Asad Umar says DG ISI told NSC meeting he 'sees no conspiracy'.

LAHORE -- Former planning minister Asad Umar has conceded that the head of Pakistan's premier intelligence agency, the ISI, had told the National Security Committee (NSC) that he did not see a conspiracy against the then-PTI government.

According to a report published by media, the PTI Secretary-General said in a television show Wednesday that, however, the DG ISI did not produce any document in the meeting to support his stance, adding that it was all verbal.

The statement that followed the NSC meeting held on March 31, chaired by then-premier Imran Khan and attended by federal ministers and top military officials, said the committee decided to issue a strong demarche the country in question - later revealed to be the United States - and also notably made no mention of a conspiracy. It did, however, mention "blatant interference" in the internal affairs of a country.

Former prime minister Khan has continued to insist that his removal through a vote of no-confidence was a "regime change conspiracy" due to what he says is his "independent foreign policy".

A subsequent NSC meeting, chaired by his successor Shehbaz Sharif, ruled out a "foreign conspiracy", and later press conferences by the DG ISPR Major General Babar Iftikhar clarified that the word "conspiracy" was not used in the March 31 NSC statement.

The NSC meeting in...

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