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    Home » The spyware industry’s war on Pakistan
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    The spyware industry’s war on Pakistan

    S.M. InamBy S.M. InamDecember 10, 2025Updated:December 10, 2025No Comments2 Views
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    By S.M. Inam

    There are stories that break with a loud crash — explosions, scandals, elections, wars. And then there are those that slip quietly into the public domain, revealing themselves not with drama but with discomfort. Amnesty International’s latest “Predator Files” report belongs firmly in the second category. It does not shout. It does not accuse with sensationalism. Instead, it walks the reader through the unsettling reality of a modern world where states no longer need to cross borders to interfere with their neighbors; their machines can do it for them. At the center of this new chapter is Intellexa, an Israeli-linked company that has carved out a place in the dark economy of spyware technology.

    According to Amnesty, Intellexa’s Predator system has been deployed unlawfully against individuals in Pakistan — journalists, activists, human rights defenders, and civil society workers. People with no connections to organized crime, no role in espionage, and no threat to national security. They are simply citizens whose phones have become windows into their lives for foreign interests. For many Pakistanis, the news arrived not through official channels but through a warning from Google, which has begun alerting users in Pakistan and several other countries that they may have been targeted. It is not easy for ordinary people to process such a message. What does it mean when a private tech company knows you are under threat before your own state does?

    Moreover, what does it say about the world’s shifting power structures when digital giants act as first responders in a new era of covert conflict? The details of the report are disturbing, but its implications go far beyond the technical mechanics of malware. What Amnesty has uncovered is not merely a breach of personal privacy; it is an intrusion into Pakistan’s national security landscape at a time when the country is already navigating internal fragility and external hostility. Spyware attacks are not just digital crimes. They are strategic operations. They are designed to observe, to influence, and at times to destabilize. In addition, what makes this case even more sensitive is the identity of the alleged operator.

    For decades, Israeli intelligence agencies and private companies with close ties to the state have honed their surveillance tools in the shadows of geopolitical rivalry. Muslim-majority countries have frequently found themselves on the receiving end of these capabilities. Pakistan — with its nuclear arsenal, its complex politics, and its central position in the region — has long been an attractive target. What is now emerging is a pattern of activity that stretches far beyond casual espionage. It resembles a structured effort to monitor and compartmentalize dissent, press freedom, and civic spaces within countries Israel deems strategically important. The timing is impossible to ignore.

    These revelations come as Israel continues its military offensive in Gaza, an assault that has left countless civilians dead and much of the international community paralyzed by diplomatic timidity. In such a climate, the exposure of a digital operation targeting Pakistan adds a new layer to an already grim picture — one in which physical violence and cyber intrusion form a seamless continuum. And yet the conversation in Pakistan risks becoming dangerously narrow if it stops at outrage. A nuclear state cannot treat cyber intrusions of this nature as if they were minor irritations. This is not about data breaches or leaked photographs. It is about sovereignty. It is about who has the power to observe Pakistani citizens more closely than their own government can.

    It is about whether Pakistan’s political institutions, security agencies and technological infrastructure are prepared for a future where warfare will not always be waged with drones and missiles, but with algorithms and invisible code. A responsible state response is not simply desirable — it is essential. Pakistan must raise this issue diplomatically and push for international accountability mechanisms that are currently either dormant or far too weak. Cyber warfare is one of the few areas where global rules remain obscure, unevenly enforced, and easily exploited. Countries that lack the economic or military leverage of larger powers end up absorbing the most damage. This imbalance must be addressed through forums where governments can no longer hide their actions behind private contractors and shell companies.

    However, the deeper failure lies not with Pakistan alone. It lies with the collective inertia of the Muslim world. For decades, Muslim-majority states have spoken of unity with the enthusiasm of speeches but the caution of reluctance. They convene conferences, issue condemnations, and publish communiqués each time a crisis emerges — but little changes. Palestinians remain trapped in a cycle of violence. Muslim minorities around the world continue to face discrimination and persecution. Now, ordinary citizens are finding themselves targeted through digital tools designed in foreign laboratories, sold through opaque networks, and deployed without accountability. It is no longer enough for Muslim leaders to express concern or frustration.

    Concern does not shield activists from being hacked. Frustration does not protect journalists who rely on their phones for work. Sympathy does not stop spyware from crawling through the private lives of people who simply want to live without fear. If the Muslim world continues to respond in fragments — politically divided, technologically unprepared, diplomatically cautious — then the only beneficiaries will be the architects of these covert operations, who thrive on disunity and silence. The path forward demands something more ambitious than statements. It requires coordinated action: shared intelligence frameworks, cyber-defence alliances, legal strategies that challenge unregulated spyware companies, and technological collaborations that strengthen collective resilience. It requires governments to understand that digital aggression is not an abstract threat but a present reality — one that can undermine national security, fracture societies and intimidate citizens into silence.

    Amnesty’s report is not the end of the story; it is the beginning of a reckoning. It forces a difficult but necessary question upon Pakistan and the broader Muslim world: in an era where surveillance has become a weapon, who will protect the protectors? And if states cannot defend their own people from invisible incursions, what does sovereignty even mean in the twenty-first century? Until these questions are answered with courage and coherence, spyware will remain more than a technological threat. It will be a reminder that the digital shadows of global politics now reach deeper into people’s lives than ever before — and that silence, in the face of such intrusion, is no longer an option.

    (The writer is a former government officer and a senior analyst on national and international affairs, can be reached at inam@metro-morning.com)

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    S.M. Inam

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