08/06/2026
Pakistan’s Power Structure Is Entering a Dangerous Collision Course
Pakistan’s political power game has entered another sensitive phase. In this video, we discuss how PPP’s victory in Gilgit-Baltistan, the upcoming Azad Kashmir political equation, the federal budget pressure, and the debate around the possible 28th Amendment are all connected to one larger power struggle.
PPP has always worked through leverage: demand more, take what is available, hold the rest for the next round. But does winning GB mean PPP will simply agree to every constitutional experiment? Or is PPP using the budget, GB government formation, and AJK politics to protect its own position—especially in Sindh?
The video also examines the dangerous situation in Kashmir, where political engineering and state handling may backfire badly. When people are killed, funerals create grievances that do not disappear easily. The question is not only what PPP or PML-N will do, but whether Pakistan’s power structure understands the sensitivity of Kashmir at all.
Alongside internal politics, the international environment is also shifting. Iran, Israel, Trump, America, China, Afghanistan, Balochistan, minerals, and regional alignments are all affecting Pakistan’s internal power calculations. If America and Iran move toward a direct understanding, Pakistan’s old balancing game between China and the US becomes even more complicated.
This is not just about elections, budget, or one amendment. This is about leverage, survival, regional instability, and a system moving toward confrontation.