Nikhil Gupta has finally been released. Nikhil Gupta, who had been framed in a story claiming that he was associated with the killing of people such as Gurpatwant Singh Pannun and Hardeep Singh Nijjar, has now had his entire situation exposed, revealing the reality that this individual is returning. As a result of this entire issue, the so-called international “Pappu,” named “Dustbin Trudeau,” also faced repercussions. I want to discuss with you this serious topic in order to illustrate the power of a narrative. A narrative is something based on falsehood; and because it is based on a lie, pushing that lie forward—propelling it—is relatively simple. However, a lie does not last very long. In the end, truth always triumphs.

Understand the game: It is quite simple. What happened was that in 1997, a person named Hardeep Singh Nijjar went from India to Canada. When this person got there, he applied for political asylum multiple times. He submitted his application repeatedly, but each time it was rejected. Finally, in 2007, Hardeep Singh Nijjar’s application was accepted, and he was granted Canadian citizenship. He was neither born nor raised in Canada; rather, he acquired his citizenship.

The second important point is that after acquiring citizenship, he became involved in certain religious activities in Canada. In Canada, there is nothing wrong with engaging in religious activities; he got involved with Gurdwaras. But you should understand that most Gurdwaras there have linkages with many criminal gangs. This is crucial to understand because these criminal gangs operate from Canada to India. Their modus operandi is that they collaborate with certain Gurdwaras and some politicians in Canada to gather boys from Haryana and Punjab in India, bring them over illegally, and then once those boys arrive illegally, they make them do illegal work. In this way, a kind of major fault line gets created from India’s side in Canada.

Now, this individual Hardeep Singh Nijjar, after getting citizenship in 2007, first joined Gurdwaras in Canada and then got connected with criminal gangs. He became associated with the Arsh Dhalla gang, the Landa gang, the Randa gang, and likewise the two biggest gangs there, the Grewal and Dhaliwal gangs. Nijjar was linked to all of these gangs. Most importantly, behind all of these gangs was a man named Jagmeet Singh “Jimmy,” the leader of the New Democratic Party, who was also connected with them. This is a very large international crime syndicate. They use Gurdwaras and these gangs to bring youth illegally from India to Canada, and then once those young men are there, they say, “Now look, you came here illegally, so if you want to stay without getting caught, you have to work for us.” They give them money, link them with Gurdwaras, provide online training, and then from Canada, they run online campaigns claiming that Khalistan should be formed in India. But if you really have the guts to demand Khalistan, then come to India to make your demand. Instead, they sit there (in Canada) running this campaign. So, understand this nexus.

Firstly, Hardeep Singh Nijjar was connected to all these gangs. Secondly, the biggest thing is that last year, there was a campaign from China. According to India’s Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) intelligence, China had launched a project in Canada called “Project Ignition.” Under Project Ignition, Canada basically tried to create tension among various elements of the Indian diaspora in Canada, pitting them against each other. Since there were already established gangs like the Arsh Dhalla gang, the Landa gang, the Grewal gang, the Dhaliwal gang in Canada, China promoted a gang war under Project Ignition among all these gangs in Canada.

In this gang war, someone like Hardeep Singh Nijjar, already associated with all these gangs, was killed. The problem was that Nijjar was linked not only to these gangs but also to Jagmeet Singh “Jimmy.” Jimmy, leader of the New Democratic Party, was, at that time, running a coalition government with the Liberal Party’s “Dustbin Trudeau.” So, when Nijjar was killed in the gang war, pressure came upon Jimmy. The pressure was that since this huge crime syndicate provided money and engaged in illegal activities, it would now face scrutiny.

So what happened? They (Trudeau and Jimmy) concocted a plan. Initially, Justin Trudeau stated that Nijjar had been assassinated. Which is true; under Project Ignition, a gang war was promoted, one gang pitted against another, and Nijjar was killed in that war. But the reality was that Nijjar was killed due to the gang war promoted by China through Project Ignition. The difficulty, however, was that Justin Trudeau did not merely say this one statement. Within a week, he made another statement, claiming that some officials from India’s embassy in Canada—diplomats—were engaged in spying or covert activities.

Justin Trudeau started a campaign suggesting that India was responsible for Nijjar’s death. What he did was allege that the staff at India’s embassy in Canada was involved. Consequently, those local people in Canada who are part of that Indian diaspora but are a blot on the Sikh community began protesting in front of the Indian embassy. Because the Indian embassy officials faced threats, India strongly condemned Canada’s actions. Since Trudeau repeatedly alleged that Indian officials were spying—naming one individual and another—he specifically identified one person called Pawan Kumar Verma, saying he was a R&AW officer. Pawan Kumar Verma was an IPS officer from the Punjab cadre and indeed served in some capacity in Canada, because in every embassy, there is an intelligence officer serving as station chief. If we had a R&AW station chief in Canada, similarly Canada also had a station chief here (in India).

The problem is that the identity of a station chief is never publicly disclosed. But Justin Trudeau, being a “Pappu”—you know, there’s a “Pappu” in India and a “Pappu” in Canada, and both operate similarly—he revealed Pawan Kumar Verma’s name, who was the R&AW station chief. Immediately, India recalled him. Then India also named Canada’s station chief, declared him persona non grata, and gave him two days to leave the country.

What happened after all these steps? The next issue was that Justin Trudeau and Jimmy realized that the Sikh population in Canada was quite upset because Nijjar had been a major criminal. He had handled a massive criminal nexus worth crores of rupees, sustaining the livelihoods of many people in Canada’s Indian diaspora. Obviously, if such a major gang figure dies in a gang war, the rest of the people associated with these gangs also feel the heat. They, in turn, pressured the government to do something, do something—but the biggest problem was that Justin Trudeau made one mistake after another. First, he claimed someone had gotten Nijjar killed. Then he created an issue with Pawan Kumar Verma. After that, he made a statement he never should have made. But what can you do—he’s a “Pappu.” He declared that the “Five Eyes” intelligence alliance—which includes the five biggest global powers, among them Canada and the US—had a “credible input” that India was behind Nijjar’s killing.

The moment he said that, it became a massive allegation. Over in the US, Joe Biden—who’s half-asleep—suddenly woke up, as if someone slapped him on the face. He asked, “What did Trudeau say?” He was told that Trudeau said the Five Eyes have credible intel. Joe Biden, who is also a “Pappu,” didn’t really understand much, so he told the American establishment, “You guys handle this.”

In the American establishment, there were two key figures: Jake Sullivan—who was, and still is for now, the National Security Advisor until perhaps the Trump administration returns—and Antony Blinken, who is the Secretary of State. Both of them, realizing that this “Pappu” Trudeau had made such a huge remark, thought, “We have no game plan for this.” So they devised what I will call a “meta-narrative.” They crafted a story—pay attention, because it’s quite beautiful how they built this story. If you look at it, you might think that if the world’s greatest storytellers come from anywhere, it’s from America.

What happened is that to defend Justin Trudeau’s statement, Jake Sullivan and Antony Blinken met with a person named Jeff Bezos. You know Jeff Bezos—the bald guy who’s the CEO of Amazon. They called the bald guy, cracked an egg on his head, and said, “Look, we need your help. We’ll make use of you.” You might wonder, “Why call that guy for help?” Listen carefully, because the game is quite interesting.

The two high-ranking American officials, Jake Sullivan and Antony Blinken, met Jeff Bezos, the owner of Amazon, because Bezos not only owns Amazon, he also owns a very prominent, long-standing American newspaper: The Washington Post. The Washington Post is a newspaper that the US has used for years to defame other countries. Now, the task was to justify the narrative that R&AW somehow got Nijjar killed and that the Five Eyes alliance had credible input to prove it.

So, Jeff Bezos, Antony Blinken, Jake Sullivan, and the CIA chief all sat down together. Last year, they collaborated with several other Washington Post editors to spin a story. Keep in mind, The Washington Post is a newspaper. Its editors have the capacity to build a narrative around any fact, point, or event. In a meeting last year, they created a story. I’ll repeat the base premise: they needed to justify Justin Trudeau’s statement, because he had dragged the US into the issue by claiming the Five Eyes had credible intel—classic “Pappu” behavior, lacking control over his tongue.

How did they create this story? The Washington Post wrote a large article last year. In that article, they claimed that Washington Post journalists had spoken with R&AW officials, Intelligence Bureau officials, and several Indian politicians, discovering that there was a game plan: The Prime Minister’s Office, under the Prime Minister’s watch, had Ajit Doval sitting there. Ajit Doval, in turn, was in daily contact with a man named Samant Goel. Samant Goel was an IPS officer of the Punjab cadre and the former head of R&AW. The Washington Post’s story claimed that the Prime Minister’s Office, with Ajit Doval in charge, told Samant Goel to kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun in America. (Listen carefully: Ajit Doval allegedly told the R&AW chief Samant Goel to kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun in the US.)

Following that, The Washington Post claims Samant Goel returned to his office and summoned a man named Vikas Yadav. They say this Vikas Yadav worked for R&AW and had come from the CRPF. The Washington Post also says that Vikas Yadav, the man Samant Goel summoned, was not well-trained. Think about it: if the R&AW chief wanted to pick someone for a covert job, would he select someone poorly trained? But anyway, the Washington Post wrote that the “so-called Vikas Yadav” was singled out by the R&AW chief, who told him, “Look, we have to kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun in the US.”

The Washington Post further claims that Vikas Yadav then contacted someone named Nikhil Gupta, who allegedly worked for R&AW, was known to him, and operated in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. The Post says that when Vikas Yadav got in touch with Nikhil Gupta, it became apparent that Nikhil Gupta had no expertise in American operations, having only experience in Afghanistan-Pakistan. Nonetheless, Vikas Yadav supposedly told Nikhil Gupta, “We have an operation in the US as ordered by Ajit Doval and communicated via Samant Goel, and I’m telling you to do it. Because you don’t have expertise in the US, go to Europe, find a hitman, and we (R&AW) will pay him $100,000 to kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun.”

So The Washington Post, in its report, detailed how Nikhil Gupta went from Afghanistan to Europe, specifically to the Czech Republic (its capital is Prague). There, the report says, Nikhil Gupta tried to locate someone. According to The Washington Post, once in Prague, he found an American citizen willing to take on the job. Nikhil Gupta then allegedly brought that American to his hotel room, made a video call, and connected him with Vikas Yadav in R&AW headquarters in India. The Post claims that in R&AW headquarters, Vikas Yadav was sitting with three or four other officials, using a public, general video call system (imagine no encryption or secrecy) to speak with the American, telling him, “We’ll pay you $100,000. We’ll give you an advance of $15,000 right now. Go kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun.” And on that video call, Vikas Yadav supposedly told Nikhil Gupta, “Give him $15,000.” Then Nikhil Gupta handed over $15,000.

But The Washington Post claims this American citizen who received the $15,000 was not an ordinary individual but rather a double agent for the DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration). He was roaming around there, and upon hearing that India was willing to pay for a killing in the US, he immediately alerted the CIA station chief in Prague. That CIA station chief alerted the Czech police, resulting in the arrest of Nikhil Gupta. Because there’s an extradition treaty between America and the Czech Republic, images surfaced last year of Nikhil Gupta being put on a plane and taken from Prague to the US.

The Washington Post says that once Nikhil Gupta arrived from Prague to the US, the CIA and FBI interrogated him. At the time, the US was loudly accusing India of extraterritorial killings. But the US, of all countries, has neither the standing nor the moral authority to lecture anyone on extraterritorial killings—they themselves conduct chemical warfare and assassinations in other countries, including the murder of several of India’s ISRO scientists. If that all were ever exposed, the US would be unable to show its face in public. I suspect R&AW won’t even allow me to make such a discussion. But I’ll try to pass on this information someday.

Anyway, the US was claiming that India was conducting extraterritorial killings. What happened next? Last year, India declared that they were forming a committee led by our Deputy National Security Advisor to investigate whether this alleged Vikas Yadav officer existed, whether there was indeed such a video call, whether Nikhil Gupta actually paid money, and so on, so they could expose the truth. India’s committee produced a report, revealing the entire game plan was a manufactured story via The Washington Post involving Nikhil Gupta.

Once that report was ready, the Indian government instructed the Deputy National Security Advisor to go to the US. Last year, our Deputy NSA traveled to America and told the US that to defend a “Pappu,” Jake Sullivan, Jeff Bezos’s Washington Post, and Antony Blinken had fabricated this entire story. And we threatened that we would globally expose how they had framed our citizen. Additionally, the Indian NSA told them, “Bring out the records of this person named Nikhil Gupta, whom you arrested in Prague. That man is just a normal citizen, with no connection to R&AW. He traveled to Prague on a tourist visa. We have checked his passport details—indeed, he went there on a tourist visa for exploring handicraft trade prospects.”

India told America, “You have taken a tourist-visa traveler and portrayed him as a R&AW official, weaving a false story. But that’s not all.” Our Deputy NSA dealt the biggest blow by telling the US, “Also, if you plan to fabricate a narrative, at least do some basic research. Not every place can handle infinite amounts of ‘Pappuism.’ The man you keep calling ‘Vikas Yadav’ does not exist in R&AW. He’s a CRPF officer and remains in the CRPF. And if you want more clarity, let me tell you: the person in R&AW, at some time, was actually named Vikram Yadav, not Vikas Yadav, and he came from the CISF, not the CRPF. He served in R&AW and then returned to CISF. As of today, there is no officer named Vikas Yadav or Vikram Yadav currently in R&AW.”

Then, India’s Deputy NSA also told the US, “Look, you wove this entire fictitious tale using false names and a false storyline in The Washington Post. We only need to hold one press conference in India to reveal everything. After that, your beloved ‘Pappu’ (Trudeau) will be added to the global ‘Pappu’ club. Moreover, any remaining respect the US has in the global market will vanish.” At that point, the US had no choice but to acknowledge wrongdoing. The outcome?

First outcome: that poor man Nikhil Gupta would be released.
Second: it was proven that Nikhil Gupta had no association with R&AW.
Third: “Pappu” (Trudeau) would remain jobless, wandering around seeking alliances with Khalistanis or Jihadists. Indeed, for the past month or so, Canada’s Pappu “Dustbin Trudeau” has been doing just that.

What happened is that the Liberal Party realized if they want even a handful of seats in the October 2025 elections, they could not rely on this “Pappu.” If his face were used, they wouldn’t get even 10 seats. Therefore, they ousted him. One thing is certain: global politics requires serious players, not “Pappus” everywhere—this has been proven in America, India, and Canada.

So keep in mind that this was the entire affair. It was a meta-narrative, a story they spun about Nikhil Gupta. He was honorably released and came back. The Washington Post, anti-India in nature, got exposed. We conducted a thorough investigation, showing the entire deception. Jake Sullivan, the US National Security Advisor, came to India last week, essentially saying, “We’re letting Nikhil Gupta go.” Many of you kept asking me to make a report on Sullivan; I did not earlier because I was waiting for this very development. That’s why we are discussing about this today.

Thus, one thing is certain: you cannot tarnish India’s international image anymore. India is no longer the old India. It is a nation that global players must take seriously. This matter has been put to rest: Canada’s “Pappu” is gone, Nikhil Gupta is acquitted, and the entire Vikas Yadav–Vikram Yadav issue is resolved. Now we’ll see how Indo-Canadian relations unfold. The Trump administration is coming, and times will be more favorable for India.