Cybersecurity
IN an era where wars are no longer fought on battlefields alone, the recent cyber-attack on Pakistani media channels should serve as a serious wake-up call. Reports aired on news channels indicated that Israeli-linked hackers targeted Pakistani broadcast systems, briefly disrupting transmissions and inserting hostile content. This incident is not merely a technical failure. It is a direct assault on our digital sovereignty and national security.
The attack raises uncomfortable, but vital questions. How were sensitive broad-
cast systems infiltrated so easily? Are our cybersecurity mechanisms equipped to counter state-sponsored digital aggression? If foreign actors can penetrate media networks today, what prevents them from targeting financial institutions, defence systems or national databases tomorrow? Cyber warfare is no longer hypothetical. It is strategic and psychological, and is designed to destabilise public confidence.
Critically examining the situation, this incident exposes structural weaknesses in our cyber-defence framework. Pakistan has made real progress in digitisation, from online banking to e-governance, but investment in cybersecurity training, monitoring systems and rapid response mechanisms appears insufficient.
According to cybersecurity experts, modern cyberattacks are often coordinated and politically motivated, aimed at mani-
pulating narratives and creating chaos. When media houses become targets, the objective is clear: to undermine trust and project vulnerability. This episode should not be reduced to political rhetoric or temporary outrage. It demands institutional reforms, stronger coordination between intelligence agencies and private media networks, and sustained funding for advanced cyber-defence technologies.
Besides, public awareness campaigns are equally essential as digital literacy remains a weak link in our security chain.
Hamna Yasmeen
Islamabad
Published in Dawn, April 25th, 2026