07 Jun Operation Social Media: The India-Pakistan war wasn’t just over borders
“Karachi captured!”
“Pakistan Army Chief arrested!”
None of it was true. All of it went viral.
As India and Pakistan teetered on the edge of open warfare this May following a gruesome terror attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 civilians, a parallel battle unfolded, not on land or in air, but in the boundless terrain of cyberspace.
This was not merely a war of missiles and drones; it was an orchestrated campaign of perception warfare, fuelled by a deluge of misinformation and psychological operations designed to distort, distract and destabilise.
This is how ‘Operation Social Media’ unfolded — an invisible front that exposed how deeply disinformation can influence modern conflict, and how India, despite facing a sophisticated hybrid threat, sought to maintain both operational focus and digital hygiene.
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When bots go off louder than bombs
The crisis began with a terror attack at a popular tourist spot in Kashmir. The assault bore the fingerprints of Pakistan-based terror outfits, prompting New Delhi to launch Operation Sindoor, a series of precision strikes on terror infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) on May 7.
Almost immediately, unverified claims began saturating social media. According to reports from The Guardian and The Washington Post, X (formerly Twitter) became a hotbed of false triumphs, premature victory laps, and fictionalised skirmishes.
Among the most viral, but entirely fabricated, narratives were:
- Indian jets capturing Lahore and Karachi.
- Arrest of Pakistan’s army chief and an alleged military coup.
- A Pakistani cyberattack disabling India’s power grid.
- India bombing Afghan territory or surrendering in key battlefronts.
Doctored videos, repurposed war clips, and even footage from video games like Arma 3 flooded social media platforms during the India-Pakistan standoff, giving rise to a parallel narrative war. These posts were amplified by a mix of anonymous accounts, official handles, and even journalists acting on unverified inputs.
Independent internet observatory NetBlocks reported that 65% of these viral false posts originated from IP addresses linked to Pakistan, while another 20% came from untraceable bot accounts.
According to the Washington-based non-profit think tank, the Centre for the Study of Organized Hate, “X emerged as the primary hub for both misinformation and disinformation.” The think tank analysed 437 such posts and found that 179, or nearly 41%, originated from verified accounts, which are often perceived as credible due to their blue-check status. These included posts by politicians, influencers, media personalities, and retired military officials.
“What was particularly alarming,” the report noted, “was the credibility lent to these falsehoods by high-profile sources.” Despite the scale of this disinformation, only 73 posts, just 17%, were flagged by X’s Community Notes, the platform’s crowd-sourced fact-checking feature. This, the think tank argued, pointed to a serious lapse in content moderation at a time of high geopolitical tension.
Raqib Hameed Naik, director of the think tank, described the information war as “a global trend in hybrid warfare”. “This wasn’t ordinary nationalist chest-thumping,” said Joyojeet Pal of the University of Michigan. “This had the potential to push two nuclear-armed neighbours to the brink.”
Pakistan’s playbook
The social media campaign didn’t begin with Operation Sindoor; it was already underway. On April 25, days before the Indian Air Force strike, India’s Ministry of Information and Broadcasting had announced the banning of 16 YouTube channels and several Instagram accounts for spreading “provocative and communally sensitive content.”
Of these, six were Pakistan-based and ten operated from within India, with a combined viewership of over 680 million.
A key inflection point came when Pakistan lifted its year-long ban on X during the peak of the crisis. According to minutes from a Pakistani Senate committee meeting, this move was deliberate and strategic, intended to enable Islamabad to “participate in the narrative war.”
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NetBlocks confirmed that access to X in Pakistan was restored precisely as tensions with India escalated, giving Pakistani agencies and allied influencers a wide window to flood the platform with misleading and often provocative posts.
In the aftermath of the operation, and as misinformation swirled on social media, India’s Press Information Bureau (PIB) Fact Check division stepped in to debunk dozens of viral claims. These included:
- Videos from Lebanon’s 2020 explosion being shared as missile strikes on Indian cities.
- Drone footage from Jalandhar fires framed as attacks.
- Game footage falsely portraying Pakistani military success.
- Recycled images from other conflict zones passed off as Indian casualties.
Together, these examples offer a window into the scale, coordination, and intent behind the disinformation campaign, aimed not just at misleading the public but also at distorting the global perception of India’s military and political posture.
Inside Pakistan’s covert spy ring
In a related espionage probe, Indian intelligence uncovered a Pakistan-backed operation recruiting social media influencers as spies. Naushaba Shahzad Masood, known as ‘Madam N’, runs Jaiyana Travels and Tourism in Lahore. She was building a network of 500 spies inside India, focusing on Hindu and Sikh YouTubers like Jyoti Malhotra and Jasbir Singh.
In six months, Naushaba arranged travel for about 3,000 Indians and 1,500 expatriates to Pakistan, fast-tracking visas through direct contacts at the Pakistani High Commission in Delhi. She also managed Sikh and Hindu pilgrimage tours with the Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB), charging inflated fees that funded ISI propaganda.
Financial trails include Naushaba’s phone number found on arrested spies’ devices and two Pakistani bank accounts linked to transfers from India. Her network recruits through agents operating in major Indian cities, including Delhi.
Open-source intelligence: Boon or bane?
The situation also highlighted the double-edged nature of Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT). Originally conceived to empower citizens through satellite images, open data, and social media monitoring, OSINT’s decentralised model became a tool for mass manipulation.
“Anyone with an internet connection could now pose as an OSINT expert,” observed an analysis published by ET. The danger lies in viral misinformation being passed off as expert assessments, especially when retweeted by influencers and news outlets under pressure for real-time content.
Newsrooms under fire
Some Indian newsrooms too fell for the deluge of fake news.
According to The Washington Post, in one case, a journalist reportedly received a WhatsApp message, allegedly from a public broadcaster, claiming that Pakistan’s army chief had been arrested. Within minutes, this falsehood became prime-time “breaking news.”
Speaking to The Post, Former Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao described the atmosphere as one of “hypernationalism” and “parallel reality,” cautioning that the lack of authoritative government briefings created a vacuum often filled by speculation.
But not everyone was misled.
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India’s Press Information Bureau, along with a 24/7 monitoring centre set up by the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting, worked to counter misinformation in real time. Fact-checks were issued, social media handles were flagged, and broadcasters were warned for violating verification norms.
Cyber Frontline: 1.5 million attacks, but only 150 breaches
While social media churned with false claims, the real-time cyber threat was no less intense. According to Maharashtra Cyber, over 1.5 million cyber attacks were launched against Indian infrastructure by seven Pakistan-allied Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) groups.
The barrage of cyberattacks not only came from the neighbouring country but from Bangladesh and the Middle Eastern region.
Pro-Pakistan hacker collectives such as APT 36 (also known as Transparent Tribe), Pakistan Cyber Force, and Team Insane PK launched a coordinated series of cyberattacks in the days surrounding the crisis.
Their arsenal included malware campaigns, distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, GPS spoofing attempts, and website defacements aimed at sowing panic and disrupting public trust in India’s digital infrastructure.
According to officials familiar with the matter, India faced over 1.5 million intrusion attempts during this period. However, only 150 attacks were successful, a tiny fraction, reported PTI.
Importantly, claims that the hackers had penetrated Mumbai’s airport systems or Election Commission portals were found to be baseless. Addressing reporters, a senior official of Maharashtra Cyber debunked claims of hackers stealing data from Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport in Mumbai, hacking aviation and municipal systems, and targeting the Election Commission website.
“The probe discovered that cyber attacks on (government websites in) India decreased after India-Pakistan ceased hostilities, but not fully stopped. These attacks continue from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Morocco, and Middle Eastern countries,” he said.
The Indian government’s “Road of Sindoor” report, a classified cyber threat assessment, showed these attacks were part of a coordinated hybrid warfare strategy involving both digital and psychological warfare.
India’s response
While the information war raged online, Indian armed forces maintained disciplined silence and strategic clarity. Official statements were sparse, but targeted. Operation Sindoor focused solely on dismantling terrorist infrastructure, confirmed in a press conference by Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri, who clarified that India did not target civilian installations.
Behind the scenes, India’s cyber defence grid was activated, fact-checking units expanded, and social media protocols for military updates tightened. The government also advised citizens to avoid unverified content and rely only on official sources.
AI fact-checkers
As the misinformation torrent intensified, social media users increasingly turned to AI chatbots for verification, only to find more confusion and falsehoods. Platforms like xAI’s Grok, OpenAI’s ChatGPT, and Google’s Gemini became common go-to tools for instant fact-checking amid the crisis.
“Hey @Grok, is this true?” became a viral plea on Elon Musk’s platform X, reflecting the surge in users seeking quick debunks. However, these AI assistants often propagated misinformation themselves.
Grok, under renewed criticism for inserting far-right conspiracy theories into unrelated answers, misidentified old video footage from Sudan’s Khartoum airport as missile strikes on Pakistan’s Nur Khan airbase during the conflict. Similarly, unrelated fire footage from Nepal was wrongly claimed as Pakistani military retaliation.
McKenzie Sadeghi of the disinformation watchdog NewsGuard warned, “The growing reliance on Grok as a fact-checker comes as X and other major tech companies have scaled back investments in human fact-checkers. Our research has repeatedly found that AI chatbots are not reliable sources for news and information, particularly when it comes to breaking news.”
The Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University found that AI chatbots were “generally bad at declining to answer questions they couldn’t answer accurately, offering incorrect or speculative answers instead.” For instance, AFP fact-checkers in Uruguay asked Google’s Gemini about an AI-generated image of a woman; it confirmed the image’s authenticity but fabricated details about her identity and location.
Truth is the first casualty, but not the last word
The digital front of the India-Pakistan standoff reveals the complex landscape of modern warfare, where victory is measured not just in ground gained but in narrative controlled.
Yet despite the storm of falsehoods, India’s response, though understated, was layered, methodical, and largely effective. As the lines between social media warfare and statecraft blur, it’s clear that the next great conflict won’t just be fought with missiles, but with memes, metadata, and misinformation.