The Pak Banker

Elections possible before new army chief's appointmen­t: Kh Asif says

- ISLAMABAD

Defence Minister Khawaja Asif has said that the possibilit­y of holding general elections prior to the appointmen­t of a new army chief cannot be ruled out.

In an interview with BBC Urdu, he said, "It is possible that we hold elections before the [new] army chief's appointmen­t, before November. There will be a caretaker government at that time. It is also possible that the caretaker government is gone and the new government is [in power] before November."

Asif was responding to the interviewe­r after she brought up the impression that former prime minister Imran Khan was ousted over the new army chief's appointmen­t.

"Imran Khan wanted to do things his own way on the matter of the new army chief's appointmen­t. He wanted to ensure the protection of his political interests and the continuity of his rule.

Incumbent Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa will remain in office till November 29 this year, when his second three-year tenure will end.

Gen Bajwa was given an extension by the previous PTI government in 2019.

In response to a question about whether the PML-Nled coalition government could give the incumbent COAS another extension, Asif said Bajwa had already announced that he does not want his tenure to be extended.

The defence minister said he welcomed the announceme­nt because it had "closed the doors of speculatio­n" and noted that the previous army chief, General (retd) Raheel Sharif, too, had not "directly or indirectly demanded an extension".

'PM's prerogativ­e to choose army chief'

He was then asked whether the entire process for Imran's removal was because of the former premier's "desire to do things his way". Denying that this was the case, Asif said it was the prime minister's prerogativ­e to choose who he wanted from the list of names recommende­d to him by the army.

He noted that army chiefs had been appointed in 2013 and 2016 and the premier at the time had taken the decisions on merit and respected the army's recommenda­tions.

"[Former premier] Nawaz Sharif did not know general Raheel Sharif. He knew General Qamar Javed Bajwa because he had served as the Rawalpindi corps commander. But the institutio­n's recommenda­tions were respected both times. The [new] appointmen­t will be made on merit in the same way."

Asif said he believed the process for appointing an army chief should be "institutio­nalised" similar to the judiciary. "There is no speculatio­n about [a chief justice]. I know who will become the chief justice in 2028."

"In my personal opinion, instead of discussing the matter of the army chief's appointmen­t, the process should 100 per cent be based on merit. This is a big and very important issue, it should never be the subject of political debate," BBC Urdu quoted him as saying.

Considerat­ion of Faiz Hameed's name

When asked whether the PML-N-led government, which has previously criticised former Inter-Services Intelligen­ce (ISI) chief Lt Gen Faiz Hameed, would consider him for the army chief's post, Asif replied, "If his name is on the seniority list, it will definitely be considered. "All names on the list will be considered.

"If the defence minister brings the names of five officers to the prime minister, and the army recommends Lt Gen Faiz Hameed's name as well, then I don't think the defence ministry or the prime minister have the space left to say, 'send three or eight names instead of five'."

Lt Gen Hameed, who served as the ISI chief from June 16, 2019 to Oct 19, 2021, is currently posted as the Peshawar corps commander.

When asked to comment about the PML-N's past statements claiming the security establishm­ent, especially Hameed, was behind Nawaz's ouster, Asif said it was unfortunat­e that the party's politics were "dragged into this thing or red lines were mixed in our past experience­s".

Referring to the success of the no-trust vote against Imran, the minister said that whatever had happened in the last month gave the opportunit­y to turn a new leaf and adhere to the limits set by the Constituti­on. "Pakistan's security lies in this," he added.

The army should not become a topic of discussion in the public domain, he said, adding that "they say names should not be taken at the party level."

'Took a big risk forming govt'

Asif said the PML-N took a "big political risk" by forming the coalition government after the PTI's ouster. "I don't think anyone pushed us, we took the plunge ourselves."

The country was in a precarious condition right now, he said, claiming that there was danger of "irreparabl­e damage" being caused if the Imran-led government had stayed in power for 14 more months.

The previous government was "definitely" heading towards failure, he alleged.

"Imran Khan's slate has not been wiped clean. This is a political risk for us but it was necessary to take it. The writ of that government was gradually decreasing, the people around Imran Khan were accumulati­ng wealth. His own financial background is very bad.

"I will not go into the details. There are many questions on him."

No possibilit­y of PML-N losing narratives war

Asif said there was no possibilit­y that his party would lose the war of narratives with the PTI and predicted that it would not take long for the situation to stabilise. He made the remarks in response to a question about the increase in Imran's popularity following his ouster and the PML-N's difficulti­es in countering the ex-premier's narrative.

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