This is the type of bullshit harami propaganda we are stuck with
When you ask why is it so difficult to deal with the TTP or Afghanistan, the above is your answer
Scum, treacherous, harami behavior PTM, ANP, PTI it's all the same
Pakistan has sedition laws, but nothing ever happens
GHQ goes as soft as possible, tries to allow IBOs and police to deal with the terrorists because it knows that if it goes full battle mode against Afghanistan and TTP, these haramis in the ANP, PTM will jump around like monkey's
Get this motherfcuker dead or in jail
Language ???
When someone like Mehmood Achakzai stands up and tells Pashtuns to carry Afghan ID cards, or claims that the Durand Line fencing was done on America’s orders, it exposes the real problem we’re dealing with, not just TTP, not just Afghanistan, but a whole political mindset that refuses to accept Pakistan as a legitimate state for Pashtuns.
This isn’t harmless rhetoric.
It shapes attitudes.
It influences young people.
And it creates space for groups like the TTP to justify their violence.
Achakzai’s larger message that Pashtuns belong to “Loy Afghanistan” and that Pakistan should not interfere is not just historically inaccurate, it’s politically reckless. Millions of Pashtuns have lived, worked, and built their lives in Pakistan for generations. Their identity is not borrowed, temporary, or conditional. It is rooted here.
But instead of strengthening unity, leaders like him push a narrative that Pashtuns are outsiders in their own country. That is the real danger.
And yes, this is why dealing with TTP and Afghanistan becomes so complicated. When mainstream political figures echo the same talking points extremists use, it blurs the line between political speech and ideological sabotage.
But here’s the thing:
Responding with rage, abuse, or calls for violence is not the answer. That only strengthens their narrative and weakens ours.
Pakistan has laws.
Pakistan has institutions.
Pakistan has the ability to hold people accountable but it must do so through the rule of law, not emotional outbursts.
If someone is spreading sedition, charge them.
If someone is undermining national security, prosecute them.
If someone is playing with ethnic fire, confront them politically and legally, not with threats.
The state cannot afford softness, but it also cannot afford lawlessness. The answer is firmness with discipline, not chaos.
Because the real strength of a nation is not in how loudly it shouts, but in how confidently it stands.