Until  a few years ago, Pakistan's Swat Valley was a serene, beautiful region known  only to a handful of foreign and Pakistani domestic tourists. All that changed  with the gradual infiltration of the valley by Taliban extremists during the  2000s. In fact, by 2006 the Pakistani state had lost control of most of the  valley. The Pakistani state was left protecting Buddhist relics in the Swat  Museum and a few other isolated pockets of authority, mostly in the form of minor  paramilitary bases. 
However,  with the gradual Taliban takeover of the valley, alarm bells rang in Islamabad.  Islamabad,  Pakistan's capital, is approximately 250 kilometres and a four hours drive  from the Swat's largest town, Mingora. (As the crow flies, the distance between  the two cities is approximately 135 kilometers.) 
Additionally,  Swat is part of Pakistan 'proper,' civil courts, Constitution and all. The Swat  Valley is not part of Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). There  is no comparison between Swat and South  Waziristan. 
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| Pakistani soldiers raise the Pakistan flag at the Baine Baba Ziarat, the highest point in the Swat Valley located at a height of approximately 2,130 meters | 
Initially  uncertain about how to respond to the Taliban's encroachment on Pakistani  territory, the state marshalled its forces and acted in 2009. Taking advantage  of an unprecedented act of 'Islamic' justice – the whipping  of a teenage girl by extremists in a public square – the government lined  up public opinion behind a massive military offensive intended to eject Islamic  militants from the Swat Valley.
Following  bloody street battles and hand to hand combat, the  military emerged victorious and declared victory a few months after Operation Rah-e-Rast began in May 2009. The  operation came with a heavy price tag: millions of Swatis became temporarily homeless  and street fighting had destroyed much physical infrastructure in the valley. 
As  Malala's optimism testifies, the war was worth the cost. The Swat Valley is  open for tourism again. As a visitor to the Swat Valley myself late last year, I  bear  witness to the Valley's beauty and also its return to normalcy. 
Surely,  isolated  (and unacceptable) acts of violence still occur across the Valley. However,  the Taliban has been driven out. Girl schools are open. Women walk the streets  alone – subject to 'pre-Taliban' social constraints imposed by the  traditionally conservative Pashtun culture. Swat's residents radiate hope and  happiness; more so than most other parts of Pakistan. Electricity  shortages mean nothing to Swat's residents, they are happy simply to breathe  freely again. 
Most  importantly, an unambiguous and defiant message has been delivered to the  Pakistani Taliban by the Pakistani state and people: there is a line in the  sand beyond which Islamist encroachment onto the country's 'mainland' will not  be tolerated. 
One  may find many reasons to criticize the Pakistan army, beginning with General  Zia's disastrous 'Islamization' process in the 1980s. However, any visitor (or  resident) to the Swat Valley can do nothing but praise the Pakistani military.  The army has brought order back to the valley – restoring hope and sanity in  the process. If Pakistan has only one  success story from its war against the Taliban, the Swat Valley  has to be it.
View  a small selection of my photos from  the Swat Valley here. 
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Imran is a business and management consultant.  Through his work at Deodar Advisors and the Deodar  Diagnostic, Imran improves profits of businesses operating in Singapore and the  region. He can be reached at imran@deodaradvisors.com. 

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