The allegations are "baseless, ridiculous. Nothing new/credible, all speculations already proven false," Pakistan military spokesperson Lt Gen Asim Bajwa said in a post on microblogging site Twitter.
Pakistan Foreign Office spokesperson Tasnim Aslam, too, denied yesterday's New York Times report, saying: "There are many inconsistencies in the article. The author herself talks about suppositions from sources with no direct knowledge. So it is not something serious."
Intelligence sources, on condition of anonymity, had also rejected the story titled 'What Pakistan Knew About Bin Laden', adapted from the book 'The Wrong Enemy: America in Afghanistan, 2001-2014', to be published next month.
"The information came from a senior US official, and I guessed that the Americans had intercepted a phone call of Pasha's or one about him in the days after the raid", wrote Gall, who covered Afghanistan and Pakistan for the paper from 2001 to 2013.
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The report added that the haul of handwritten notes, letters, computer files and other information collected from bin Laden's house during the raid revealed regular correspondence "between Bin Laden and a string of militant leaders who must have known he was living in Pakistan, including Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, the founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba, a pro-Kashmiri group that has also been active in Afghanistan, and Mullah Omar of the Taliban".
"Any correspondence the two men had with Bin Laden would probably have been known to their ISI handlers," it said.
Saeed, who is wanted by Indian security agencies in connection with the 2008 Mumbai attacks, also denied the report yesterday.
Bin Laden was shot dead by US commandos in May 2012 in a unilateral raid by them, catching the Pakistanis by surprise.