The cable sent to Islamabad said that the observation of Donald Lu on the visit of Moscow Imran Khan was based on a note taken by an embassy official who was present at the farewell lunch of the former Ambassador Asad Majeed.
The cable owned by former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan was quoted as proof of a foreign conspiracy behind the non-believer movement that overthrew his government having an interesting background story that came from a farewell lunch meeting but ended up on allegations of conspiracy, Dawn reported.
According to Fajar reports, conversations among US and Pakistan officials and then Ambassador Asad Majeed, who then rocked the PTI government, took place on March 7 at the residence of Asad Majeed Khan, known as Pakistani’s house. It was a farewell lunch for Asad Majeed but a record maker whose job had made a note from the exchange between the ambassador and US officials was also present there. The majede cable was then sent to Islamabad based on the note taken by the recording of the Pakistani embassy.
Discussions at the lunch party mostly revolve around the Russian-Ukrainian crisis in the context which the US stated ‘disappointment’ with Imran Khan’s visit to Moscow on the day the war began, the report said. As Asad Majeed explained that the decision that Imran Khan would continue Moscow’s planned visit was taken collectively when Pakistan was trying to visit Moscow for years, assistant Secretary of the United States for South Asian and Central Affairs, Donald Lu said that the final decision to continue the visit Take a break with Imran Khan.
Then the conversation, according to the Fajar report, caressed Pakistan’s situation. “Lu showed that Washington was very concerned about the situation and the results of the movement did not believe in the prime minister would then influence our relationship-Pakistan too,” the Dawn report said.
All of these conversations pay attention to people who took notes and then displayed in the cable received by Islamabad from the Embassy in Pakistan.
The Fajar report, citing the source, said that even though Donald Lu did not threaten the regime’s change, his argument was “worrying and far from the routine”.
While the White House rejected all this allegation, a very strong Pakistani military also denied the use of the word ‘conspiracy’. It was said that a statement issued by the Pakistani National Security Committee did not mention ‘conspiracy’.