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French Navy Exposes Pakistani Media Lies on Sindoor Operation and Rafales

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THE ASIAN INDEPENDENT UK

    Bal Ram Sampla

Bal Ram Sampla
Geopolitics

On November 21, 2024, several major Pakistani news outlets published a shocking story. They claimed that a French Navy officer had confirmed Pakistan shot down Indian Rafale fighter jets during an operation called “Sindoor.” The story spread quickly across Pakistan’s mainstream media, including Geo News, Dunya News, Samaa TV, Pakistan Today, and Times of Islamabad.

According to these reports, a French naval officer named “Jacques Launay” had praised Pakistan’s air force. The outlets claimed he said Pakistan had destroyed Indian Rafale jets and demonstrated superior military capabilities.

The Truth Comes Out

Within 24 hours, the French Navy issued a rare public statement. They called the Pakistani media reports “fake news.” The denial was swift and clear.

The French Navy revealed several major problems with the Pakistani story:

1. The officer’s name was wrong.

There is no “Jacques Launay” in the French Navy. The real officer is Captain Yvan Launay, who commands the Landivisiau Naval Air Station. He never made any such statements.

2. No interview ever happened.
Captain Launay never spoke to Pakistani media. He never confirmed any claims about Operation Sindoor or downed Rafale jets. The quotes were completely fabricated.

3. The claims were impossible to verify.
No French military source, press release, or official statement supported anything in the Pakistani reports.

Why This Matters

The French Navy normally stays quiet about foreign media speculation. They rarely respond to rumours or unverified stories. But this case was different.

First, the Pakistani outlets directly attributed fake quotes to a real French military officer. This damaged his professional reputation and credibility.

Second, the false claims involved France’s Rafale fighter jets. France sells these advanced aircraft to India. Fake stories about Rafales being shot down could hurt France’s defence industry and commercial relationships.

Third, the story spread across multiple major Pakistani news channels. This wasn’t one small outlet making a mistake. It was Pakistan’s mainstream media publishing coordinated disinformation.

The Bigger Picture

This incident raises serious questions about media standards in Pakistan. How did so many major outlets publish the same fake story without checking basic facts? Why didn’t anyone verify the officer’s name or contact French authorities?

The French Navy’s quick response prevented the false narrative from spreading further internationally. Their statement made it clear: the Pakistani media reports were fabricated from start to finish.

This case shows the importance of fact-checking and verification in journalism. It also demonstrates how quickly false information can spread when multiple outlets repeat claims without proper investigation.

Conclusion

The French Navy’s exposure of Pakistani media lies about Operation Sindoor serves as a clear example of modern disinformation. Major Pakistani news organizations published completely fabricated quotes, got basic facts wrong, and created a false narrative about military operations.

The swift official denial from France stopped the story in its tracks. But the damage to Pakistani media credibility was already done. The incident stands as a reminder that in the age of instant news, accuracy and truth still matter most.

References

1.https://www.india.com/news/world/pakistan-faces-big-humiliation-as-french-navy-exposes-its-propaganda-over-rafale-downing-claims-during-operation-sindoor-paris-indian-air-force-geo-news-hamid-mir-marine-nationale-8197116/
2.https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/french-navy/french-navy-slams-pakistan-media-for-misinformation-says-rafale-claims-fabricated