has claimed in subsequent interviews that there was no question of such a sensitive document being misplaced, and that the cipher was safe and sound at the Foreign Office.

‘Sinister, seditious act’

Meanwhile, in an indirect admission of the contents of the purported cipher published by Ther Intercept, Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah said, “Though there is nothing new in this story, the investigation needs to [be] held to establish the authenticity of the information or source document. Potentially, it is a very sinister, treacherous, and seditious act.”

In a tweet, the minister said that it should not be forgotten that Mr Khan had a copy of the cipher, which “he has not returned and has accepted (on record) that he misplaced or lost it. If proven guilty, Khan should be tried under the Official Secret Act”.

US State Department response

At a briefing on Wednesday, spokesperson Matthew Miller confirmed that Washington did “express concern privately to the government of Pakistan” and then did the same “publicly [when] then PM Khan [went] to Moscow on the very day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.”

While he refused to comment on the veracity of the document reproduced by The Intercept, Mr Miller said that these comments “in no way show the United States taking a position on who the leader of Pakistan ought to be… I think what they show is the US government expressing concern about the policies choices the PM was taking.”

“The allegations that the United States has interfered in internal decisions about the leadership of Pakistan are false, as we have stated they were false. They were always false and they remain false,” Mr Miller said at the State Department briefing.

When it was pointed out that the US had a history of ousting leaders in other countries and how the remarks may be construed as such, Mr Miller said: “I would say how those comments, number one, could be taken out of context and, number two, how people might desire for them to be taken out of context. They might try to use them to advance an agenda that is not represented by the countries themselves.”

He added: “I think a number of people have taken them out of context to use them in political process.”

US concern over current events

Before the publication of The Intercept story, White House national security spokesperson John Kirby said at a briefing on Wednesday that the United States is watching “with concern” events in Pakistan.

Reuters reported that Mr Kirby made these remarks after being asked about the situation in Pakistan, where former PM Imran Khan was recently imprisoned and there has been a spike in militant attacks.

“We’re obviously concerned about any actions, particularly violent actions, that can contribute to instability in Pakistan or frankly any other country with whom we share a set of common interests when it comes to counterterrorism, so we’re watching it with concern,” he said.

Published in Dawn, August 10th, 2023
 
The Americans lied, our Generals lied, the imported puppets lied, only IK told the truth. A fledgling democracy destroyed by a conspiracy that has caused chaos in PK. Thanks America, champions of democracy and freedom of speech
 
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has said that if the contents of a diplomatic cipher — sent to Islamabad last year by Pakistan’s former ambassador to the US and which former prime minister Imran Khan cited as proof of a conspiracy to remove his government — allegedly published in a US-based news organisation were true, it was tantamount to a “massive crime”.

The purported cipher contained an account of a meeting between US State Department officials, including Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs Donald Lu, and Pakistani envoy Asad Majeed Khan, and was reproduced on Wednesday by The Intercept.

As per the purported contents of the cable, the US objected to Imran Khan’s foreign policy regarding the Ukraine war.

Dawn was unable to independently verify whether the contents of the cable reported by the US-based publication were indeed authentic. But the US State Department — while refraining from commenting on the veracity of the published cable — said its contents did not show the US taking a position on who the leader of Pakistan should be.

Although The Intercept has claimed in its report that they were provided with the document by an anonymous source in the Pakistani military “who said that they had no ties to Imran Khan or [Mr] Khan’s party,” many believe that the source of the leak could be the PTI itself.

As per protocol, only a handful of key officials had access to the confidential document. These included the foreign minister, the prime minister and the army chief.

The timing of the purported cable’s publication also seems quite significant, as it comes in the wake of the imprisonment of Imran Khan over charges of graft in the Toshakhana case.

In an interview with WE News today, PM Shehbaz was asked if The Intercept story proved Imran’s claims regarding the cipher and the foreign conspiracy.

“The answer to your question is that two meetings of the National Security Committee were held on the cipher under my leadership. In one of the meetings, former ambassador and Foreign Secretary Asad Majeed clearly stated that there was no discussion of a conspiracy in his meeting with Donald Lu,” the outgoing premier said.

He said former army chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa and other service chiefs also confirmed that there was no conspiracy against Pakistan, adding that Majeed too had stated that there was no question of a conspiracy at all.

“Imran Niazi said that this conspiracy was hatched because of his growing relations with Russia … but we my government purchased cheap oil from Russia.

“If god forbid this government had come from a US conspiracy, then it would have been a moment of shame for us,” PM Shehbaz asserted.

He also recalled that Imran had himself retracted from his narrative and said that the US never hatched any conspiracy. “Will you consider Imran Niazi’s first statement genuine or the other one?” the prime minister asked, adding that the PTI chairman’s statements were poles apart.

Read more at

 
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has said that if the contents of a diplomatic cipher — sent to Islamabad last year by Pakistan’s former ambassador to the US and which former prime minister Imran Khan cited as proof of a conspiracy to remove his government — allegedly published in a US-based news organisation were true, it was tantamount to a “massive crime”.

The purported cipher contained an account of a meeting between US State Department officials, including Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs Donald Lu, and Pakistani envoy Asad Majeed Khan, and was reproduced on Wednesday by The Intercept.

As per the purported contents of the cable, the US objected to Imran Khan’s foreign policy regarding the Ukraine war.

Dawn was unable to independently verify whether the contents of the cable reported by the US-based publication were indeed authentic. But the US State Department — while refraining from commenting on the veracity of the published cable — said its contents did not show the US taking a position on who the leader of Pakistan should be.

Although The Intercept has claimed in its report that they were provided with the document by an anonymous source in the Pakistani military “who said that they had no ties to Imran Khan or [Mr] Khan’s party,” many believe that the source of the leak could be the PTI itself.

As per protocol, only a handful of key officials had access to the confidential document. These included the foreign minister, the prime minister and the army chief.

The timing of the purported cable’s publication also seems quite significant, as it comes in the wake of the imprisonment of Imran Khan over charges of graft in the Toshakhana case.

In an interview with WE News today, PM Shehbaz was asked if The Intercept story proved Imran’s claims regarding the cipher and the foreign conspiracy.

“The answer to your question is that two meetings of the National Security Committee were held on the cipher under my leadership. In one of the meetings, former ambassador and Foreign Secretary Asad Majeed clearly stated that there was no discussion of a conspiracy in his meeting with Donald Lu,” the outgoing premier said.

He said former army chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa and other service chiefs also confirmed that there was no conspiracy against Pakistan, adding that Majeed too had stated that there was no question of a conspiracy at all.

“Imran Niazi said that this conspiracy was hatched because of his growing relations with Russia … but we my government purchased cheap oil from Russia.

“If god forbid this government had come from a US conspiracy, then it would have been a moment of shame for us,” PM Shehbaz asserted.

He also recalled that Imran had himself retracted from his narrative and said that the US never hatched any conspiracy. “Will you consider Imran Niazi’s first statement genuine or the other one?” the prime minister asked, adding that the PTI chairman’s statements were poles apart.

Read more at

This buffoon had as much auqaat as a peon, and either he wouldn't have been Given a chance to see it and if he did see it, he committed a crime by not acting upon it.which is it loser
 
As expected they will all deny it and hope it goes away.

If Imran is released they will try to arrest him again for revealing state secrets, seeing him in a military court.

Poor chap sacrificed everything for Pakistanis, they have shown to be weak in support.
 
So we are not gonna discuss that the cipher waived by IK in the rally was different than what is being shown.

So who is lieing?
 
So we are not gonna discuss that the cipher waived by IK in the rally was different than what is being shown.

So who is lieing?

Don't think that is the issue any more.

It's clear that US made some moves on this. Concentrate on the bigger picture.
 
Sad, Americans have never been friends of Pakistan. It is sad to see that the army of a nuclear country can easily be purchased in exchange for receiving a few dollars. No wonder we Pakistanis are treated as third class citizens at international airports.

It is better not to think about Pakistan at all. That is the way to mental peace. It is a failed state and it is meant for ridicule by the elite class who have kidnapped the whole country for their self interests.

Back to Nawaz and Zardari daughters and sons then their daughters and sons.

I thank Allah Mian billion times that I have left Pakistan for good.
 
So we are not gonna discuss that the cipher waived by IK in the rally was different than what is being shown.

So who is lieing?

It was a summary not the actual document.

But of course the biggest crooks in Pakistani history Zardari and Sharifs are truthtellers . They've also said Pakistanis in a few years will be living a life of luxary.
 
Sad, Americans have never been friends of Pakistan. It is sad to see that the army of a nuclear country can easily be purchased in exchange for receiving a few dollars. No wonder we Pakistanis are treated as third class citizens at international airports.

It is better not to think about Pakistan at all. That is the way to mental peace. It is a failed state and it is meant for ridicule by the elite class who have kidnapped the whole country for their self interests.

Back to Nawaz and Zardari daughters and sons then their daughters and sons.

I thank Allah Mian billion times that I have left Pakistan for good.

There will be a mass exodus from Pakistan , the likes of which have not been seen before. Many sadly will die on boats towards Europe, while those remaining will live in poverty, huge inflation and under an extreme dictatorship.

The only hope is a coup with the Armed forces, similar to Niger. Problem is most in the forces live a great life, plenty of money and plenty of power. This supersedes any value they claim to have as Muslims.
 
So we are not gonna discuss that the cipher waived by IK in the rally was different than what is being shown.

So who is lieing?

We should be discussing why your party changed their position from “No Cypher” to “PTI leaked Cypher”.

We should be discussing why America was meddling in Pakistans internal affairs.

We should be discussing how you still believe that the IK was voted out through a VONC democratically with no help from the state.

We should be discussing how Pakistani pseudo liberals like yourself went from chanting “boot polisher” for four years to now being ok with the establishment running the country.
 
We should be discussing why your party changed their position from “No Cypher” to “PTI leaked Cypher”.

We should be discussing why America was meddling in Pakistans internal affairs.

We should be discussing how you still believe that the IK was voted out through a VONC democratically with no help from the state.

We should be discussing how Pakistani pseudo liberals like yourself went from chanting “boot polisher” for four years to now being ok with the establishment running the country.
This guy has the memory of a goldfish and what's worse that he waited for a narrative from the lifafas, who themselves get it WhatsApped to them by media cells. Billo said there was no Cypher, Hamid Mir and Najam Shitty both claimed to have seen it, Nani was so confused that she still doesn't know what it is and hilariously claimed that countries had stopped sending them 🤣🤣🤣🤣
The Generals denied it existed after IK was ousted but were part of the security meeting which sent the demarche to the Americans for interference. The only thing not clear at the time was that the whole thing was being planned from 2019, with Covid getting in their way. Khawaja Asif said he had secret meeting with Someone high up and that was either Bajwa or Munir( and as it was revealed last week when the arguments over the Caretaker PM took place you can be pretty assured that it was Munir).
 
It was a summary not the actual document.

But of course the biggest crooks in Pakistani history Zardari and Sharifs are truthtellers . They've also said Pakistanis in a few years will be living a life of luxary.
dont you see the contradictions in both docs?

someone is lieing, now you tell who is
 
There will be a mass exodus from Pakistan , the likes of which have not been seen before. Many sadly will die on boats towards Europe, while those remaining will live in poverty, huge inflation and under an extreme dictatorship.

The only hope is a coup with the Armed forces, similar to Niger. Problem is most in the forces live a great life, plenty of money and plenty of power. This supersedes any value they claim to have as Muslims.
Thats true. I heard that Canada is easing up their visa policy and processing time towards Pakistan. Now getting appointments is not easy as it seems everyone is trying to go there and applicants are going Dubai for their biometric appointments since the appoinments in Pakistan are already booked.

You can not blame them. To be honest, there is nothing left. Media is controlled. People are gtting locked up. Seems Adolf Hitler is back in full force.

I am still hoping for a divine intervation in favor of Imran come next elections but really the same old Pakistan is back.

People are dying due to inflation and poverty on the other hand Army chiefs are having a holiday in France.

Do they even care if they have to die one day?
 
Thats true. I heard that Canada is easing up their visa policy and processing time towards Pakistan. Now getting appointments is not easy as it seems everyone is trying to go there and applicants are going Dubai for their biometric appointments since the appoinments in Pakistan are already booked.

You can not blame them. To be honest, there is nothing left. Media is controlled. People are gtting locked up. Seems Adolf Hitler is back in full force.

I am still hoping for a divine intervation in favor of Imran come next elections but really the same old Pakistan is back.

People are dying due to inflation and poverty on the other hand Army chiefs are having a holiday in France.

Do they even care if they have to die one day?

Unless there is an Iran 1979 style uprising, even Imran coming back into power will not make much difference. Even the judges, police are scared of the people in power who have guns and all institutions under their grip.
 
Its simply sad that we have a significant proof that internal matters of Pakistan were not only meddled into but were pressured into a change. Yet our domestic folks are more concerned about the version of document being waved or source of this leak.

It's a shame to see that folks in general public, journalists, bureaucrats and other people in relative power have such a tunnel vision of hate against Imran Khan that they have rendered themselves value less. For these people any propaganda or hate against Imran Khan is more valuable than sovereignty of the country or their morals.
 
We should be discussing why your party changed their position from “No Cypher” to “PTI leaked Cypher”.

We should be discussing why America was meddling in Pakistans internal affairs.

We should be discussing how you still believe that the IK was voted out through a VONC democratically with no help from the state.

We should be discussing how Pakistani pseudo liberals like yourself went from chanting “boot polisher” for four years to now being ok with the establishment running the country.
This message will be conveniently ignored :) you guys are wasting your time. If there are still PDM supporters after everything that has transpired over the last year there is really no hope for them and no matter what facts you show them they're too blinded by hate and arrogance to change their mind.

@controversial_man is spot on. There is no hope for this country. The people get what they deserve and I hope they enjoy every bit of PDMs legacy while millions more of their fellow countrymen become impoverished and uneducated every year and the rest of the world moves ahead. Hijrah from such an oppressive state is the only option for the common man.

---


The real focus, however, must be on the role of the PDM coalition. Blinded by its hatred of Imran Khan, the ruling coalition has voluntarily destroyed the little power Parliament had. It has played an active role in disenfranchising the people of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and paved the way for a delay in elections beyond the constitutional limit.

That the party which claims to have given the Constitution to Pakistan has paired with the party that until recently talked about vote ko izzat do to undermine constitutional democratic rule in Pakistan can never be forgotten. In their twilight years, Nawaz Sharif and Asif Ali Zardari have both destroyed their legacy and their parties’ reputation, perhaps beyond repair.
 
This message will be conveniently ignored :) you guys are wasting your time. If there are still PDM supporters after everything that has transpired over the last year there is really no hope for them and no matter what facts you show them they're too blinded by hate and arrogance to change their mind.

@controversial_man is spot on. There is no hope for this country. The people get what they deserve and I hope they enjoy every bit of PDMs legacy while millions more of their fellow countrymen become impoverished and uneducated every year and the rest of the world moves ahead. Hijrah from such an oppressive state is the only option for the common man.

---


The real focus, however, must be on the role of the PDM coalition. Blinded by its hatred of Imran Khan, the ruling coalition has voluntarily destroyed the little power Parliament had. It has played an active role in disenfranchising the people of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and paved the way for a delay in elections beyond the constitutional limit.

That the party which claims to have given the Constitution to Pakistan has paired with the party that until recently talked about vote ko izzat do to undermine constitutional democratic rule in Pakistan can never be forgotten. In their twilight years, Nawaz Sharif and Asif Ali Zardari have both destroyed their legacy and their parties’ reputation, perhaps beyond repair.
I used to believe this as well, but I've altered my view slightly down the years. I'm not sure the people of Pakistan have much say in the big decisions, the only time they have any real power is during elections, and even those are neutralised by trumped up charges against govt leaders when it suits outside powers who can buy off a General or two.

Pakistan awam are mere puppets dancing according to the whims of others. They aren't given an opportunity to rectify mistakes, if the elections had been held on schedule, most reckon that Imran Khan would have swept to power. So he was removed and more pliant and servile leaders planted into govt in his place. Now the country is at the service of foreign powers regardless of what the people wish.
 
WASHINGTON: The authenticity of the purported text of a diplomatic cable — detailing a meeting held last year between Pakistan’s then-ambassador to the US and senior State Department officials — seems to have become a massive bone of contention.

While Pakistan’s Foreign Office has refrained from commenting on the leaks, an artfully diplomatic comment by US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller during a recent briefing has piqued interest in the question of the purported leak’s provenance.

US-based news outlet The Intercept, which earlier this week reproduced what it claimed was the cipher in question, said in its report that the document was provided to it by “an anonymous source in the Pakistani military who said that they had no ties to Imran Khan or Khan’s party”.


However, many people — mostly Mr Khan’s critics — insist that the leak could only have come from the PTI.

Even the outgoing foreign minister, Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, believes that the document published by The Intercept was “inauthentic”. Pointing to the timing of the purported leak, he told Dawn that the military did not even have access to the diplomatic cable.

The Foreign Office follows a “very strict protocol” and shares such cables only with the prime minister, the foreign minister, the head of the country’s spy agency, and a few others, Mr Bhutto-Zardari told Dawn, adding that all cables are then returned to the Foreign Office.

Since the publication of the purported cable, journalists from The Intercept have been engaging with naysayers who have been casting doubts on the veracity or source of the diplomatic cable, challenging them to provide proof for their claims about the origin of the purported document.

In the original report, several lines are devoted to the provenance of the document — as if the writers knew in advance that they would face questions on this front.

“The Intercept’s source, who had access to the document as a member of the military, spoke of their growing disillusionment with the country’s military leadership, the impact on the military’s morale following its involvement in the political fight against Khan,” the news organisation said in its Aug 9 story.

However, Mr Bhutto-Zardari echoed the suspicions voiced by this cabinet colleague — outgoing interior minister Rana Sanaullah — saying that only one copy of the cable had gone missing, “the one given to the then PM [Imran Khan], who even told the media he lost it”.

“So, either the leak is fake, or it came from [Imran]. Perhaps, Imran Khan said to his supporters that if I go to jail, leak this cable to claim I went to jail because America wanted it. And if it came from him, then it’s a clear violation of the Official Secrets Act and he should be tried for it.”

Mr Bhutto-Zardari also noted that the publishers had not shown anything so far to authenticate the purported leak. “Anything can be typed up on a piece of paper. No one can say what was there in the telegram and what was not. Without authentication, it does not have any value. It should be verified first,” he said.

Evidence of conspiracy?

There is also a great deal of debate over whether the purported text of the cable actually provides evidence of a conspiracy against Mr Khan’s government.

According to Mr Miller of the State Department, “It is not in any way the US government expressing a preference on who the leadership of Pakistan ought to be.”

During a briefing held after the publication of The Intercept story, when a journalist asked whether the spokesperson was saying that the substance of this report was accurate, but it did not represent US views, Mr Miller responded with: “Close-ish.”

Describing the “close-ish” comment as “a diplomatic term of art”, the journalist asked him what it meant.

“I’ll explain what I mean by that, which is I cannot speak to the veracity of this document. What I can say (is that) even if those comments were hundred per cent accurate as reported, which I do not know them to be — they do not in any way show a representative of the State Department taking a position on who the leadership ought to be,” Mr Miller said.

This view seems to be shared by others in the diplomatic community. Prof Touqir Hussain, a former Pakistani diplomat who currently teaches diplomacy and foreign policy at Georgetown and Johns Hopkins universities, told Dawn that he did not see any element of “conspiracy” or a “specific threat” in the contents of the cipher published by The Intercept.

“[There is] a warning certainly in a language that superpowers often use to seek compliance from a country dependent on their support. That aside, it is normal for diplomats to complain about other countries’ policies and sometimes take exception to the statements made by political leaders,” he told Dawn.

In a thread on X (formerly Twitter), George Mason University associate professor Ahsan I. Butt also notes that the cipher “does not suggest the US was pushing for regime change, only that it would be happy/happier when it happened. There is a significant difference between those positions.”

In addition, Pakistan’s former ambassador to the US, Husain Haqqani, also tweeted: “How does a US diplomat telling a Pakistani diplomat that my government does not like your prime minister & relations might improve once he goes, constitute ‘pressure to remove’ him? [And] what is the threat?”

Even Michael Kugelman, the Wilson Centre’s outspoken Pakistan scholar, noted that the document “merely proves what’s already been reported: The US said ties with Pakistan would improve if Khan lost power”.

This opinion, however, is not shared by Mr Khan’s supporters, who insist that Ambassador Asad Majeed Khan’s own endnote in the purported cipher — where he expresses concern over the language used by US official Donald Lu and suggests a demarche to the US charge d’affaires in Islamabad — proves that a conspiracy did indeed exist.

This view has also found favour among those disillusioned with the US foreign policy, and many examples of Washington’s meddling in the affairs of other countries. Nations in South and Central America, as well as in the Middle East, have been cited as precedents for such suspicions.

Timeline of events

As for the PTI’s claim that Washington orchestrated the last year’s no-confidence vote that ousted Imran Khan, Mr Bhutto-Zardari told Dawn: “On Jan 5, 2022, we discussed the long march and the vote of no confidence at our central executive committee. I announced the planned vote at my long march (held between Feb 25 and Mar 7), and on March 8 we moved the no-confidence motion.”

He said the plan to table the no-trust vote had already been made public and was discussed in the Pakistani media long before Donald Lu met Ambassador Asad Majeed Khan. “So, it could not have been a conspiracy, as it was already public knowledge,” he added.

Asked if the leaked cable could influence voters in the forthcoming elections, the outgoing foreign minister said: “Those who trust this narrative will vote for it. Those who do not, they will not.”

The leaked document, he said, could give “the PTI narrative a second wind before it dies down again”.
 
Baby Bhutto should really not be commenting on these matters, it only erodes what little credibility the puppet administration has. Now I will have to search for those Mehroz dancing videos on Youtube.
 
So IKs assertion was true all along. The Americans wanted a minus one formula which are crooked Generals played their full part in implementing. The Americans can never accept a Muslim leader that stands up to them
 
And as expected....

The Federal Investigation Authority (FIA) Counter Terrorism Wing has registered a case against the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chairman for allegedly missing a copy of the diplomatic cipher, ARY News reported.
 
And as expected....

The Federal Investigation Authority (FIA) Counter Terrorism Wing has registered a case against the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chairman for allegedly missing a copy of the diplomatic cipher, ARY News reported.
From that alone you can tell these criminals are getting more and more desperate. Both Hamid Mir and Najam Sethi told they had a copy
 
The US Congress should look at the allegedly leaked cipher about former prime minister Imran Khan’s ousting when it returns from summer recess, says a former US national security adviser John Bolton.

In an interview with VOA broadcasting service, recorded this week, Mr Bolton said he “worries about” the Biden administration’s foreign policy about South Asia because “it’s not clearly defined”.

Asked if the language used in the cipher was usual for a State Department official, the former Trump and Bush administrations official said he saw the report published by The Intercept news site and noted that it was about “an effort to get Pakistan’s support” against Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

“I would be stunned if that’s exactly what they said. It would be remarkable for the State Department, under any administration, but particularly under the Biden administration, to be calling for Imran Khan’s overthrow.”

DAWN
 
The ongoing investigation into the cipher case took a dramatic turn on Saturday when PTI Vice Chairman Shah Mehmood Qureshi was picked up soon after he demanded that a level playing field be provided to the embattled party during the upcoming elections.

The arrest was made in connection with the FIR — a copy of which is available with Dawn — registered on Aug 15 under the Official Secrets Act against PTI Chairman and former prime minister Imran Khan and the former foreign minister.

The case was registered after an American news outlet The Intercept recently published what was claimed to be the diplomatic cable which had reportedly gone missing from Mr Khan’s possession.

Mr Khan, who was interrogated by FIA a few days ago in the cipher case in Attock jail where he was lodged after his conviction in the Toshakhana case, claimed he was ousted from office last year under a “US conspiracy”. The PTI alleges that cipher contained the threat from the United States to oust Mr Khan from power.

Addressing a news conference at National Press Club minutes before his arrest, Mr Qureshi called for the caretaker government, Chief Justice of Pakistan and Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to ensure a level playing field for the PTI during the forthcoming polls.

 
The ex-Pakistani prime minister had many failings. But a recent leaked cable regarding Imran Khan’s military-backed ouster lays bare how the US government uses its power to influence events around the world and how the mainstream press conceals this from the public.

T
he saga of ousted Pakistani prime minister Imran Khan is a perfect case study in the way that US power functions in the world, and how the propaganda that’s used to conceal that power is shaped to mislead the general public.

Khan, a former cricket superstar who since his 2018 election win has butted heads with the US government over, among other things, using Pakistan as a launching pad for drone strikes, was removed from the presidency by a no-confidence vote in April 2022, partly fueled by Khan’s attempt to reappoint a friendly spy chief in advance of a coming election against the wishes of the country’s powerful military, partly by disillusionment among his coalition partners over his government’s failings. Those failings were legitimate and very real, including imposing International Monetary Fund–driven austerity after having vowed to avoid the organization.

In any case, Khan has said that the vote was part of a US plot to oust him even before it was held, an accusation he continued to repeat for the next year and a half. Khan claimed to have a document, a copy of a Pakistani diplomatic cable he couldn’t publicly show for fear of revealing government secrets, that showed assistant US secretary of state for the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs Donald Lu pressuring Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States over the no-confidence vote due to Khan’s entreaties to Russia, while warning that leaving him in power would isolate Pakistan from the Western world.

Everyone involved denied it. The Pakistani military did, the country’s information minister and opposition party politician did (“fake propaganda”), and so did the US government, strenuously so. Washington denied Khan’s allegation at least three separate times: deputy State Department spokesperson Vedant Patel insisted “there is not and there has never been a truth to” it, the department’s senior advisor and spokesperson Ned Price called it “propaganda, misinformation, and disinformation — lies,” and spokesperson Matthew Miller said the US government “does not have a position on one political candidate or party versus another in Pakistan.”

The media quickly followed suit, accusing Khan of having simply invented the tale as a cynical ruse to stay in power and widely charging him with shopping around a “conspiracy theory” — a term that’s literally accurate, given that Khan was alleging a foreign conspiracy to oust him, but which in today’s political discourse is a close cousin of “misinformation,” one that effectively means “absurd and nefarious lie.”

Most of this commentary followed the same broad pattern: no evidence had yet emerged for Khan’s claims, and the potentially guilty parties had denied it, so it must not be true; Khan was deliberately spreading an anti-American conspiracy to play to his political base, knowing they would have purchase in Pakistan’s political culture given drone bombings and other long-standing outrages created by US involvement; and that it was ridiculous to think the United States had the power or inclination to do this. Often, a think tank fellow or US-friendly diplomat would be quoted making one or more of these points, lending them authority firmly establishing it an open and shut case.

All of these elements found their way into the Asia Research Centre’s Krzysztof Iwanek’s April 2022 piece in the Diplomat on the subject, which also picks apart the timeline of events to claim that not only could it not have happened, but that it couldn’t have had any connection with Khan’s February 24, 2022, flight to Moscow. “Khan seems to suggest that Washington is capable of changing a government in Islamabad if the US does not like Pakistan’s foreign policy,” he wrote. “But a quick review of relations reveals this as merely fantasy.”

“There was no US conspiracy against Khan,” Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)’s Center for International Studies research fellow Maham Javaid wrote in the Boston Globe. Khan had simply “turned fiction into fact, at least for his followers.” He was simply “trying to tap into anti-American sentiments to mobilize support” despite having not “a shred of evidence” for his claim, former Pakistan ambassador to the United States and UN Maleeha Lodhi was quoted saying by CNN. “This is nonsense,” wrote Hamid Mir in the Washington Post.

In Haaretz, Hamza Azhar Salam called it an “inescapable conclusion” that Khan had simply invented a conspiracy theory that’s not only anti-American but antisemitic (though the latter was never explained). The Wall Street Journal went further, not just calling Khan’s claim a “conspiracy ploy,” but suggesting that Khan’s diplomatic cable was faked by his team.

Fast-forward a year and a bit. Earlier this month, the Intercept published that very cable in full, leaked to the outlet by a source in the Pakistani military uneasy with its role in Khan’s ouster and the political crackdown that followed, and which is closely in line with what Khan had publicly argued.

According to the cable, Lu pointed to Khan’s visit to Moscow while raising concerns “about why Pakistan is taking such an aggressively neutral position (on Ukraine),” adding that “it seems quite clear that this is the Prime Minister’s policy.” Lu then mentioned that “if the no-confidence vote against the Prime Minister succeeds, all will be forgiven in Washington,” but warned that “it will be tough going ahead” if Khan remained in power, and that “isolation of the prime minister will become very strong from Europe and the United States.”

In sum, Khan’s maximalist charge — that the entire no-confidence vote was orchestrated by Washington as part of a plot to shunt him from power — is, at least by the evidence released so far, an overstatement. But the US State Department did clearly make use of the existing no-confidence vote, which was born in the first place from Khan’s domestic failings and Pakistan’s internal political machinations, to lean on its government by making a mob boss–like threat, to ensure the vote went the way it wanted.

On top of that, it did so precisely because of Khan’s visit to Moscow and his neutral position on the Ukraine war, a position which Washington at the time was, largely unsuccessfully, trying to dissuade much of the world from taking.

This isn’t surprising. The United States is the world’s most powerful country, its biggest economy, leads a powerful military alliance that is itself one of the world’s biggest and one of its most well-funded military forces, and funds even just the CIA with an amount equivalent to or more than some countries’ GDP. It gives billions of dollars of aid to Pakistan and has a close relationship with its military and security services.

Maybe most importantly, its government has meddled in other countries’ elections dozens of times and even outwardly brags about pulling the strings of political events around the world. Knowing all this, it’s more absurd to believe the United States doesn’t have the ability or inclination to influence political events in Pakistan than to believe it does. And the strenuous State Department denials that there was any US role in this suggest that the Joe Biden administration well understands that Lu’s comments to the ambassador weren’t meaningless and innocent.

Yet as we can see, many commentators — often highly credentialed voices with powerful institutional backing who are published in influential establishment news outlets — rushed to categorically dismiss the idea as fantastical and false and to declare anyone who advanced it as outside the bounds of seriousness. They were themselves spreading misinformation at the same time they were claiming to be correcting the record, taking a strident, absolute position on something that, at that point, it was impossible for them to know with full certainty was true or false.

And because there’s rarely any professional consequences in US media for these kinds of errors if they happen to line up with US government interests, everyone involved will simply move on. Some, in fact, are choosing to double down.

There is a style of dissenting commentary, usually on the Left, that too readily accepts claims of US culpability before all the evidence is out, while sometimes overstating US involvement and level of control of events around the world. But the opposite is far more widespread: commentators and political figures who presume the fact that evidence hasn’t yet surfaced (or simply ignore it if it does) means any such claims are obviously untrue and absurd, and that we should rule them out from the get-go — even though we have a mountain of examples from recent and distant history of the US government carrying out coups, fomenting unrest, and trying to engineer regime change, with documentary evidence often taking years to surface.

There’s one final irony to this. The Biden administration has cast the war over which it pushed for Khan’s ouster as one being waged against imperialism and on behalf of democracy, national sovereignty, and a “rules-based international order.” Yet here the administration is injecting itself into another country’s domestic political dispute and using its sole-superpower status to exert pressure so that it gets the political outcome it wants.

It’s as clear-cut a violation as you can get of every one of these principles. But it does fit neatly with the principle that, sadly, still more or less governs the world: powerful states can more or less do whatever they want on the world stage.

 
The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) again interrogated detained PTI chief Imran Khan in Attock Jail on Saturday in a case related to a diplomatic cable that reportedly went missing from his custody.

FIA sources said a six-member joint investigation team, led by FIA Deputy Director Ayaz Khan, met Mr Khan in the office of the jail’s deputy superintendent and interrogated the former prime minister for over an hour.

Earlier, FIA’s counter terrorism wing registered a case over the cipher, which reportedly went missing from the official record of the Prime Minister’s Office, sources said.

The cipher in question was the same document Mr Khan waved last year in an Islamabad rally days before the ouster of his government, describing it as proof of a US-backed conspiracy to remove him from power because of his stance on Russia.

DAWN
 
The hearing of cypher case against PTI Chairman Imran Khan will be held at Attock Jail on Wednesday (today).

According to a notification issued by the Ministry of Law and Justice, the case will be heard by Judge Abul Hasnat Zulqarnain of the special court established under the Secret Act at the prison.
 
A special court established under the Official Secrets Act Wednesday extended Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan's judicial remand by 14 days in the case pertaining to the missing cipher.

The court's decision, issued by Judge Abual Hasnat Zulqarnain, came after its hearing took place at the Attock District Jail following approval by the Law Ministry amid security concerns

Meanwhile, Shah Mahmood Qureshi will also be produced at the judicial complex in relation to the cipher case today after his two-day remand is completed today, the sources said.
 
A special court established under the Official Secrets Act Wednesday extended Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan's judicial remand by 14 days in the case pertaining to the missing cipher.

The court's decision, issued by Judge Abual Hasnat Zulqarnain, came after its hearing took place at the Attock District Jail following approval by the Law Ministry amid security concerns

Meanwhile, Shah Mahmood Qureshi will also be produced at the judicial complex in relation to the cipher case today after his two-day remand is completed today, the sources said.
A law that doesn't exist is bring used against IK. Crooked Generals are getting more and more desperate and don't know what to do. And bear the oil price is at 85, if it goes up then the Rp will crash and inflation, that is already suffocating PKs will kill them
 
He’ll be found guilty in the cypher case, jailed for 4+ years. Judge will go on a holiday shortly after. Case will be suspended after a month. Another case will open, jailed for 4 years, judge has a heart attack after the sentencing, case suspended by SC.

The kinda stuff you’d see in countries like Nigeria🤣
 
Special court sends Qureshi to Adiala Jail on 14-day judicial remand in cipher case.

A special court in Islamabad, recently established to hear cases filed under the Official Secrets Act, on Wednesday sent PTI Vice-Chairman Shah Mahmood Qureshi on a 14-day judicial remand in the cipher case.

During the hearing, prosecutor Naqvi urged the court to grant the FIA further physical remand of the PTI leader, which the court rejected and instead, sent the PTI vice chairman back to the Adiala jail on a 14-day judicial remand.

 
ISLAMABAD: A special court hearing cases registered under the Official Secrets Act on Saturday adjourned the proceedings on the bail application filed by former prime minister and PTI Chairman Imran Khan in the cipher case till Sept 4.

Judge Abual Hasnat Zulqarnain of the special court heard the case. During the hearing, PTI chairman’s lawyer Salman Safdar complained to the judge that the Attock Jail authorities are creating obstacles for the PTI lawyers. Every time the PTI lawyers go to Attock Jail, they have to walk one and a half kilometers, he added.

 
If President not sign in the law then how special court is legal?

Just think why Pakistani people stand with Imran Khan
 
Special Court Judge Abual Hasnat Zulqarnain, who is hearing the cipher case against PTI Chairman Imran Khan and Vice Chairman Shah Mahmood Qureshi, is on leave, it emerged on Monday.

On September 2, the hearings on the bail pleas of Imran and Qureshi were adjourned till today since the validity of the special court was under scrutiny in the IHC.

Speaking to the media in Islamabad today, Imran’s lawyer Naeem Haider Panjotha said that when the legal team arrived at the court premises, they found out that Judge Zulqarnain was on leave for a week.

According to Dawn.com’s correspondent, the judge is on leave till September 9 (Saturday).

The lawyer further said that the legal team requested Administrative Judge Raja Jawad Abbas to preside over the case but he refused to do so as he was not authorised to hear the case.

The lawyer said that due to his request not being accepted, the legal team withdrew the plea. He said they would now approach the IHC seeking an answer as to who was the relevant judge to hear the case while the special court judge was on leave.

 
When you finally get your day in court and the judge decides it's the perfect time for a vacation.
Wonder if this was in the planner or just a coincidence?
 
It is clear that the message being sent is not to clash with the state, and what we desire will happen.
 
A law that doesn't exist is bring used against IK. Crooked Generals are getting more and more desperate and don't know what to do. And bear the oil price is at 85, if it goes up then the Rp will crash and inflation, that is already suffocating PKs will kill them
Could you expand on this please? The part "A law that doesn't exist..."

I am genuinely curious.
 
Could you expand on this please? The part "A law that doesn't exist..."

I am genuinely curious.
Long story but the short version is that all bills go to the president and he has to sign them before the Parliament can approve it..if he doesn't sign it the first time it should automatically go back to parliament for.amendments. when it returns he has 10 days to sign. If he doesn't it becomes law.automatically.

Pakistan currently has no parliament so no bill can be ratified...

The current govt claims he signed it the first time thus making it a law..but the president has categorically denied this and thus this bill cannot be a law..therefore you cant try someone under a bill..it has to be made a law.first..
 
Long story but the short version is that all bills go to the president and he has to sign them before the Parliament can approve it..if he doesn't sign it the first time it should automatically go back to parliament for.amendments. when it returns he has 10 days to sign. If he doesn't it becomes law.automatically.

Pakistan currently has no parliament so no bill can be ratified...

The current govt claims he signed it the first time thus making it a law..but the president has categorically denied this and thus this bill cannot be a law..therefore you cant try someone under a bill..it has to be made a law.first..
Ah ok, so the secrets act mentioned is not actually a law in Pakistan?

That sounds very suspicious.
 
Cipher controversy: Monitoring situation closely: US

WASHINGTON: The US Department of State reiterated on Tuesday that it has been monitoring the situation related to the cipher case closely.

Responding to a question during a press briefing that if the US Congress had asked for an investigation into the cipher allegations, the State Department deputy principal spokesperson said, “We consult with our congressional partners on a number of issues.

I am certainly not gonna speak to something like that to specificity.” The spokesperson then added that the United States was monitoring the situation closely.

To another question about Pakistani Americans visas being denied by Pakistani authorities, the spokesperson maintained that if there were any issues that arise in this area, “it certainly would be something for Pakistani consular officials to speak to, and not anything that relates to the State Department.”

 
Long story but the short version is that all bills go to the president and he has to sign them before the Parliament can approve it..if he doesn't sign it the first time it should automatically go back to parliament for.amendments. when it returns he has 10 days to sign. If he doesn't it becomes law.automatically.

Pakistan currently has no parliament so no bill can be ratified...

The current govt claims he signed it the first time thus making it a law..but the president has categorically denied this and thus this bill cannot be a law..therefore you cant try someone under a bill..it has to be made a law.first..
What does this article mean?
 
What does this article mean?
It appears there is a dispute regarding the status of a particular bill and whether it has become law. The legislative process described aligns with the typical procedures in many parliamentary systems, where bills passed by the legislature require the president's approval to become law.

In this situation, the discrepancy between the government's claim that the bill was signed and the president's denial has created uncertainty about the bill's status. Legal and constitutional disputes like this can be complex and may require resolution through the legal system, such as through the courts or other constitutional mechanisms.
 
It appears there is a dispute regarding the status of a particular bill and whether it has become law. The legislative process described aligns with the typical procedures in many parliamentary systems, where bills passed by the legislature require the president's approval to become law.

In this situation, the discrepancy between the government's claim that the bill was signed and the president's denial has created uncertainty about the bill's status. Legal and constitutional disputes like this can be complex and may require resolution through the legal system, such as through the courts or other constitutional mechanisms.
My point with the article was that the President did sign the bill. Who says he did not? I couldn't find any news on that.
 
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