by Muhammad Bilal Iftikhar khan
Pakistan is currently under a sophisticated information
attack. In such an environment, vigilance is not merely a civic duty but a
prerequisite for national security. The convergence of Indian and Israeli
strategic interests, supported logistically and diplomatically by the United
States, has created a formidable nexus whose information operations
increasingly target Pakistan's internal cohesion, international standing, and
strategic partnerships.
A recent episode involving a statement by US
President Donald Trump illustrates precisely how this nexus operates and why
critical discourse analysis is essential for defending against psychological
warfare.
Bloomberg reported that there is no evidence to support a
claim made by Trump. According to tracking systems monitoring the Strait of
Hormuz, no tankers or ships matching the description he provided passed through
the strategic waterway.
The original claim was as follows: Iran had
"gifted" him ten oil tankers, which, he asserted, crossed the Strait
of Hormuz under the Pakistani flag.
At first glance, the statement appeared bizarre. Some
dismissed it as delusional. However, as President of the United States, nothing
a sitting (or former) president utters is accidental. Such statements are
rarely personal unconventionalities; they are almost always scripted,
intentional, and designed to achieve specific strategic effects. Notably, no
serious political opposition has moved to challenge him on this matter,
suggesting that his actions, however unconventional, enjoy the tacit consent of
America's ruling and strategic elite.
Trump's rhetoric often aligns with the "Madman
Theory" popularized by Richard Nixon, a psychological strategy of
cultivating an image of unpredictability to keep adversaries off-balance. When
a leader makes a factually absurd claim, the intent is often to send a coded
signal: I operate outside conventional diplomacy; provoke me at your own risk.
However, in this case, the statement did more than signal.
It functioned as raw material for a coordinated disinformation ecosystem.
Critically, Trump did not explicitly accuse Pakistan of
complicity. He framed the tankers as a "gift" to himself…a
superficially positive framing. This seemingly neutral posture allowed the
initial statement to:
Ø
Seed an allegation into the
global information ecosystem without bearing the diplomatic cost of a direct
accusation
Ø
Enable third-party actors, primarily
India and Israel, to extract the implied accusation and weaponize it
The Indian and Israeli information warfare apparatus has
long-standing strategic interests in delegitimizing Pakistan.
·
For India, Pakistan's
internal instability, whether Baloch separatism, sectarian violence, or
economic fragility, is a strategic asset. Framing Pakistan as back stabbing
Iran creates political difficulties for Pakistan government and also creates
distrust among people.
·
For Israel, Pakistan
remains a nuclear-armed state with no diplomatic recognition. Any narrative
that weakens Pakistan's internal cohesion aligns directly with Israeli
strategic objectives.
Neither India nor Israel needed to invent a story. They
simply took Trump's statement, stripped it of its "gift" framing, and
amplified a new accusatory narrative: "Pakistan is complicit with US
against Iran meaning adding fodder to already politically charged environment
What followed was a textbook example of a layered
information operation:
·
Layer 1 : Trump's original
statement: Provided authoritative seed content that lent legitimacy to the
narrative
·
Layer 2 : Indian and
Israeli-linked accounts: Repackaged the statement by stripping its
"gift" framing and introducing accusatory angles
·
Layer 3 : Anti-Pakistan
regional actors (Afghanistan, diaspora networks): Localized the narrative by
inserting references to the deep state,
and economic collapse
·
Layer 4 : Domestic
Pakistani opposition figures: Weaponized the narrative politically, using it to
attack the government
By the time the narrative reached domestic Pakistani
audiences, it had acquired the legitimacy of "Trump said it" while
carrying the full political payload of "Pakistan is a rogue state aiding Zionist
nexus against Iran."
This process was then reinforced by “misinformation”, the
unintentional sharing of the false claim by ordinary Pakistanis who, failing to
conduct further investigation, inadvertently amplified a narrative designed to
harm their own nation.
This operation was not an isolated incident. It was designed
to achieve multiple simultaneous objectives:
·
Sow distrust between
Pakistan and Iran by implicating playing
double game.
·
Create space for
anti-government narratives within Pakistan by providing opposition factions
with international allegations to undermine domestic legitimacy
·
Exploit internal Pakistani
divisions targeting existing societal
fault lines
As an ideological Islamic state and a close partner of
China, Pakistan must recognize that it is a primary target of information and
psychological warfare conducted by the Indo-Israeli nexus. Defending against
this requires more than patriotic sentiment; it demands intellectual rigor.
We must cultivate the ability to “construct reality after
discourse analysis”. This means:
Understanding the Power-Knowledge relationship: Recognizing
that those who control narratives shape perceptions of legitimacy. Claims are
rarely neutral; they serve strategic interests.
Applying biopolitical analysis: Western information operations often target
the social body, seeking to fracture societies, destabilize populations, and
erode trust in institutions.
Suspending political bias:
Our domestic political affiliations must not dictate our construction of
reality. When we allow partisan loyalties to determine what we believe about
national security, we become unwitting amplifiers of foreign information
warfare.
The goal of Pakistan's adversaries is not to win a single
argument but to fragment Pakistani society to the point of strategic paralysis.
Our response must be unity grounded in critical awareness.
Vigilance in the face of information warfare is not passive
observation; it is active, critical engagement with the narratives that seek to
shape our national destiny. The Trump tanker episode is a case study in how a
single statement, designed to serve one leader's psychological strategy, can be
repurposed by hostile intelligence and information networks to target
Pakistan's most sensitive strategic vulnerabilities.
We must recognize these operations, trace their
amplification chains, and refuse to be channels for narratives designed to
weaken us. In the information age, national security begins with how each of us
chooses to engage with the stories we are told.
