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The US Deep State’s Regime Change Attempts In India


How did the US Deep State, through ‘soft power,’ attempt to destabilise and disrupt a democratically elected government in India? 

As the BJP outlines, vast networks of NGOs and media houses, both in India and abroad, were well funded and weaponised to attempt to discredit the government, bring the government down in the eyes of voters, and finally create enough chaos and anarchy to execute a change in regime. 

From the 2018 violent anti-Sterlite protests to the 2020 Delhi riots and the 2020-21 farmer protests, the role of NGOs and some media organisations was to fund and instigate. 

In 2023, a consortium of publications funded by Soros’ Open Society Foundations and the Omidyar Foundation published an ‘exposé’ about phones of a handful of journalists and of opposition leaders allegedly being bugged by the spyware Pegasus. Still the regime could not be changed. 

French publication Mediapart has recently exposed the ‘world’s largest investigative reporting agency,’ OCCRP, as having been in the pay of the US Deep State, receiving funding of up to $47 million from them and publishing ‘investigative reports’ about governments that the US was inimical to. 

When these tactics did not work, the Deep State picked a respected symbol of India—the Adani Group—the only conglomerate that had the ability to carry out large infrastructure and power projects within and outside of India. To hurt Adani would mean to hurt India as a nation. Deep State assets such as OCCRP and their allies in India were deployed to make loud and confusing claims of corruption. Hindenburg Research lent a hand. How would falsities disguised as facts ever stand scrutiny? The Adani Group shook off temporary setbacks and moved on. 

But the web of NGOs and how they functioned, the Indian faces of these NGOs who did the bidding of the US Deep State, must necessarily be made public. 



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