In fact, I want to expand on this. People view insurgencies and terrorism all in the same brush but each one is unique to its own specific context and state goals. The outcome that some countries seek is extremely different to what others seek as well as the nature of the insurgency.
The problem is that Pakistanis are low IQ, often don't read much so they love taking copy-paste solutions done by X,Y,Z. It's the lazy village-idiot intellectual thing to do.
Mainly, the obsession is with the American strategy of hearts & minds, this is because the Pakistani Army lacking its own native ideological clarity or meaning in what Pakistan really is or its goal, has always seeked out-of-place solutions copied from outside, but especially from the US due to close ties and idolising it. They lack both originality, and a localised perspective because of the hollowness of Pakistani identity itself.
But there are major flaws in trying to just copy & paste US strategies because they were fundamentally expeditionary operations overseas to defeat specific groups like ISIS. In other words, the US needed their temporary support to defeat a group and then leave.
This is starkly different to national insurgencies within your border because not only do you defeat the insurgency, but it requires a strong degree of assimiliation and integration into the mainstream of the country. You are not going to up and leave, it's home territory.
This is why Turkish strategies, Sri Lankan or Chinese strategies had always been majorly different to US expeditionary forces overseas. Because there is also a larger demographic and cultural assimiliatiom program to stabilise a territory and integrate it. It's not a temporary thing.
@Panzerkiel opinions?