Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Asim Munir appointed as Pakistan army chief

- Rezaul H Laskar

NEW DELHI: Lt Gen Asim Munir, a former head of the Inter-services Intelligen­ce (ISI) agency, was on Thursday appointed the new Pakistan army chief by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, ending intense speculatio­n about choosing the successor to Gen Qamar Bajwa.

Munir was considered the dark horse among the six generals who were in the race for the top post as he was set to retire on November 27, just two days before Bajwa completes an extended tenure of six years. People familiar with the matter said Munir’s reputation as a no-nonsense military officer known for his by-the-book approach to all matters helped clinch the post for him.

The appointmen­t was announced by informatio­n minister Marriyum Aurangzeb on Twitter. She posted in Urdu: “The Prime Minister of Pakistan Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif has decided to appoint Lt Gen Sahir Shamshad Mirza as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff [Committee] and Lt Gen Syed Asim Munir as the Chief of the Army Staff using the constituti­onal authority.”

Aurangzeb said a summary or formal proposal regarding this had been sent to President Arif Alvi for approval.

Though the approval of such appointmen­ts by Pakistan’s president is usually a formality, Alvi was appointed by former

WHY THE TOP JOB MATTERS

The army chief will play a key role in managing risks of conflict with nuclear-armed rival India on its east, while dealing with potential instabilit­y and friction with Afghanista­n on its west

Many world capitals, including Washington and Beijing, have direct ties with the military, given the country's strategic location, and a coastline close to major shipping lanes serving the oil-rich Gulf region

Foreign government­s have periodical­ly questioned the safety of nuclear arsenal, in a country so frequently needing IMF bailouts and where anti-western and anti-india militant groups have proliferat­ed

Internal security has been a problem due to insurgenci­es in ethnic Pashtun and Baloch regions Despite all the risks, Pakistan and its military have dismissed foreigners' concerns over the command and control, and security of its nuclear weapons

premier Imran Khan and relations between Alvi and the Shehbaz Sharif government have been strained. Soon after receiving the summary, Alvi travelled to Lahore to meet Khan, who is recuperati­ng from injuries sustained in a recent gun attack. Khan’s party tweeted he and the president will act “according to the constituti­on and laws” in the army chief’s appointmen­t.

Later in the evening, President Alvi signed the summary

and approved the appointmen­t of Lt Gen Munir as the new army chief and Lt Gen Mirza as the next CJCSC.

Munir, who belongs to the Frontier Force Regiment, has had stints heading both the ISI (in 2019) and Pakistan’s Military Intelligen­ce (2016-18). He was removed by Khan as ISI chief after a tenure of less than eight months as his no-nonsense attitude and by-the-books approach did not go down well with the then prime minister.

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