@Meengla
Clarification, going on Gen. Tariq Khan’s analysis that there is no deference between the Afghan Talibs and the TTP, is that we have to deal with the Afghan Talibs when they are now at their weakest, a global pariah, who have even alienated the Chinese. We have to go effectively deal with the source of the problem and not ignore the problem or think force alone will do the work.
We need to change their culture when Pakistani Pashtuns make up a population nearly double the population of Afghan Pashtuns (50:25 million), which in a generation maybe even sized, probably at 65:65 million.
Remember the old Cold War adage about us troops in Germany; keep the Americans in, Russians out (in our case the Indians and any other disruptive foreign powers) and Germans down. German and Japanese culture were reshaped with economic incentives, and so must Afghan culture, a unified Pashtun leader most Pashtuns would accept agreeing to terms with.
As a one term PM, he could leave the political helm, and focus on building a non-nepotistic PTI, should God grant him the time to do so.
P.S. If we can solve this “frozen conflict” it will also create a template for solve our other frozen internal conflicts. Finding a way to politically and peacefully bring dissents into the fold. Conflicts for resources amongst different ethnic groups or parts of provinces, water resources and how tax revenue is spent. Progress on our internal and external frozen conflicts will build trust and attract FDI. Remember Chinese investors want to see stability before they will invest big. A major goal and milestone for an IK government will have to be terms to build and secure a Trans-Afghan railway with no post construction funny business. We need to have contract law solid in Afghan culture and our own culture for that matter.
Dealing with the TTP, has to be done like cancer, go to the source, cut off the blood supply (funding/support) allowing the cancer to keep growing or even just existing.
We have to like IK to know he can be useful for our national interests on the one border we can possible leverage our size upon.