In recent days, Tirah Valley has become the unlikely stage for a controversy that says as much about Pakistan’s fractured politics as it does about the fragile realities of life along its north-western frontier. What should have remained a routine, if harsh, seasonal movement of people has been inflated into a narrative of displacement, conspiracy and institutional conflict. The defence minister, Khawaja Muhammad Asif, has now sought to deflate that narrative, arguing that there is neither a military operation under way nor any extraordinary state action forcing residents from their homes. His intervention is less a denial of hardship than a plea for proportion.
For generations, winter has dictated the rhythms of life in Tirah and neighboring valleys straddling the Pak–Afghan border. Heavy snowfall, impassable terrain and brutal cold have left families with little choice but to descend to lower areas for several months each year. This migration is not a secret policy or a new experiment; it is a survival strategy embedded in local memory. To recast it as a sudden eviction, orchestrated by shadowy forces, risks severing the present from both history and geography. The defence minister’s insistence that this winter is no different from those before it may sound prosaic, but prosaic truths are often the first casualties of political drama.
Crucially, the formalization of this year’s migration did not originate in Islamabad or Rawalpindi. It emerged from the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government itself, following meetings with tribal elders in December and accompanied by a substantial financial package. The decision was administrative and pragmatic, intended to provide structure and support to a movement that would have occurred regardless. To later disown that decision, or to attribute it to federal or military diktat, is to engage in a selective reading of events. In a federation already burdened by suspicion, such maneuvering deepens mistrust and weakens the very institutions meant to serve citizens.
More unsettling than the argument over migration, however, are the disclosures that accompanied it. The presence of hundreds of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan militants in Tirah Valley, living alongside their families, and the cultivation of cannabis on a vast scale to finance their activities, point to a security challenge far more serious than any rhetorical dispute. These claims, if accurate, describe a parallel economy and an armed presence that thrive on neglect and denial. Reducing the debate to accusations of forced displacement while sidestepping these dangers is a form of wilful blindness. It allows politics to eclipse security, and symbolism to replace substance.
The defence minister’s remarks also reflected an evolution in Pakistan’s approach to internal security. The era of large-scale military operations, which tore through communities and drained the economy, has given way to a preference for intelligence-led, targeted actions. This shift is born of bitter experience. Sweeping offensives may have cleared territory, but they also displaced millions and left scars that endure. A more precise doctrine, while imperfect, acknowledges that lasting security cannot be imposed solely through force. It requires legitimacy, coordination and a measure of trust between state and citizen.
History, too, has been enlisted in this argument, not as nostalgia but as evidence. The federal information minister’s invocation of British-era records documenting winter migration in Khyber district serves as a reminder that the past often offers clarity where the present breeds confusion. Climate change may have altered patterns of snowfall, but it has not erased the fundamental constraints of mountainous life. To frame today’s movement as unprecedented is to disregard a century of recorded experience.
Yet controversies rarely ignite without a spark. In this case, remarks by the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chief minister, amplified in public gatherings and the provincial assembly, lent official weight to claims of forced eviction and institutional sabotage. Allegations that the army was orchestrating the process resonated in a province long sensitive to federal overreach. Faced with the repetition and intensity of these charges, the federal government chose to respond publicly. The joint press conference was less an exercise in triumph than an attempt at containment, a bid to prevent a political fire from spreading further.
The broader context is impossible to ignore. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan have endured years of militancy, paying in blood and opportunity. Military operations did push insurgents back and restore a fragile calm, but subsequent political choices allowed many militants to re-emerge, reigniting violence. Where cooperation between center and province has been maintained, security has improved. Where confrontation has prevailed, instability has followed. This is not coincidence but consequence.
The most troubling aspect of the Tirah debate is the sense that Islamabad and Peshawar are drifting into a posture more akin to rivalry than partnership. Political disagreements are inevitable in a democracy, but they are meant to be resolved through dialogue, not through public denunciation of state institutions. The constitution offers no endorsement of open hostility, and national cohesion cannot survive sustained rhetorical assault. Lost amid these exchanges are the people of Tirah themselves. Long marginalized, battered by poverty and conflict, they find their lives reduced to talking points.
Their needs are neither abstract nor ideological. They require security that does not uproot them, livelihoods that endure beyond winter, and services that acknowledge their citizenship. Using their hardship as a lever in political contests compounds their suffering. Responsibility therefore rests heavily on the provincial leadership to exercise restraint. Foreign policy and the management of cross-border militancy fall within the federal domain, informed by evidence already presented on international platforms. To demand proof piecemeal, or to advocate negotiations without clear conditions, risks fragmenting a response to a threat that is inherently national.
Dialogue with militants may appeal as a shortcut to peace, but it cannot be an end in itself. Any engagement must be predicated on renunciation of violence, acceptance of the constitution and accountability for past crimes. Without these, talks risk legitimizing actors who have shown scant regard for civilian life or state authority. The Tirah controversy, stripped of its theatrics, is a cautionary tale. It reveals how easily routine governance can be derailed by mistrust, how history can be ignored when inconvenient, and how genuine dangers can be obscured by political noise. In a country fatigued by conflict, the imperative is clear. Honesty must replace insinuation, cooperation must trump confrontation, and the welfare of citizens must outweigh the temptations of political gain. Only then can the valleys of the frontier hope for winters defined by endurance, not by manufactured fear.
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