On May 11, 2025, Outlook magazine’s official X account briefly vanished. No explanation, no platform notice. Within hours, it was restored. Liberal media reacted with outrage. “Digital censorship,” they declared. That evening, Outlook issued a statement:
“Outlook has upheld the highest quality of objective and balanced journalism for thirty years, and will continue to do so.”
But while the public focused on the takedown, government analysts focused elsewhere—on the magazine’s editor, and a story that began years earlier.
2014: The Flood, The Profile, and the Propaganda
In 2014, Chinki Sinha—then a journalist, now Outlook’s editor—authored a glowing profile of Omar Javaid Bazaz, who had volunteered during the Kashmir floods. The article framed him as a humanitarian. What it didn’t mention: Bazaz had been flagged by Indian intelligence for openly celebrating the killing of Indian Army Captain Bikramjeet Singh, and urging Kashmiris to hold prayers for Osama Bin Laden after his death.
At the same time, Babbar Khalsa and ISI asset Ghulam Nabi Fai launched an orchestrated campaign to promote Bazaz as a youth icon. His image appeared in digitally coordinated efforts across Pakistan-based forums, rebranded as a “hero” for the Kashmiri cause.
The timing of the article and the ISI narrative push was not a coincidence. It was synchrony.
‘Neo’ and ‘Morpheus’: Codenames Behind the Curtain
In conversations and references documented by observers, Omar Javaid Bazaz is referred to as “Neo” and Chinki Sinha as “Morpheus”—a symbolic borrowing from The Matrix where reality is layered and obscured. The codenames appear in social media comments and casual exchanges, raising questions about the tone and framing of the coverage, and whether personal affinity blurred the line between reporting and reverence.
An Instagram comment from Sinha to Bazaz reads: “Both you and the pigeon are beautiful.” Harmless on the surface. Loaded when seen alongside Bazaz’s pro-jihadist online activity.
Fai’s Network and the Indian Media
Ghulam Nabi Fai, exposed in the U.S. as a conduit for Pakistan’s ISI, operated the Kashmir American Council with secret funding from Pakistani intelligence. His mission: shape global discourse on Kashmir by recruiting scholars, activists—and journalists.
Fai organized annual “Kashmir Peace Conferences” in Washington D.C., attended by a mix of Indian and Pakistani delegates. Names included:
Kuldip Nayar, senior journalist
Justice Rajinder Sachar
Angana Chatterji, academic
Rita Manchanda, rights activist
Each participant added credibility to a campaign crafted in Rawalpindi.
Today, intelligence analysts see similar storytelling patterns in Indian media houses. The dots no longer appear disconnected.
Operation Sindoor and the Narrative War
While Indian forces conducted Operation Sindoor—a precision crackdown on terror networks—Outlook’s editor was busy peddling an alternative narrative on Facebook. Chinki Sinha described the operation as “reeking of patriarchy,” encouraging users to disown it and share critical posts that reframed a counterterror push as cultural chauvinism.
These sentiments found quick traction in Pakistani propaganda outlets, replicated almost verbatim across disinformation groups operating out of Karachi and Lahore.
It wasn’t just an opinion. It became ammunition.
India’s government did not ban Outlook. It didn’t arrest anyone. It observed.
And what emerged was a troubling pattern:
An editor who once profiled a man celebrated by terror groups.
A legacy of symbolic associations with extremist sympathizers.
Social media messaging that weakens national security narratives while amplifying adversarial talking points.
When national media headlines start aligning with foreign intelligence interests, who is really telling the story?
In a world of noise and nuance, the war isn’t only in Kashmir—it plays out between the lines.