Pakistan’s enemies continue to use their intelligence resources and propaganda led hybrid warfare against Pakistan, as an endeavour to subvert some sections of Pakistani society against the state. The latest hybrid war methodology being used by the enemy is by subverting Pakistani students against the state, by supporting a country wide students’ solidarity campaign, to undermine Pakistan’s solidarity, stability and the progressing economy. This above mentioned strategy is being played in addition to the enemy’s earlier efforts of undermining Pakistan’s strength and image through repeated kinetic, ideological and economy related attacks. The latest strategy is being implemented by pampering, and supporting some Pakistani politicians and students, misleading a few media channels and shady activists. As published by the “peoples dispatch’ dated 22 November 2019, the Student Solidarity March in Pakistan, planned to be conducted on November 29, 2019,had gained support from important sections of the Pakistani left. The left party, Awami Workers Party (AWP), was the latest to express its support to the organizers. While citing the recent incidences of sexual harassment and blackmail in Pakistan’s Balochistan province, where security forces are being accused of abusing their position to use surveillance and heavy-handed policing to curb the student movement, the AWP demanded that the security forces stationed in Sind and Balochistan provinces to control student activities, should be moved from there. The students’ solidarity march preparations had gained further momentum, while a video captured at the Faiz International Festival organized by the Students Collective in Lahore, from 15 to 17 November 2019, had gone viral and triggered a massive countrywide debate. In the video, dozens of students can be seen reciting the poems of revolutionary poet, Faiz Ahmad Faiz, and sloganeering passionately against the state of governance in the country. Apart from the AWP, the student campaign has also gained the sympathies of some other like minded politicians, the PTM, organizations, and print/electronic media houses. As published by the University World News (The Global window on Higher Education),dated 5 December 2019,large-scale student demonstrations were held on 29 November 2019, in Pakistan under the banner ‘Students Solidarity March’, demanding the restoration of student unions banned in 1984, an end to harassment, an increase in the education budget and a reduction in fees. University World News further added that the students also raised their voices against tyranny, chanting slogans such as “we want freedom, we want justice”. The latest strategy is being implemented by pampering, and supporting some Pakistani politicians and students, misleading a few media channels and shady activists Students are seen in a video, challenging the ‘system’ and calling for freedom. They chanted verses of a revolutionary poem which says, “We are now determined to sacrifice our heads, let’s see how much power is in the hands of the executioner.” The protests were led by the umbrella Progressive Students Collective (PRSF) and some 25 student organisations participated. After the students’ march, the AWP has demanded, “All those students who have been arrested for organizing protests in Balochistan and Sindh provinces should be released, and the sedition charges imposed on students should also be revoked”. The above discussed scenario is being created by the forces inimical to Pakistan, which want to achieve their ulterior motives by creating unrest in the country and disturbing its stability to damage its progressing economy, which also serve the objectives of Pakistan’s enemies. In this context, linking of issues of students and the education system to the country’s security apparatus is also an attempt to release pressure on anarchists in Balochistan and Sind. This should be taken as the next attack on Pakistan in the 5th generation warfare spectrum. The issue has also to be understood in the context of student unions’ political activities before 1984, where students were misled and made to play into the hands of politicians, defeated in the national elections, and they were made to act as a front line destabilizing force through motivated demonstrations. The demonstrations became a source of creating violence and unrest to destabilize the governments of the time. This was done at the cost of sacrificing students’ education and their healthy mental development. In view of the above discussion, it is suggested that the student unions should not be restored in haste, lest the students again become a tool in the hands of the opposition politicians to destabilize the elected governments in Pakistan, and disturb peace and stability in Balochistan and Sind. Even otherwise, there is no bar on working of various student societies under the guidance of universities’ authorities to carry out their extra curricular activities. In any case, if the student unions are wished to be restored as is being advocated by some politicians, that should be done in the light of the Prime Minister Imran Khan’s statement, published in the Newsweek dated 2 December 2019, that his government was willing to restore student unions in universities across Pakistan, once it has established a “comprehensive and enforceable code of conduct” for their functioning to prevent past violence. The writer is a former Research Fellow of Islamabad Policy Research Institute (IPRI)