Let $f\colon X\to Y$ be a smooth map between smooth manifolds. Then the pull-back operation $f^*\colon C^\infty(Y)\to C^\infty(X)$ is a linear continuous operator when $C^\infty$ is equipped with the usual topology of of uniform convergence on compact subsets of all partial derivatives.
It tuns out that sometimes $f^*$ can be extended to larger spaces of generalized functions. More precisely, fix a closed $\mathbb{R}_{>0}$-invariant subset $\Lambda\subset T^*Y\backslash 0$ of the cotangent bundle with removed zero section. Let $C^{-\infty}_\Lambda(Y)$ denote the space of generalized functions with the wave front set contained in $\Lambda$. This space $C^{-\infty}_\Lambda(Y)$ is equipped with some standard locally convex linear topology (see e.g. Ch. 6 in the book "Geometric Asymptotics" by Guillemin and Sternberg).
Let us assume that the map $f$ is transversal to $\Lambda$ in the sense that for any $x\in X$ if $(f(x),\eta)\in \Lambda$ then $(df_x^*)(\eta)\ne 0$. Then one defines a ("natural") linear map
$$f^*\colon C^{-\infty}_\Lambda(Y)\to C^{-\infty}(X)\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\, (1)$$
extending the usual pull-back on smooth functions (see the above mentioned book. Another very good reference is Hormander's ”The analysis of linear partial differential operators, I”; see especially Theorem 8.2.4.)
The point is that in the above literature the map (1) is proven to be sequentially continuous, namely it maps convergent sequences to convergent ones.
QUESTION. Is the pull-back map (1) topologically continuous?
The difference between usual topological continuity (e.g. continuity in the usual sense of maps of topological spaces) and sequential continuity seems to me to be quite subtle.
Edit: Definition of topology on $C^{-\infty}_\Lambda(X)$. Covering $X$ by open charts and using partition of unity we may assume that $X= \mathbb{R}^n$. For any $N\in\mathbb{N}, \phi \in C^\infty_c(\mathbb{R}^n)$, and any closed $\mathbb{R}_{>0}$-invariant subset $V\subset \mathbb{R}^n$ such that $$\Lambda\cap (supp(\phi)\times V)=\emptyset$$ let us define the semi-norm on $C^{-\infty}_\Lambda(\mathbb{R}^n)$ by $$||u||_{\phi,N,V}=sup_{\xi\in V}|\xi|^N|\widehat{\phi u}(\xi)|,$$ where $\hat F$ denotes the Fourier transform of the function $F$. Then one equips $C^{-\infty}_\Lambda(X)$ with the weakest locally convex topology which is stronger than the weak topology on $C^{-\infty}(X)$ and such that all semi-norms $\{||\cdot||_{\phi,N,V}\}$ are continuous.