Pakistan names former spymaster as new army chief
Pakistan’s government nominated a former spymaster on Thursday to be the next military chief, a position long considered the real power in the nuclear-armed Islamic nation of 220 million people.
Syed Asim Munir, currently quartermaster general, will replace General Qamar Javed Bajwa, who is retiring this month after serving as chief of army staff since November 2016.
“The process has completed in accordance with the law and constitution,” Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif told reporters, adding the nomination had been sent to the president for confirmation.
Pakistan’s military, the world’s sixth largest, holds undue influence over the nation and has staged at least three coups since independence in 1947, ruling for more than three decades.
The army chief also has to handle multiple domestic security threats from rising militancy, as well as the delicate balance of power with India.
Munir, the most senior of six officers considered for the top job, previously served as head of the Inter-services Intelligence (ISI) spy bureau.
He takes over at a time when Pakistan is riven by political strife, with former prime minister Imran Khan rallying supporters to stage mass protests pressing the government to call a snap election.
“The political process is very weak and democratic institutions are almost at a collapse,” analyst
Zahid Hussain said. “In this situation, the army automatically becomes an arbiter of power.”
Khan was ousted by Shehbaz Sharif in a no-confidence vote in April after the economy went into a tailspin and he lost the support of the top military brass.
Pundits have suggested Sharif ’s coalition picked that moment to secure the right to select the next army chief, who will steer elections due no later than next October.
Munir served as ISI chief under Khan, but his stint ended in June 2019 after just eight months following a reported falling out with the former cricket star.
Since leaving office Khan has held a series of mass rallies, frequently making unfounded claims that he was ousted by a Us-led foreign conspiracy, and questioning the military’s role in politics.
Earlier this month he ramped the rhetoric higher still, accusing Sharif and an army officer of plotting an assassination attempt that saw him shot at a rally in eastern Punjab province. —