Orakzai. Central Kurram. Eleven soldiers, including a lieutenant colonel and a major, were killed in a pre-dawn assault. Nineteen militants died in return. The firefight lasted hours, a grim echo of battles Pakistan thought it had buried after Zarb-e-Azb. Across the province, villages watch the mountains in silence while gunfire writes the news.
The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan has regained coherence. Its commanders move freely across eastern Afghanistan under Kabul’s watchful indifference. Whenever Islamabad presses for action, Kabul nods politely, shrugs, or points the finger at Pakistan, but nothing changes on the ground. Every ambush reminds Pakistan of a truth diplomats have whispered for years: stabilisation in Kabul without accountability costs Pakistan blood.
The international community has shifted its gaze. Beijing and Tehran deepen trade and connectivity ties. Washington quietly probes “re-engagement” in Bagram. Recognition, investment, and influence take precedence over verified counterterrorism. Meanwhile, Pakistan pays in lives, in morale, in sovereignty left half-guarded.
At home, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa mirrors the battlefield’s disorder. Thirteen years of mismanagement and political infighting have hollowed governance. Police are under-resourced, local administrations are paralysed, and relief and infrastructure projects stall, as a result of which, militancy thrives. India’s strategic designs quietly aggravate the pressure. Policy papers and think-tank chatter openly discuss keeping Pakistan “preoccupied” on its western front. Every strike in Kurram, every blast in Dera Ismail Khan, stretches security forces thinner, consuming time and attention that could be spent on prevention and governance.
The soldiers on the ground still hold the line. Their resilience is undeniable. They bury their dead, return to patrols, and confront the familiar horror of a frontier that will not forgive. But courage alone is no strategy. Pakistan needs enforceable, quantifiable metrics: no trade, no connectivity, no engagement without dismantling sanctuaries. Border management must be a regional compact, not a national burden. Intelligence must be fused, patrols coordinated, and timelines credible.
Our frontier keeps bleeding because the rest of the region treats the problem as a transaction. The multi-million-dollar question is whether Islamabad can finally treat it as a state responsibility, not tomorrow, not next week, but now.






