By Mir Yar Baloch
The people of Balochistan have outright rejected the manufactured significance of March 23, a date the Pakistani state attempts to glorify as its so-called “Defense Day.” For many, it represents not strength, but decades of coercion, denial, and state violence.
This year’s muted observance of the day is telling. The decision by the military establishment in Pakistan to cancel or drastically scale down its annual parade is not some routine adjustment—it is a visible symptom of a state under strain. Pressure is mounting internally, driven by persistent resistance movements in Balochistan and growing unrest across Pashtun regions.
For decades, this parade has been a carefully staged spectacle: tanks rolling, missiles on display, fighter jets roaring overhead—all meant to project an image of dominance. But this year, that illusion cracked. Instead of choreographed displays of power in Islamabad, there was silence, unease, and a conspicuous absence of public confidence.
Even more revealing was the posture of the leadership. Ishaq Dar chose not to address the nation from a public मंच or among citizens, but from the comfort and safety of his drawing room. His message avoided the country’s spiraling economic crisis, deepening political instability, enforced disappearances, and the ongoing turmoil in Baloch and Pashtun areas. Instead, he resorted to threats and recycled the state’s predictable rhetoric on Kashmir.
The contrast could not be starker: leaders speaking from secure, insulated spaces while those they threaten live under the shadow of military operations, airstrikes, and repression.
The subdued marking of March 23 may well go down as more than just a scaled-back ceremony—it is a symbol of a state increasingly cornered by its own realities. When power retreats from parade grounds to drawing rooms, it does not signal strength. It signals fear, caution, and a growing inability to control the narrative beyond carefully scripted walls.





