ISLAMABAD: Noreen Niazi claims the Pakistan Army coordinated with India and pursued relations with Israel, but she provided no evidence and acknowledged that some assertions reflected her personal conclusions.
Niazi, the sister of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) founding chairman Imran Khan, made the allegations during a podcast interview circulating online.
She alleged that “Marka-e-Haq” involved coordination between the Pakistan Army and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. She also claimed India could have rapidly escalated the conflict but avoided attacking Pakistan on Israel’s instructions.
Niazi further alleged that Pakistan was close to recognising Israel before the Iran-Israel conflict disrupted the process. She claimed Pakistani leaders had contacted or met Israeli officials but did not identify any officials, dates, locations or supporting documents.
اس طرح کے بیانات کی ضرورت کیا ہوتی ہے؟؟ کیا اپنے ازلی دشمن بھارت کو خوش کرنے کیلئے ایسا کرنا لازمی تھا؟؟ ایسے ہی بیانات سے ملکی اداروں کو نقصان پہنچتا ہے،نورین آپا کوئی عام خاتون نہیں بلکہ سابق وزیراعظم کی بہن ہے ان کو بھارت کی خوشنودی کیلئے ایسا بیان نہیں دینا چاہئے تھا۔۔۔۔۔۔۔… pic.twitter.com/LXszm49UHb
— Sheraz Ahmad Sherazi (@Sherazi_Silmian) July 18, 2026
She linked United States President Donald Trump’s praise of Pakistan to alleged pressure on Islamabad to join the Abraham Accords. Niazi said Washington wanted Pakistan to establish diplomatic relations with Israel.
However, she clarified that nobody had formally provided the information to her and that she had reached the conclusions through her own reasoning. There is no official response from the Pakistan Army, the federal government, India or Israel.
Her allegations conflict with Pakistan’s publicly stated position. Pakistan rejected joining the Abraham Accords in May 2026, while analysts quoted by the Associated Press said Islamabad’s position on recognising Israel remained unchanged.
Niazi also claimed Modi had gained international influence through closer relations with Russia and had resisted Trump’s efforts to secure Indian support.