Pakistan's ISPR is more lethal and dangerous than even ISI, Top cyber intelligence specialist warns India
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ISLAMABAD - Days after a retired Indian general praised Pakistan Army’s media wing for employing “outstanding strategy” in the domain of hybrid warfare, a prominent cyber-intelligence specialist has now warned the India government of the threat the ISPR poses.
“If there is a Pakistani inter-services directorate as lethal as the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), it is, undoubtedly, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR),” Pukhraj Singh wrote in his latest article for *The Print* link .
In his opinion, the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi was too late in spotting the danger after Facebook took down pages mending the public opinion ahead of the Indian general elections.
Just like Lt-Gen (retd) Syed Ata Hussain acknowledged the superiority of Pakistani military’s media wing over its Indian counterpart, Singh also hailed the ISPR’s information warfare strategies, especially in the showdown after Pulwama incident.
Last week, Lt-Gen (retd) Hussain had remarked during a speech that the ISPR outclassed the Indian army in information war. “I want to give full marks to the ISPR for the information strategy it has played out,” he was quoted as saying during his address at the International Institute of Strategic Studies in the UK on Thursday.
According to Singh, Pakistani Army has conducted a series of wargames — Azm-e-Nau, meant to counter India’s ‘Cold Start’ doctrine. “With many successful iterations over the years, these exercises simulated massive mobilisations augmented by net-centric warfare, stopping short at the tactical nuclear weapons threshold,” he wrote.
“Interestingly, the said wargames treated the ISPR as the crucial pivot of conflict escalation and de-escalation. It was meant to undertake information operations, military deception and strategic communications – benignly dubbed as perception management in military parlance.
“This was a couple of years prior to ‘hybrid war’ becoming all the rage in the media circles, manifesting itself as the wildly successful Russian playbook against Georgia, Ukraine, and the US elections.
From leveraging non-uniformed militias to undertaking disruptive cyber operations that seeded widescale paranoia and confusion, the Russians reintroduced the cognitive dimension to this emerging format of war.”