I can understand your point of view. All I am asking who could BRIBE Indian newspaper (small or big, even unknown) to write against RAW? On the other hand Tell me how do you rate Indian Express? Is it Pro India or anti-India? Here is something from Indian Express back in May 2017
http://indianexpress.com/article/ex...-hague-verdict-plays-out-in-pakistan-4662831/
Tussle between Army, govt will shape how The Hague verdict plays out in Pakistan by Praveen Swami | Updated: May 19, 2017 9:30 am
Kulbhushan Jadhav was sized up by the hardened intelligence professionals sitting across the table — and dismissed as a high-risk fantasist, officials present at the meeting recall. IN the summer of 2010, his hopes of setting up a marine engineering and gypsum-shipping business floundering in the sanctions-hit Iranian port of Chabahar, a former Naval officer walked into the offices of the Research and Analysis Wing off New Delhi’s Lodhi Road, with a startling business proposition. His dhow, the Kaminda, could spy on Pakistan’s naval works around Gwadar, the lean, balding man told officers at RAW’s Pakistan desk; he even suggested it could be used as a platform to ship in covert assault teams, to stage 26/11-type maritime retaliation against jihadists in Karachi. Kulbhushan Jadhav was sized up by the hardened intelligence professionals sitting across the table — and dismissed as a high-risk fantasist, officials present at the meeting recall. He made repeated attempts to secure a place on RAW’s payroll until 2012, with no success.
“The fatal conceit of most spies is to believe they are loved,” wrote Ben Macintyre, historian of the great Soviet spy Kim Philby, who betrayed his nation, and his class, for his beliefs. Jadhav, we can be reasonably certain, would have had no such delusions: no Indian spy had ever been acknowledged, let alone bartered, by the country for which he engaged in secret service.
Yet, a man who was, at most, a bit-actor in the India-Pakistan espionage game has become a central figure in one of the most high-stakes battles between the two countries. India has never taken the case of a citizen denied legal rights by Pakistan’s judicial system to the International Court of Justice. Nor has Pakistan ever invested so much capital in the case of one of the many Indian spies it has held. There’s little doubt Jadhav lived in the world inhabited by traffickers and spies alike. He was linked, in Chabahar, to the Karachi gangster Uzair Baloch — an Iranian intelligence asset whose eventual arrest seems to have facilitated Jadhav’s downfall.
Ahhh so the Journalist is really missing.