Pakistan Faces Suspected Pro-Mossad Google Ad Campaign, Satellite Broadcast Disruptions
Pakistan is reportedly facing a coordinated digital and broadcast disruption campaign, with pro-Mossad narratives allegedly being promoted through Google’s advertising network on local media websites, alongside reported interference in satellite transmissions of news channels.
Digital monitoring sources claim that controversial ads have appeared on multiple Pakistani media platforms via automated ad systems operated by Google. Because most websites use programmatic advertising, publishers do not manually approve every ad impression. While they can block certain categories or advertisers, algorithm-driven placements may still bypass filters through reseller accounts, intermediaries, or cloaked creatives.

At this stage, there is no publicly available forensic evidence confirming state attribution.
Cybersecurity analysts caution that programmatic ad infrastructure can be exploited by both state and non-state actors.
Satellite Transmission Interference
In parallel, more than one Pakistani news television channel has reported disruptions in satellite transmission. Recently, Geo News informed viewers about interference affecting its broadcast via satellite operated on PakSat, describing attempts to disrupt transmission signals.
Broadcast engineers note that satellite beam interference is technically complex and may involve uplink intrusion attempts, signal jamming, or transponder-level manipulation. No official attribution has yet been disclosed.
Hybrid Information Pressure?
Media security observers say the combination of digital ad exploitation and satellite-level disruption raises concerns about hybrid information pressure tactics. However, authorities have not formally linked the two developments, and investigations are ongoing.
Experts stress that until verified technical findings are released, conclusions about responsibility remain premature.





