Hussain says the civilian coalition government consisting of the Pakistan People's Party, the Awami National Party, and the Muthaida Qaumi Movement is now in favor of such an operation. Hussain says the government now needs to generate consensus with the opposition parties in parliament.

Many among the opposition have already expressed their backing.

The opposition Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), which has advocated talking to the Taliban over confronting them, now appears to be taking a harder line.

"The government should launch this operation because of its own interest and not because of being pushed by outside powers," says Amir Muqam, a PML-N lawmaker who was targeted by Taliban suicide bombers in the past.

"It should convince the parliament and call a conference of all political parties to convince their leaders [about the urgency of such an offensive]. Everybody is against terrorism and finishing it off is in our best interests."

Popular Demand For Action

Clerics have also joined the calls for taking the fight to the Taliban.

Sahibzada Fazle Karim is head of the Sunni Ittehad Council, a powerful group that issued a fatwa, or religious decree, denouncing the Taliban's justification for targeting Malala Yousafzai.

"We want an immediate operation against the Taliban and will completely support the government," he told journalists on October 15, adding that the Taliban's only ideology was "terrorism."

Similar calls have been made across the country at small candlelight vigils, big political rallies, in newspaper columns, and on television talk shows.

An editorial on October 16 in the country's leading English-language daily, the "Express Tribune," concluded that "Pakistan has to fight terrorism and North Waziristan is the battleground." It added that the "world will rally around Pakistan if it decides to fight its own war."

Punjab Heartland Raises Its Voice

Khadim Hussain, an Islamabad-based political commentator, says Malala's shooting has piled pressure on the government by forging unprecedented unity among Pakistanis on the fundamental issue of being able to lead a normal life in a peaceful country.

Hussain says that for the first time the demand for a North Waziristan offensive has turned into a popular cause in the eastern Punjab Province.

Punjab is home to some 60 percent of Pakistan's 180 million people. Most of the military's rank-and-file comes from the province.

This wealthy industrial and agricultural heartland of Pakistan has generally been spared the violence gripping the northwestern tribal regions and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province. But its cities have endured Taliban attacks.

"From the majority Punjab region, the demands for such an offensive are emerging as a very strong popular demand. This puts huge pressure on the Pakistani military," Hussain says. "So I think they will not be able to trample over it."