Pakistan's political system remains unstable. The country continues cycling through democratic periods and military interventions, a pattern that's defined the last 75 years. Elections happen, governments form, institutions stumble, and
POLITICS
The IMF is squeezing Pakistan's development wallet. Only Rs1.13 trillion allocated to PSDP against a Rs4.1 trillion requirement — that's a 72 percent shortfall in what the country actually needs
Pakistan's democracy isn't broken. It's just never worked the way it should. Since 1947, the country has drafted four constitutions and seen five military takeovers. That's not a stable system.
Pakistan's nuclear playbook is outdated. Twenty-eight years after the Chagai tests in 1998, the strategic environment has shifted so dramatically that the assumptions driving our deterrence posture don't match today's
Bilawal Bhutto Zardari leads Pakistan's Pakistan People's Party now. The 35-year-old is foreign minister, holding one of the country's most critical posts in diplomacy and international relations. His family name
Pakistan keeps cycling between democracy and military takeover. That's the pattern nobody can seem to break. The constitution itself is the problem here, but not for the reason you'd think.
Pakistan's political system is broken. Not permanently, but broken enough that most Pakistanis don't trust it anymore. The country has rewritten its constitution five times since 1973. Five times. Every
Deputy Prime Minister Dar took the stage in New York this week with one message. Pakistan's economy is turning the corner, and investors should pay attention.He spoke at an Eid
Pakistan's nuclear moment still defines us. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif marked Youm-i-Takbeer on May 28 by reminding the nation what that day really meant. Back in 1998, when Pakistan detonated
Pakistan just broadened who can sit for TNE exams. That's the Transnational Education qualification, for those not tracking education policy closely.The government announced new eligibility rules that open doors for
Load More












