Pakistan’s power structure has turned stupidity into a governing philosophy. The establishment props up corrupt governments, watches them launder public money, and then pretends to be shocked when nothing gets built, not dams, not storage systems, not even the basic infrastructure needed to keep the country alive. It’s a cycle of incompetence so deep that it feels intentional.
Pakistan should already have 1,500 dams, large, medium, and small, spread across the country to store water, support agriculture, and protect communities. This isn’t some ambitious dream; it’s the bare minimum for a nation that depends on the Indus Basin for survival. But instead of building, planning, or even thinking long‑term, the ruling elite has spent decades looting project budgets, inflating costs, and turning development into a money‑laundering pipeline.
And then comes the part that truly exposes the rot: whenever India builds dams or restricts water flow under the Indus Waters Treaty, our politicians don’t respond with engineering plans or diplomatic strategy. They don’t talk about building Pakistan’s own water security. No, they jump straight to childish threats like, “We will destroy Indian dams.”
Destroy what?
You can’t even build your own.
This is the political mindset that has dragged Pakistan into a water crisis. India builds infrastructure. Pakistan builds press conferences. India secures its future. Pakistan’s leaders secure their bank accounts.
The truth is brutal….
Pakistan doesn’t suffer from a water shortage, it suffers from a leadership shortage.
Until the establishment stops manufacturing puppets and starts building dams, Pakistan will remain stuck in the same cycle of incompetence, dependency, and national vulnerability.