U.S. shuts Peshawar consulate over Khyber Pakhtunkhwa security concerns

Washington says engagement with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa will continue from Islamabad, but the closure is expected to raise fresh questions over KP's local security management and the province’s ability to reassure foreign missions.

PESHAWAR (The Thursday Times) — The United States has announced the phased closure of its Consulate General in Peshawar, saying diplomatic engagement with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa will now be handled by the US Embassy in Islamabad.

The US State Department said the decision reflected its commitment to the safety of diplomatic personnel and the efficient management of resources. Reuters reported that the department said the embassy in Islamabad would take over all diplomatic engagement with KP, whose capital is Peshawar.

In its official statement, the State Department said the United States was announcing the phased closure of the Peshawar consulate and that responsibility for diplomatic engagement with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa would be transferred to the US Embassy in Islamabad.

The closure marks a significant change in Washington’s physical presence in Pakistan’s north-west. Peshawar has long been a strategically important diplomatic post because of its proximity to Afghanistan and its position as the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The consulate was the closest US diplomatic mission to Afghanistan and played an important operational role during and after the 2001 US-led war in Afghanistan, according to the Associated Press.

US diplomatic operations in Pakistan are expected to continue through the embassy in Islamabad and consulates in Karachi and Lahore. Reporting on the closure has noted that the State Department has presented the move as a reduction in physical presence, not as an end to US engagement with Pakistan or Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The decision comes as Khyber Pakhtunkhwa continues to face security challenges linked to militancy, attacks on security forces and tensions along the Afghan border. Reuters noted that KP borders Afghanistan and has seen attacks and fierce fighting involving Pakistani forces and militants that Islamabad says are backed from Afghan territory.

The closure is also expected to place renewed scrutiny on the KP government’s handling of the province’s security environment. While counterterrorism policy involves both federal and provincial authorities, the decision by a major foreign mission to move its provincial engagement from Peshawar to Islamabad is likely to raise questions over local security management, policing capacity and the ability of the provincial administration to reassure diplomatic and international organisations operating in the province.

Officials in KP have repeatedly pointed to the scale of the threat, cross-border militancy and the province’s geographic exposure. However, the consulate closure underlines how persistent insecurity can affect not only local communities and law enforcement, but also foreign engagement, development access and Peshawar’s international profile.

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