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Muhammad Ayub Khan

Muhammad Ayub Khan[c] (14 May 1907 – 19 April 1974) was a Pakistani military officer and politician who served as the second president of Pakistan from 1958 to 1969. He previously served as the third Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army from 1951 to 1958.

Muhammad Ayub Khan
محمد ایوب خان
Khan in West Germany in 1961
2nd President of Pakistan
In office
27 October 1958 – 25 March 1969
Preceded byIskandar Ali Mirza
Succeeded byYahya Khan
4th Minister of Defense
In office
28 October 1958 – 21 October 1966
Preceded byMuhammad Ayub Khuhro
Succeeded byAfzal Rahman Khan
In office
24 October 1954 – 11 August 1955
Prime MinisterMohammad Ali Bogra
DeputyAkhter Husain
(Defence Secretary)
Preceded byMohammad Ali Bogra
Succeeded byChaudhry Muhammad Ali
Minister of Interior
In office
23 March 1965 – 17 August 1965
DeputyInterior Secretary
Preceded byK. H. Khan
Succeeded byAli Akbar Khan
3rd Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army
In office
23 January 1951[1] – 26 October 1958
PresidentIskander Mirza
Governors General
Prime Minister
DeputyChief of General Staff
See list
Preceded bySir Douglas Gracey
Succeeded byMusa Khan
Chief Martial Law Administrator
In office
7 October 1958 – 27 October 1958
PresidentIskander Mirza
Preceded byFeroz Khan Noon
Succeeded byNurul Amin (1971)
Personal details
Born(1907-05-14)14 May 1907
Rehana, North-West Frontier Province, British India (now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan)
Died19 April 1974(1974-04-19) (aged 66)
Islamabad, Pakistan
Resting placeRehana, Haripur, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan
Nationality
Political partyConvention Muslim League (before 1974)
Other political
affiliations
Pakistan Muslim League (1962)
SpouseBegum Ayub Khan[2]
Children2, including Gohar Ayub Khan
CabinetMinistry of Talents
Military service
Allegiance British India (1928-47)
Pakistan (1947-58)
Branch/service British Indian Army
Pakistan Army
Years of service1928–1958[a]
Rank Field Marshal[b]
Unit15th Punjab Regiment
Commands
Battles/wars

Born in the North-West Frontier Province, Khan was educated from the Aligarh Muslim University and trained at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. He fought in the Second World War on the British side against the Imperial Japanese Army. After the partition of India in August 1947, he joined the Pakistan Army and was stationed in East Bengal. In 1951, he became the first native commander-in-chief, succeeding General Sir Douglas Gracey. From 1953 to 1958, he served in the civilian government as Defence and Home Minister and supported president Iskandar Ali Mirza's decision to impose martial law against prime minister Feroze Khan's administration on 7 October 1958. Two weeks later, after a breakdown in civil–military relations, Khan seized presidency in a military coup, the first in the country's history.

As president, Khan appointed Muhammad Musa to replace him as commander-in-chief. He aligned Pakistan with the United States, and allowed American access to air bases inside Pakistan, most notably the airbase outside of Peshawar, from which spy missions over the Soviet Union were launched. Relations with neighboring China were strengthened but his alignment with the US worsened relations with the Soviet Union in 1962. He launched Operation Gibraltar against India in 1965, leading to an all-out war. It resulted in a stalemate and peace was restored via the Tashkent Declaration. Domestically, Ayub subscribed to the laissez-faire policy of Western-aligned nations at the time. Khan privatised state-owned industries, and liberalised the economy generally. Large inflows of foreign aid and investment led to the fastest-growing economy in South Asia. His tenure was also distinguished by the completion of hydroelectric stations, dams, and reservoirs. Under Ayub, Pakistan's space program was established, and the country launched its first uncrewed space-mission by 1962. However, the failure of land reforms and a weak taxation system meant that most of this growth landed in the hands of the elite. In 1965, Khan entered the presidential race as the Convention Muslim League's candidate to counter the opposition candidate Fatima Jinnah. Ayub won the elections and was re-elected for a second term. In 1967, disapproval of price hikes of food prompted demonstrations across the country led by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Following protests in East Pakistan, Ayub resigned in March 1969 and appointed Yahya Khan. Later, fighting a brief illness, he died in 1974.

Khan remains the country's longest-serving president and second-longest serving head of state. His legacy remains mixed; his era is often dubbed the "Decade of Development". Khan is credited with economic prosperity and industrialisation. He is denounced by critics for beginning the first of the intelligence agencies' incursions into national politics, for concentrating wealth in a corrupt few hands, and for geographically discriminatory policies that later led to the Bangladesh Liberation War.

Early life edit

Ayub Khan was born on 14 May 1907 in Rehana, a village in Abbottabad District of the North-West Frontier Province during the British Raj (now in Haripur District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan) into a Hindko-speaking Hazarewal family of Pashtun descent belonging to the Tareen tribe.[4][5][6][7][8]

He was the first child of the second wife of Mir Dad Khan, a Risaldar-Major (a regimental JCO which was then known as VCO) in the 9th Hodson's Horse which was a cavalry regiment of the British Indian Army.[9] For his basic education, he was enrolled in a school in Sarai Saleh, which was about 4 miles from his village. He used to go to school on a mule's back and was shifted to a school in Haripur, where he started living with his grandmother.[8]

He went on to study at Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) and[10] while pursuing his college education, he was accepted into the Royal Military College at Sandhurst on the recommendation of General Sir Andrew Skeen; he did not complete his degree at AMU and departed for Great Britain.[11][12] Ayub Khan was fluent in Urdu, Pashto,[citation needed] English, and his regional Hindko dialect.[13]

Military service edit

 
Brig. Ayub Khan meeting with Governor-General Muhammad Ali Jinnah, c. 1947

Ayub Khan was admitted to the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, in 1926.[14] He was commissioned as a 2nd Lt. on 2 February 1928 in the 1/14th Punjab Regiment (1st Battalion of the 14th Punjab Regiment) of the British Indian Army – before this he was attached to the Royal Fusiliers.[14][15] Amongst those who passed out with him was the future chief of army staff of the Indian Army, General Joyanto Nath Chaudhuri, who served as the army chief from 1962 to 1966 while Ayub was the president of Pakistan.[16] After the standard probationary period of service in the British Army, he was appointed to the British Indian Army on 10 April 1929, joining the 1/14th Punjab Regiment Sherdils, now known as the 5th Punjab Regiment.[17]

He was promoted to lieutenant on 2 May 1930 and to captain on 2 February 1937.[18][19] During World War II, he was promoted to the temporary rank of lieutenant-colonel in 1942 and was posted in Burma to participate in the first phase of the Burma Campaign in 1942–43.[citation needed] He was promoted to the permanent rank of major on 2 February 1945.[20] Later that year, he was promoted to temporary colonel and assumed the command of his own regiment in which he was commissioned to direct operations in the second phase of the Burma Campaign; however, he was soon temporarily suspended without pay from that command for visible cowardice under fire.[21]

In 1946, he was posted back to British India and was stationed in the North-West Frontier Province. In 1947, he was promoted to brigadier and commanded a brigade in mountainous South Waziristan.[22] When the United Kingdom announced the partition of British India into India and Pakistan, he was one of the most senior serving officers in the British Indian Army who opted for Pakistan in 1947.[14][22] At the time of his joining, he was the tenth ranking officer in terms of seniority with service number PA-010.[23]

In the early part of 1948, he was given the command of the 14th Infantry Division[citation needed] in the rank of acting major-general stationed in Dacca, East Pakistan.[24] In 1949, he was decorated with the Hilal-i-Jurat (HJ) by Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan for non-combatant service and called back to General Headquarters as the Adjutant General of the army on November of the same year.[citation needed]

Commander-in-chief of the Pakistan Army edit

 
General Ayub Khan as C-in-C of the Pakistan Army, in his office, 23 January 1951

General Sir Douglas Gracey relinquished the command of the Pakistan Army on 23 January 1951, under pressure of calls for "nationalisation" of the army.[1] The Pakistan government had already called for appointing native commanders-in-chief of the army, air force, and navy and dismissed deputation appointments from the British military.[25][26] The General Headquarters sent the nomination papers to the Prime Minister's Secretariat for the appointment of commander-in-chief.[citation needed] There were four senior officers in the race: Major-General Akbar Khan, Major-General Iftikhar Khan, Major-General Ishfakul Majid, and Major-General N.A.M. Raza. Among these officers Akbar was the senior, having been commissioned in 1920.[27][28][29][30][31][32]

Initially, General Iftikhar Khan (commissioned in 1929) was selected for appointment as the first native commander-in-chief of the army, but he died in an airplane crash en route to take command after finishing the senior staff officers' course in the United Kingdom. All three remaining generals were bypassed including the recommended senior-most Major-General Akbar Khan and Major-General Ishfakul Majid (commissioned in 1924).[citation needed]

Defence Secretary Iskandar Mirza at that time played a crucial role in lobbying for the army post selection, by presenting convincing arguments to Prime Minister Ali Khan to promote the most junior Major-General, Ayub Khan (commissioned in 1928), to the post despite the fact that his name was not included in the nomination list.[citation needed] Ayub's papers of promotion were approved and he was appointed the first native commander-in-chief of the Pakistan Army on 17 January 1951 by Prime Minister Ali Khan.[33] This ended the transitional role of British military officers.[34] Although the Pakistani government announced the appointment of the navy's native commander in chief in 1951, it was Ayub Khan who helped Vice-Admiral M.S. Choudhri to be appointed as the first native navy commander in chief, also in 1953.[25][35] The events surrounding Ayub's appointment set the precedent for a native general being promoted out of turn, ostensibly because he was the least ambitious of the generals in the line of promotion and the most loyal to civil government at that time.[36]

In 1953, Ayub visited Turkey, his first foreign visit as an army commander in chief, and was said to have been impressed with Turkish military tradition; he met only with the Turkish Defence minister during his visit. Thereafter, he went to the United States and visited the US State Department and Pentagon to lobby for forging military relations.[37] He termed this visit as a "medical visit" but made a strong plea for military aid which was not considered due to India's opposition.[38]

Cabinet and Defence Minister edit

On 24 February 1954, Ayub signed the Central Treaty Organization (CENTO) pact for Pakistan and his role in national politics, along with that of Defense Minister Mirza, began to grow[39]

In 1954, Prime Minister Muhammad Ali Bogra's relations with the military and Governor-General Ghulam Muhammad deteriorated on issues of the economy.[40] Pressure built up to reconstruct the cabinet which eventually witnessed General Ayub Khan becoming the defence minister and Iskander Mirza as home minister in October 1954.[41][42] Ayub Khan disdained civilian politicians, whose factional infighting had for years prevented adoption of a constitution. He wrote that he reluctantly joined the cabinet as defence minister with "two clear objectives: to save the armed forces from the interference of the politicians, and to unify the provinces of West Pakistan into one unit."[43]

The controversial One Unit Scheme integrated the four western provinces into one political entity, West Pakistan, as a counterbalance against the numerically superior population of East Bengal, which was renamed East Pakistan. The province of Punjab supported the project, but all the other provinces protested against it and its centralisation of power. Opposition was particularly strong in East Bengal, where it was seen as an attack on the democratic principle of political egalitarianism.[44]

In 1955, Prime Minister Bogra was dismissed by Governor-General Malik Ghulam Muhammad and he was succeeded by the new Prime Minister Chaudhry Muhammad Ali as the Defence Minister.[45]

After the 1954 provincial elections in East Pakistan, the Awami League formed the government there while West Pakistan was governed by the PML, but the PML government collapsed in 1956.[46] He was called on to join the Cabinet as Defence Minister by Prime Minister H.S. Suhrawardy and maintained closer relations with Iskander Mirza who now had become the first President of the country after the successful promulgation of the Constitution in 1956.[citation needed] In 1957, President Mirza promoted him from acting full general to the substantive rank of full general.[47][48]

Around this time the MoD, led by General Ayub Khan, began to see the serious interservice rivalry between the General Headquarters staff and the Naval Headquarters staff.[49] Commander in Chief of Navy Vice-Admiral M. S. Choudri and his NHQ staff had been fighting with the Finance ministry and the MoD over the issues of rearmament and contingency plans.[50]

He reportedly complained about Admiral M. S. Choudri to President Mirza and criticized Admiral Choudri for "neither having the brain, imagination, or depth of thought to understand such (defence) problems nor the vision or the ability to make any contribution".[51] The impasse was broken with Admiral Choudhri resigning from the navy in protest as a result of having differences with the navy's plans of expansion and modernization.[52][53]

Presidency (1958–1969) edit

1958 military coup edit

 
Ayub Khan in 1958 with H. S. Suhrawardy and Mr. and Mrs. S. N. Bakar
 
Ayub Khan (back row, second from the right) with Elizabeth II, former Queen of Pakistan at the 1960 Commonwealth Prime Minister's Conference, Windsor Castle

Suhrawardy and Feroz began campaigning to become prime minister and president in the upcoming general elections.[citation needed] Also, the conservative Pakistan Muslim League, led by its President A.Q. Khan, was threatening to engage in civil disobedience.[54] These events were against President Mirza hence he was willing to dissolve even Pakistan's One Unit for his advantage.[30]

On 7 October 1958, President Mirza abrogated the Constitution after sending a letter to Prime Minister Feroz announcing the coup d'état. Most of the country's politicians only became aware of the coup the next morning;[55] only U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan James Langley was kept fully informed of political developments in the country.[54] President Mirza declared martial law and appointed General Ayub chief martial law administrator (CMLA).[56]

Ayub justified his part by declaring that: "History would never have forgiven us if the present chaotic conditions were allowed to go on any further," and his goal was to restore a democracy that the "people can understand and work", not to rule indefinitely.[57] When the public was informed, public reactions were mixed. The immediate crackdown on smuggling, corruption, and trafficking won Ayub plenty of support from the commoners. The middle-class and the upper-middle class were more apprehensive.[citation needed]

President Mirza himself was apprehensive, though for a different reason. He had been contemplating replacing Ayub Khan, and it seems that Ayub knew. Immediately after the Supreme Court's Chief Justice Munir justified the coup under the doctrine of necessity, Ayub sent the military into the presidential palace and exiled Mirza to England.[58] This was largely done with the support of: Admiral A. R. Khan, General Azam Khan, Nawab of Kalabagh Amir Khan, General Dr. Wajid Khan, and Air Marshal Asghar Khan.[citation needed]

The regime came to power with the intent of instituting widespread reform. Like Mirza, Ayub advocated for greater centralization of power, and his ruling style was more American than British. He "vowed to give people access to speedier justice, curb the crippling birth rate, and take appropriate steps, including land reforms and technological innovation, to develop agriculture so that the country could feed itself".[57]

Ayub finally "restored civil administration", although he maintained the Presidency and relied on an intricate web of spy agencies to maintain supremacy over the bureaucracy, including calling upon civilian intelligence agencies.[citation needed]

In 1960, a referendum, that functioned as the Electoral College, was held that asked the general public: "Do you have confidence in Muhammad Ayub Khan?". The voter turnout was recorded at 95.6% and such confirmation was used as impetus to formalise the new system – a presidential system.[59] Ayub Khan was elected president for the next five years and decided to pay his first state visit to the United States with his wife and also daughter Begum Naseem Aurangzeb in July 1961.[59] Highlights of his visit included a state dinner at Mount Vernon, a visit to the Islamic Center of Washington, and a ticker tape parade in New York City.[60]

Constitutional and legal reforms edit

A constitutional commission was set-up under the Supreme Court to implement the work on the constitution that was led by Chief Justice Muhammad Shahabuddin and Supreme Court justices. The commission reported in 1961 with its recommendations but President Ayub remained unsatisfied; he eventually altered the constitution so that it was entirely different from the one recommended by the Shahabuddin Commission. The constitution reflected his personal views of politicians and the restriction of using religions in politics. His presidency restored the writ of government through the promulgated constitution and restored political freedom by lifting the martial law enforced since 1958.[61]

The new constitution respected Islam, but did not declare Islam as the state religion and was viewed as a liberal constitution.[61] It also provided for election of the president by 80,000 (later raised to 120,000) Basic Democrats who could theoretically make their own choice but who were essentially under his control. He justified this as analogous to the American Electoral College[citation needed] and cited Thomas Jefferson as his inspiration.[62] The Ayub administration "guided" the print newspapers through his takeover of key opposition papers and, while Ayub Khan permitted a National Assembly, it had only limited powers.[63]

In 1961, he promulgated the "Muslim Family Law Ordinance".[64] Through this ordinance, unmitigated polygamy was abolished. Consent of the current wife was made mandatory for a second marriage, and brakes were placed on the practice of instant divorce under Islamic tradition, where men could divorce women by saying:"I divorce you" three times.

The Arbitration Councils were set up under the law in the urban and rural areas to deal with cases of: (a) grant of sanction to a person to contract a second marriage during the subsistence of a marriage; (b) reconciliation of a dispute between a husband and a wife; (c) grant of a maintenance allowance to the wife and children.[65]

Economy and infrastructure edit

 
Kaptai Dam in East Pakistan being visited by Ayub Khan

Industrialization and rural development through constructing modern national freeways are considered his greatest achievements and his era is remembered for successful industrialization in the impoverished country. Strong emphasis on capitalism and foreign direct investment (FDI) in the industry is often regarded as the "Great Decade" in the history of the country (both economical and political history).[66] The "Decade of Development" was celebrated, which highlighted the development plans executed during the years of Ayub's rule, the private consortium companies and industries, and is credited with creating an environment where the private sector was encouraged to establish medium and small-scale industries in Pakistan.[66] This opened up avenues for new job opportunities and thus the economic graph of the country started rising.[67] He oversaw the development and completion of mega projects such as hydroelectric dams, power stations, and barrages all over the country.[68] During 1960–66, the annual GDP growth was recorded at 6.8%.[69]

Several hydroelectric projects were completed, including the Mangla Dam (one of the world's largest dams), several small dams and water reservoirs in West Pakistan, and one dam in East Pakistan, the Kaptai Dam.[citation needed] President Ayub authorized planning of nuclear power plants.[70] Dr. Abdus Salam. supported by the President, personally approved the project in Karachi while the project in East Pakistan never materialized.[71]

Extensive education reforms were supposedly carried out and 'scientific development efforts' were also supposedly made during his years. These policies could not be sustained after 1965, when the economy collapsed and led to economic declines which he was unable to control.[72][73]

Ayub introduced new curricula and textbooks for universities and schools. Many public-sector universities and schools were built during his era.[74] He also introduced agricultural reforms preventing anyone from occupying more than 500 acres of irrigated and 1000 acres of unirrigated land. An oil refinery was established in Karachi. These reforms led to 15% GNP growth of the country that was three times greater than that of India. Despite the increase in the GNP growth, the profit and revenue was gained by the famous 22 families of the time that controlled 66% of the industries and land of the country and 80% of the banking and insurance companies of Pakistan.[75]

Defence spending edit

During the Ayub era, the navy was able to introduce submarines and slowly modified itself by acquiring warships.[25] However, Ayub drastically reduced funding of the military in the 1950s and de-prioritized nuclear weapons in the 1960s.[70][76] The military relied on donations from the United States for major weapons procurements.[77] Major funding was made available for military acquisitions and procurement towards conventional weaponry for conventional defence. In the 1960s, the Pakistani military acquired American‑produced conventional weapons such as Jeep CJs, M48 Patton and M24 Chaffee tanks, M16 rifles, F-86 fighter airplanes, and the submarine PNS Ghazi; all through the US Foreign Military Sales program.[77] In 1961, President Ayub started the nation's full‑fledged space program in cooperation with the air force, and created the Suparco civilian space agency that launched sounding rockets throughout the 1960s.[78]

Ayub prioritized nuclear power generation over the use of nuclear technology for military purposes. He reportedly spent ₨. 724 million on the civilian Karachi Nuclear Power Plant and related education of engineers and scientists.[79]

Ayub Khan filled more and more civil administrative positions with army officers, increasing the military's influence over the bureaucracy. He expanded the size of the army by more than half from the early 1960s to 1969, and maintained a high level of military spending as a percentage of GDP during that period, peaking in the immediate aftermath of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965.[80]

Foreign policy edit

U.S. alliance and 1960 U-2 incident edit

 
President Ayub with President Kennedy in Washington D.C., 1961

The main feature of Ayub Khan's foreign policy was prioritized relations with the United States and Europe. Foreign relations with the Soviet Union were downplayed. He enjoyed support from President Dwight Eisenhower in the 1950s and, working with Prime Minister Ali Khan, forged a military alliance with the United States against regional communism. His obsession towards modernization of the armed forces in the shortest time possible saw relations with the United States as the only way to achieve his organizational and personal objectives as he argued against civilian supremacy that would affect American interests in the region as a result of an election.

 
President Ayub receiving Vice President Johnson in Karachi, 1967

The Central Intelligence Agency leased Peshawar Air Station in the 1950s and spying into the Soviet Union from the air station grew immensely, with Ayub's full knowledge, during his presidency. When these activities were exposed in 1960 after a U-2 flying out of the air station was shot down and its pilot captured by the USSR,[81] President Ayub was in the United Kingdom on a state visit. When the local CIA station chief briefed President Ayub on the incident, Ayub shrugged his shoulders and said that he had expected this would happen at some point.[82]

Soviet Secretary General Nikita Khrushchev threatened to bomb Peshawar if the United States continued to operate aircraft from there against the Soviet Union. Ayub Khan apologised for the incident when he visited the Soviet Union five years later.[83]

 
President Ayub Khan meeting Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin in the 1960s

President Ayub directed his Foreign Office to reduce tensions with the Soviet Union by facilitating state visits by Soviet Premier Kosygin and Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko and agreeing to downplay relations with the United States.[83]

In 1963, Ayub signed the historic Sino-Pakistan Frontier Agreement with China despite US opposition.[84]

During 1961–65, Ayub lost much of his support from President John Kennedy and President Lyndon Johnson as they sought closer relations with India. President Johnson placed an embargo on both nations during the war in 1965.[85] Relations with the Soviet Union were eventually normalized when the Soviets facilitated a peace treaty between Pakistan and India in 1965, and reached a trade treaty with Pakistan the following year.[86] In 1966–67, Ayub wrestled with the United States' attempt to dictate Pakistan's foreign policy, while he strengthened relations with the Soviet Union and China.[87] Despite initiatives to normalize relations with the Soviet Union, Ayub Khan remained inclined towards the United States and the western world, receiving President Johnson in Karachi in 1967.[88]

In 1961–62, Ayub paid a state visit to the United Kingdom. He attracted much attention from the British public when his involvement in the Christine Keeler affair was revealed.[89][90]

India: 1959 joint defence and 1965 war edit

In 1959, Ayub Khan's interest in building defence forces had already diminished when he made an offer of joint defense with India during the Sino-Indo clashes in October 1959 in Ladakh, in a move seen as a result of American pressure and a lack of understanding of foreign affairs[91] Upon hearing this proposal, India's Prime Minister Nehru reportedly countered, "Defence Minister Ayub: Joint Defence on what?"[87]: 84–86  India remained uninterested in such proposals and Prime Minister Nehru decided to push his country's role in the Non-Aligned Movement.[92] In 1960, President Ayub, together with Prime Minister Nehru, signed the Indus Waters Treaty brokered by the World Bank.[93] In 1962, after India was defeated by China, Ayub Khan disguised a few thousand soldiers as guerillas and sent them to Indian Kashmir to incite the people to rebel.[94] In 1964, the Pakistan Army engaged with the Indian Army in several skirmishes, and clandestine operations began.

The war with India in 1965 was a turning point in his presidency, and it ended in a settlement reached by Ayub Khan at Tashkent, called the Tashkent Declaration, which was facilitated by the Soviet Union. The settlement was perceived negatively by many Pakistanis and led Foreign Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto to resign his post and take up opposition to Ayub Khan.[72] According to Morrice James, "For them (Pakistanis) Ayub had betrayed the nation and had inexcusably lost face before the Indians."[95]

According to Sartaj Aziz, deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, it was Foreign Minister Bhutto who had inadvertently set Pakistan on the road to war with India. During a cabinet meeting, Bhutto had gone on a populist anti-Indian and anti-American binge and succeeded in spellbinding President Ayub into thinking he was becoming a world statesman fawned upon by the enemies of the United States. When Ayub authorized Operation Gibraltar, the fomenting of an Kashmiri insurgency against India, Aziz famously told the President: "Sir, I hope you realize that our foreign policy and our economic requirements are not fully consistent, in fact they are rapidly falling out of line". Aziz opposed Operation Gibraltar, fearing the economical turmoil that would jolt the country's economy, but was in turn opposed by his own senior bureaucrats. In that meeting, Foreign Minister Bhutto convinced the president and the finance minister Muhammad Shoaib that India would not attack Pakistan due to Kashmir being a disputed territory, and per Bhutto's remarks: "Pakistan's incursion into Indian-occupied Kashmir, at [A]khnoor, would not provide [India] with the justification for attacking Pakistan across the international boundary because Kashmir was a disputed territory". This theory proved wrong when India launched a full-scale war against West Pakistan in 1965.[96]

His army C-in-C General Musa Khan did not order the Pakistan Army to respond without the confirmation by President Ayub Khan despite Foreign Minister Bhutto's urging [97] However, after the Indian Army advanced towards the Rann of Kutch, General Musa Khan ordered the army to respond against the opposing force.[98] He faced serious altercations with, and public criticism from, air chief AM Asghar Khan for hiding the details of the war. The Air AHQ began fighting the president over the contingency plans, and this inter-services rivalry ended with Asghar Khan's resignation.[99]

About the 1965 war's contingency plans, AM Nur Khan briefly wrote that "Rumours about an impending operation were rife but the army had not shared the plans with other forces."[99]

Ayub Khan's main sponsor, the United States, did not welcome the move and the Johnson administration placed an economic embargo that caused Pakistan to lose US$500 million in aid and grants that had been received through consortium.[96] Ayub Khan could not politically survive in the aftermath of the 1965 war with India and fell from the presidency after surrendering presidential power to Army Commander General Yahya in 1969.[citation needed]

Afghanistan: Afghanistan-Pakistan Confederation Plan

In the 1950s, partly due to the complicated bilateral relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan over the Durand Line dispute, Ayub Khan along with the Royal family of Afghanistan under King Zahir Shah proposed the Afghanistan-Pakistan Confederation Plan to merge Afghanistan with Pakistan under a single confederation.[100] This merger was proposed on the basis of mutual distrust and fears of security threats by the Indian government and the Soviets, which wasn't able to amount to fruition due to the eventual Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the formation of a new communist Afghan regime.[101]

Presidential election of 1965 edit

In 1964, President Ayub Khan was confident in his apparent popularity and saw the deep divisions within the political opposition which ultimately led him to announce presidential elections in 1965. He earned the nomination of the Pakistan Muslim League (PML) and was shocked when Fatima Jinnah was nominated by the Combined Opposition Parties.[102][better source needed]

Ayub Khan's son, Gohar Ayub Khan, launched attacks on Jinnah supporters.[103] During this time, Ayub Khan used the Pakistani intelligence community for his own advantage. Military Intelligence actively monitored politicians and political gatherings and the Intelligence Bureau taped politicians' telephone conversations.[102] This was the first departure of the intelligence community from national defence and security to direct interference with national politics, an interference which continued in succeeding years.[104]

It was reported that the elections were widely rigged by the state authorities and machinery under the control of Ayub Khan and it is believed that had the elections been held via direct ballot, Fatima Jinnah would have won. The Electoral College consisted of only 80,000 Basic Democrats. They were easily manipulated by President Ayub Khan, who won the bitterly-contested elections with 64% of the Electoral College vote.[105] According to journalists of the time, the election did not conform to international standards; many viewed the election results with great suspicion.[102]

1969 protests and resignation edit

The controversial victory over Fatima Jinnah in the 1965 presidential election and the outcome of the war with India in the same year brought devastating results for Ayub Khan's image and his presidency. Khan's foreign minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto believed the Tashkent Declaration was a "political surrender" which turned a military victory into defeat.[106] Bhutto began criticizing Ayub Khan openly and resigned in June 1966. In Karachi, public resentment towards Ayub had been rising since the 1965 elections and his policies were widely disapproved.[107]

In 1967, Bhutto formed the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and embarked on a nationwide tour where he attacked the Ayub administration's economic, religious, and social policies. Bhutto was arrested for these activities.[108] His detention further inflamed the opposition and demonstrations were sparked all over the country. The East Pakistani Awami League charged the Ayub administration with discriminatory policies towards the East. Labour unions called for strikes against Ayub Khan's administration, and dissatisfaction was widespread in the country's middle class by the end of 1968. When Ayub Khan was confronted with the Six point movement led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and with the criticism by Bhutto's PPP, he responded by imprisoning both leaders but that made matters worse for Ayub's administration.[109]

In 1968, he survived an assassination attempt while visiting Dacca and was visibly shaken afterwards, according to close aides; though this was not reported in the press of the day.[110]

In 1969, Ayub Khan opened negotiations with the opposition parties in what was termed as a "Round Table Conference" where he held talks with all major opposition parties. However, these discussions yielded no results and strong anti-Ayub demonstrations calling for his resignation were sparked all over the country.[109] During this time, Ayub Khan survived a near-fatal cardiac arrest that put him out of the office, and later survived a paralysis attack that put him in a wheelchair.[111] The police were unable to maintain law and order in the country, especially in East Pakistan where riots and a serious uprising were quelled. At one point, Home and Defence Minister Vice-Admiral Rahman told journalists that the "country was under the Mob rule and that Police were not strong enough to tackle the situation".[112]

The PPP also led very strong protests, street demonstrations, and riots against the Ayub Khan's administration when the prices of food consumer products such as sugar, tea, and wheat, hiked up. Disapproval of Ayub Khan was widely expressed by chanted slogans and insults referring to him.[113] On the streets of major cities of West Pakistan, massive wall chalkings that employed derogatory and pejorative terms for Ayub made headlines in the print and broadcast media.[114]

Elements in the military began supporting the opposition political parties; it was this that finally brought about the demise of Ayub Khan's era. On 25 March 1969, President Ayub Khan, after consulting Advocate Raja Muhammad Qalib Ali Khan (the last person to meet the president before resignation) resigned from office and invited commander-in-chief of the army General Yahya Khan to take over control of the country.[115][116]

Global policy edit

He was one of the signatories of the agreement to convene a convention for drafting a world constitution.[117][118] As a result, for the first time in human history, a World Constituent Assembly convened to draft and adopt a Constitution for the Federation of Earth.[119]

Death and legacy edit

Ayub Khan did not comment on the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971. He died of a heart attack on 19 April 1974 at his villa near Islamabad.[120][121][122]

Ayub Khan's presidency allied Pakistan with the American-led military alliance against the Soviet Union which helped Pakistan develop its strong economic background and its long-term political and strategic relations with the United States.[28] Major economic aid and trade from the United States and European Communities ultimately led Pakistan's industrial sector to develop rapidly but the consequences of cartelization included increased inequality in the distribution of wealth. After 1965, he became extremely concerned about the arrogance and bossiness of the US over the direction of Pakistan's foreign policy when the US publicly criticized Pakistan for building ties with China and the Soviet Union; he authored a book over this issue known as Friends not Masters.[123][124]

Ayub Khan began his diary in September 1966, and ended his record in October 1972, because of his failing health. The diary covers events such as his resignation from office, the assumption of power by Yahya Khan, the independence of Bangladesh, and the replacement of Yahya by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. After his death in 1972, the diary was not released to the public for thirty years due to opinions which would have been detrimental to the reputation of powerful individuals at the time. Ayub Khan wanted his diary to be edited by his close associate Altaf Gauhar, but after Ayub Khan's death the six-year-long diary was entrusted to Oxford University Press (OUP) to edit and publish. At OUP, Diaries of Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan, 1966-1972 was edited and annotated by American historian Craig Baxter.[125]

The federal capital was relocated under the Ayub administration from the port city of Karachi to the new and carefully planned city of Islamabad in the mountains. Facilitated by the World Bank, the Ayub administration became a party to the Indus Waters Treaty with archrival India to resolve disputes regarding the sharing of the waters of the six rivers in the Punjab Doab that flow between the two countries. Khan's administration also built a major network of irrigation canals, high-water dams, and thermal and hydroelectric power stations.[126]

He subsidized fertilizers and modernized agriculture through irrigation development and spurred industrial growth with liberal tax benefits.[28] In the decade of his rule, the GNP rose by 45% and manufactured goods began to overtake such traditional exports as jute and cotton.[124] However, the economists in the Planning Commission alleged that his policies were tailored to reward the elite families and major landowners in the country. In 1968, his administration celebrated the so-called "Decade of Development" when the mass protests erupted all over the country due to an increasingly greater divide between the rich and the poor.[124][127][128][129][130]

Criticism edit

After 1965, the corruption in government, nepotism, and suppression of free speech, thought, and press increased unrest and turmoil in the country against the Ayub administration.[66] The 1965 presidential election, where Ayub Khan was opposed by Fatima Jinnah, was allegedly rigged. In 2003, the nephew of the Quaid-i-Azam, Akbar Pirbhai, re-ignited the controversy by suggesting that Fatima Jinnah's death in 1967 was an assassination by the Ayub Khan establishment.[131] Gohar Ayub Khan became the subject of criticism by many writers when he was accused of leading a victory parade after the 1965 election right into the heartland of opposition territory in Karachi in a blatantly provocative move. The civil administration's failure to stop the rally led to fierce clashes between opposing groups with many locals being killed.[132] He was faced with allegations of widespread intentional vote riggings, organizing political murders in Karachi. His peace with India was considered by many Pakistanis an embarrassing compromise.

He is also blamed for not doing enough to tackle the significant economic disparity between East and West Pakistan. Whilst he was aware of the acute grievances of East Pakistan, he did try to address the situation. However, the Ayub Khan regime was so highly centralized that, in the absence of democratic institutions, densely populated and politicized East Pakistan province continued to feel it was being slighted.[133]

Historian Yasmin Saikia argues that the Islamization that is often blamed on Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq has its roots in the policies of Ayub Khan, who injected a "jihadi" rhetoric into the Pakistan Army, his re-writing of Pakistan's history from a purely Islamic lenses and his categorization of Bengali Muslims as being too influenced by Hinduism.[134] During his presidency, differences between West and East Pakistan arose to an enormous degree, that ultimately led to the independence of Bangladesh following the Bangladesh Liberation War

Family edit

Gohar Ayub Khan also faced criticisms during that time on questions of family corruption and cronyism through his business links with his father-in-law, retired Lieutenant General Habibullah Khan Khattak. One Western commentator in 1969 estimated Gohar Ayub's personal wealth at the time at $4 million, while his family's wealth was put in the range of $10–20 million.[135] Public criticism of Gohar's personal wealth and that of the President increased. All these criticisms harmed President Ayub Khan's image.[citation needed]

After his death, his descendants became active in national politics in the 1990s until the present; however, these family members have been controversial. His son Gohar is an active member of the conservative PML(N) and was the Foreign Minister in the Sharif ministry in the 1990s but was removed due to his controversial and unauthorized statements about India.[136] His daughter Nasim did not enter politics and married Miangul Aurangzeb, the Wali of Swat.[136]

His son Shaukat was a successful businessman and had four children: three sons and one daughter. All three sons went into business and politics, with Akbar, Arshad, and Yousaf Ayub Khan becoming successful members of the provincial and national assemblies.[30]

His grandson, Omar, served in the Aziz ministry as a Finance Minister in the 2000s but joined the PML(N) in 2010; he was declared ineligible for the 2013 general election after allegations of vote rigging were proved. In 2018, he joined PTI. Another grandson, Yousaf, who is a party worker of the PTI, was also declared ineligible for submitting fake documents to the Election Commission.[citation needed]

Awards and decorations edit

 
       
       
       

Foreign Decorations edit

Honours edit

National honours edit

Commonwealth honours edit

Books edit

Among the books Khan authored or which were based on his speeches, talks and other output, are:[139]

Authored edit

  • Friends Not Masters: A Political Autobiography, Karachi: Oxford University Press, 1967.
  • Ideology and Objectives, Rawalpindi: Ferozesons, 1968.
  • Agricultural Revolution in Pakistan, Karachi: Rana Tractors & Equipment, 1968.

Edited by others edit

  • Diaries of Field Marshall Mohammad Ayub Khan, 1966-1972, Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2007. Edited by Craig Baxter.
  • Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan: A Selection of Talks and Interviews, 1964-1967, Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2010. Edited by Nadia Ghani.

See also edit

Notes edit

Footnotes

  1. ^ Ayub retired from active service in 1958; however, he made himself field marshal in 1959. See "Military Ruler Gets Himself Elevated", Dawn, 27 October 1959

    Dawn October 27, 1959 (News Report)

    President Ayub made Field Marshal

    General Mohammad Ayub Khan was conferred the rank of Field Marshal by the presidential cabinet. The communique said that the conferment of this rank will serve to demonstrate to the world in a humble way the high esteem in which he is held by his people and how grateful the nation is to its saviour. The rank of Field Marshal is the highest rank of armies built on the patron of the British Army. The press communique added that by a peaceful revolution last year the President had not only defended the territorial integrity of Pakistan but had also saved the very existence of the nation.[3]

  2. ^ Ayub never had an active regular military appointment of the rank of field marshal, his last military appointment was the commander-in-chief of the Pakistan Army in the rank of full general.
  3. ^ Urdu: محمد ایوب خان

References edit

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Bibliography edit

External links edit

Military offices
Preceded by C-in-C of the Pakistan Army
1951–1958
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Defence
1954–1955
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of Pakistan
1958–1969
Succeeded by
Chief Martial Law Administrator
1958–1969
Preceded by Minister of Defence
1958–1966
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of the Interior
1965
Succeeded by

muhammad, ayub, khan, this, article, about, former, president, pakistan, other, people, named, ayub, khan, ayub, khan, disambiguation, 1907, april, 1974, pakistani, military, officer, politician, served, second, president, pakistan, from, 1958, 1969, previousl. This article is about the former president of Pakistan For other people named Ayub Khan see Ayub Khan disambiguation Muhammad Ayub Khan c 14 May 1907 19 April 1974 was a Pakistani military officer and politician who served as the second president of Pakistan from 1958 to 1969 He previously served as the third Commander in Chief of the Pakistan Army from 1951 to 1958 Field MarshalMuhammad Ayub Khanمحمد ایوب خانKhan in West Germany in 19612nd President of PakistanIn office 27 October 1958 25 March 1969Preceded byIskandar Ali MirzaSucceeded byYahya Khan4th Minister of DefenseIn office 28 October 1958 21 October 1966Preceded byMuhammad Ayub KhuhroSucceeded byAfzal Rahman KhanIn office 24 October 1954 11 August 1955Prime MinisterMohammad Ali BograDeputyAkhter Husain Defence Secretary Preceded byMohammad Ali BograSucceeded byChaudhry Muhammad AliMinister of InteriorIn office 23 March 1965 17 August 1965DeputyInterior SecretaryPreceded byK H KhanSucceeded byAli Akbar Khan3rd Commander in Chief of the Pakistan ArmyIn office 23 January 1951 1 26 October 1958PresidentIskander MirzaGovernors GeneralKhawaja NazimuddinGhulam MuhammadIskander MirzaOffice abolished succeeded by PresidentPrime MinisterLiaquat Ali KhanKhawaja NazimuddinMohammad Ali BograMuhammad AliH S SuhrawardyI I ChundrigarFeroz Khan NoonDeputyChief of General StaffSee list Maj Gen Yusuf Khan 1951 53 Maj Gen M H Din 1953 55 Maj Gen Sher Khan 1955 57 Maj Gen Yahya Khan 1957 58 Preceded bySir Douglas GraceySucceeded byMusa KhanChief Martial Law AdministratorIn office 7 October 1958 27 October 1958PresidentIskander MirzaPreceded byFeroz Khan NoonSucceeded byNurul Amin 1971 Personal detailsBorn 1907 05 14 14 May 1907Rehana North West Frontier Province British India now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistan Died19 April 1974 1974 04 19 aged 66 Islamabad PakistanResting placeRehana Haripur Khyber Pakhtunkhwa PakistanNationalityBritish Indian 1907 1947 Pakistani 1947 1974 Political partyConvention Muslim League before 1974 Other politicalaffiliationsPakistan Muslim League 1962 SpouseBegum Ayub Khan 2 Children2 including Gohar Ayub KhanCabinetMinistry of TalentsMilitary serviceAllegianceBritish India 1928 47 Pakistan 1947 58 Branch serviceBritish Indian Army Pakistan ArmyYears of service1928 1958 a RankField Marshal b Unit15th Punjab RegimentCommandsAdjutant General GHQGOC 14th Infantry Division DaccaBattles warsWaziristan campaign Second World War Pacific War Burma campaignBorn in the North West Frontier Province Khan was educated from the Aligarh Muslim University and trained at the Royal Military College Sandhurst He fought in the Second World War on the British side against the Imperial Japanese Army After the partition of India in August 1947 he joined the Pakistan Army and was stationed in East Bengal In 1951 he became the first native commander in chief succeeding General Sir Douglas Gracey From 1953 to 1958 he served in the civilian government as Defence and Home Minister and supported president Iskandar Ali Mirza s decision to impose martial law against prime minister Feroze Khan s administration on 7 October 1958 Two weeks later after a breakdown in civil military relations Khan seized presidency in a military coup the first in the country s history As president Khan appointed Muhammad Musa to replace him as commander in chief He aligned Pakistan with the United States and allowed American access to air bases inside Pakistan most notably the airbase outside of Peshawar from which spy missions over the Soviet Union were launched Relations with neighboring China were strengthened but his alignment with the US worsened relations with the Soviet Union in 1962 He launched Operation Gibraltar against India in 1965 leading to an all out war It resulted in a stalemate and peace was restored via the Tashkent Declaration Domestically Ayub subscribed to the laissez faire policy of Western aligned nations at the time Khan privatised state owned industries and liberalised the economy generally Large inflows of foreign aid and investment led to the fastest growing economy in South Asia His tenure was also distinguished by the completion of hydroelectric stations dams and reservoirs Under Ayub Pakistan s space program was established and the country launched its first uncrewed space mission by 1962 However the failure of land reforms and a weak taxation system meant that most of this growth landed in the hands of the elite In 1965 Khan entered the presidential race as the Convention Muslim League s candidate to counter the opposition candidate Fatima Jinnah Ayub won the elections and was re elected for a second term In 1967 disapproval of price hikes of food prompted demonstrations across the country led by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Following protests in East Pakistan Ayub resigned in March 1969 and appointed Yahya Khan Later fighting a brief illness he died in 1974 Khan remains the country s longest serving president and second longest serving head of state His legacy remains mixed his era is often dubbed the Decade of Development Khan is credited with economic prosperity and industrialisation He is denounced by critics for beginning the first of the intelligence agencies incursions into national politics for concentrating wealth in a corrupt few hands and for geographically discriminatory policies that later led to the Bangladesh Liberation War Contents 1 Early life 2 Military service 2 1 Commander in chief of the Pakistan Army 2 2 Cabinet and Defence Minister 3 Presidency 1958 1969 3 1 1958 military coup 3 2 Constitutional and legal reforms 3 3 Economy and infrastructure 3 4 Defence spending 3 5 Foreign policy 3 5 1 U S alliance and 1960 U 2 incident 3 5 2 India 1959 joint defence and 1965 war 3 6 Presidential election of 1965 3 7 1969 protests and resignation 4 Global policy 5 Death and legacy 5 1 Criticism 5 2 Family 6 Awards and decorations 6 1 Foreign Decorations 7 Honours 7 1 National honours 7 2 Commonwealth honours 8 Books 8 1 Authored 8 2 Edited by others 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksEarly life editAyub Khan was born on 14 May 1907 in Rehana a village in Abbottabad District of the North West Frontier Province during the British Raj now in Haripur District Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistan into a Hindko speaking Hazarewal family of Pashtun descent belonging to the Tareen tribe 4 5 6 7 8 He was the first child of the second wife of Mir Dad Khan a Risaldar Major a regimental JCO which was then known as VCO in the 9th Hodson s Horse which was a cavalry regiment of the British Indian Army 9 For his basic education he was enrolled in a school in Sarai Saleh which was about 4 miles from his village He used to go to school on a mule s back and was shifted to a school in Haripur where he started living with his grandmother 8 He went on to study at Aligarh Muslim University AMU and 10 while pursuing his college education he was accepted into the Royal Military College at Sandhurst on the recommendation of General Sir Andrew Skeen he did not complete his degree at AMU and departed for Great Britain 11 12 Ayub Khan was fluent in Urdu Pashto citation needed English and his regional Hindko dialect 13 Military service edit nbsp Brig Ayub Khan meeting with Governor General Muhammad Ali Jinnah c 1947Ayub Khan was admitted to the Royal Military College Sandhurst in 1926 14 He was commissioned as a 2nd Lt on 2 February 1928 in the 1 14th Punjab Regiment 1st Battalion of the 14th Punjab Regiment of the British Indian Army before this he was attached to the Royal Fusiliers 14 15 Amongst those who passed out with him was the future chief of army staff of the Indian Army General Joyanto Nath Chaudhuri who served as the army chief from 1962 to 1966 while Ayub was the president of Pakistan 16 After the standard probationary period of service in the British Army he was appointed to the British Indian Army on 10 April 1929 joining the 1 14th Punjab Regiment Sherdils now known as the 5th Punjab Regiment 17 He was promoted to lieutenant on 2 May 1930 and to captain on 2 February 1937 18 19 During World War II he was promoted to the temporary rank of lieutenant colonel in 1942 and was posted in Burma to participate in the first phase of the Burma Campaign in 1942 43 citation needed He was promoted to the permanent rank of major on 2 February 1945 20 Later that year he was promoted to temporary colonel and assumed the command of his own regiment in which he was commissioned to direct operations in the second phase of the Burma Campaign however he was soon temporarily suspended without pay from that command for visible cowardice under fire 21 In 1946 he was posted back to British India and was stationed in the North West Frontier Province In 1947 he was promoted to brigadier and commanded a brigade in mountainous South Waziristan 22 When the United Kingdom announced the partition of British India into India and Pakistan he was one of the most senior serving officers in the British Indian Army who opted for Pakistan in 1947 14 22 At the time of his joining he was the tenth ranking officer in terms of seniority with service number PA 010 23 In the early part of 1948 he was given the command of the 14th Infantry Division citation needed in the rank of acting major general stationed in Dacca East Pakistan 24 In 1949 he was decorated with the Hilal i Jurat HJ by Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan for non combatant service and called back to General Headquarters as the Adjutant General of the army on November of the same year citation needed Commander in chief of the Pakistan Army edit nbsp General Ayub Khan as C in C of the Pakistan Army in his office 23 January 1951General Sir Douglas Gracey relinquished the command of the Pakistan Army on 23 January 1951 under pressure of calls for nationalisation of the army 1 The Pakistan government had already called for appointing native commanders in chief of the army air force and navy and dismissed deputation appointments from the British military 25 26 The General Headquarters sent the nomination papers to the Prime Minister s Secretariat for the appointment of commander in chief citation needed There were four senior officers in the race Major General Akbar Khan Major General Iftikhar Khan Major General Ishfakul Majid and Major General N A M Raza Among these officers Akbar was the senior having been commissioned in 1920 27 28 29 30 31 32 Initially General Iftikhar Khan commissioned in 1929 was selected for appointment as the first native commander in chief of the army but he died in an airplane crash en route to take command after finishing the senior staff officers course in the United Kingdom All three remaining generals were bypassed including the recommended senior most Major General Akbar Khan and Major General Ishfakul Majid commissioned in 1924 citation needed Defence Secretary Iskandar Mirza at that time played a crucial role in lobbying for the army post selection by presenting convincing arguments to Prime Minister Ali Khan to promote the most junior Major General Ayub Khan commissioned in 1928 to the post despite the fact that his name was not included in the nomination list citation needed Ayub s papers of promotion were approved and he was appointed the first native commander in chief of the Pakistan Army on 17 January 1951 by Prime Minister Ali Khan 33 This ended the transitional role of British military officers 34 Although the Pakistani government announced the appointment of the navy s native commander in chief in 1951 it was Ayub Khan who helped Vice Admiral M S Choudhri to be appointed as the first native navy commander in chief also in 1953 25 35 The events surrounding Ayub s appointment set the precedent for a native general being promoted out of turn ostensibly because he was the least ambitious of the generals in the line of promotion and the most loyal to civil government at that time 36 In 1953 Ayub visited Turkey his first foreign visit as an army commander in chief and was said to have been impressed with Turkish military tradition he met only with the Turkish Defence minister during his visit Thereafter he went to the United States and visited the US State Department and Pentagon to lobby for forging military relations 37 He termed this visit as a medical visit but made a strong plea for military aid which was not considered due to India s opposition 38 Cabinet and Defence Minister edit Further information Ministry of Talents One Unit and Interservice rivalry On 24 February 1954 Ayub signed the Central Treaty Organization CENTO pact for Pakistan and his role in national politics along with that of Defense Minister Mirza began to grow 39 In 1954 Prime Minister Muhammad Ali Bogra s relations with the military and Governor General Ghulam Muhammad deteriorated on issues of the economy 40 Pressure built up to reconstruct the cabinet which eventually witnessed General Ayub Khan becoming the defence minister and Iskander Mirza as home minister in October 1954 41 42 Ayub Khan disdained civilian politicians whose factional infighting had for years prevented adoption of a constitution He wrote that he reluctantly joined the cabinet as defence minister with two clear objectives to save the armed forces from the interference of the politicians and to unify the provinces of West Pakistan into one unit 43 The controversial One Unit Scheme integrated the four western provinces into one political entity West Pakistan as a counterbalance against the numerically superior population of East Bengal which was renamed East Pakistan The province of Punjab supported the project but all the other provinces protested against it and its centralisation of power Opposition was particularly strong in East Bengal where it was seen as an attack on the democratic principle of political egalitarianism 44 In 1955 Prime Minister Bogra was dismissed by Governor General Malik Ghulam Muhammad and he was succeeded by the new Prime Minister Chaudhry Muhammad Ali as the Defence Minister 45 After the 1954 provincial elections in East Pakistan the Awami League formed the government there while West Pakistan was governed by the PML but the PML government collapsed in 1956 46 He was called on to join the Cabinet as Defence Minister by Prime Minister H S Suhrawardy and maintained closer relations with Iskander Mirza who now had become the first President of the country after the successful promulgation of the Constitution in 1956 citation needed In 1957 President Mirza promoted him from acting full general to the substantive rank of full general 47 48 Around this time the MoD led by General Ayub Khan began to see the serious interservice rivalry between the General Headquarters staff and the Naval Headquarters staff 49 Commander in Chief of Navy Vice Admiral M S Choudri and his NHQ staff had been fighting with the Finance ministry and the MoD over the issues of rearmament and contingency plans 50 He reportedly complained about Admiral M S Choudri to President Mirza and criticized Admiral Choudri for neither having the brain imagination or depth of thought to understand such defence problems nor the vision or the ability to make any contribution 51 The impasse was broken with Admiral Choudhri resigning from the navy in protest as a result of having differences with the navy s plans of expansion and modernization 52 53 Presidency 1958 1969 edit1958 military coup edit Main article 1958 Pakistani military coup nbsp Ayub Khan in 1958 with H S Suhrawardy and Mr and Mrs S N Bakar nbsp Ayub Khan back row second from the right with Elizabeth II former Queen of Pakistan at the 1960 Commonwealth Prime Minister s Conference Windsor CastleSuhrawardy and Feroz began campaigning to become prime minister and president in the upcoming general elections citation needed Also the conservative Pakistan Muslim League led by its President A Q Khan was threatening to engage in civil disobedience 54 These events were against President Mirza hence he was willing to dissolve even Pakistan s One Unit for his advantage 30 On 7 October 1958 President Mirza abrogated the Constitution after sending a letter to Prime Minister Feroz announcing the coup d etat Most of the country s politicians only became aware of the coup the next morning 55 only U S Ambassador to Pakistan James Langley was kept fully informed of political developments in the country 54 President Mirza declared martial law and appointed General Ayub chief martial law administrator CMLA 56 Ayub justified his part by declaring that History would never have forgiven us if the present chaotic conditions were allowed to go on any further and his goal was to restore a democracy that the people can understand and work not to rule indefinitely 57 When the public was informed public reactions were mixed The immediate crackdown on smuggling corruption and trafficking won Ayub plenty of support from the commoners The middle class and the upper middle class were more apprehensive citation needed President Mirza himself was apprehensive though for a different reason He had been contemplating replacing Ayub Khan and it seems that Ayub knew Immediately after the Supreme Court s Chief Justice Munir justified the coup under the doctrine of necessity Ayub sent the military into the presidential palace and exiled Mirza to England 58 This was largely done with the support of Admiral A R Khan General Azam Khan Nawab of Kalabagh Amir Khan General Dr Wajid Khan and Air Marshal Asghar Khan citation needed The regime came to power with the intent of instituting widespread reform Like Mirza Ayub advocated for greater centralization of power and his ruling style was more American than British He vowed to give people access to speedier justice curb the crippling birth rate and take appropriate steps including land reforms and technological innovation to develop agriculture so that the country could feed itself 57 Ayub finally restored civil administration although he maintained the Presidency and relied on an intricate web of spy agencies to maintain supremacy over the bureaucracy including calling upon civilian intelligence agencies citation needed In 1960 a referendum that functioned as the Electoral College was held that asked the general public Do you have confidence in Muhammad Ayub Khan The voter turnout was recorded at 95 6 and such confirmation was used as impetus to formalise the new system a presidential system 59 Ayub Khan was elected president for the next five years and decided to pay his first state visit to the United States with his wife and also daughter Begum Naseem Aurangzeb in July 1961 59 Highlights of his visit included a state dinner at Mount Vernon a visit to the Islamic Center of Washington and a ticker tape parade in New York City 60 Constitutional and legal reforms edit Further information Constitution of Pakistan of 1962 A constitutional commission was set up under the Supreme Court to implement the work on the constitution that was led by Chief Justice Muhammad Shahabuddin and Supreme Court justices The commission reported in 1961 with its recommendations but President Ayub remained unsatisfied he eventually altered the constitution so that it was entirely different from the one recommended by the Shahabuddin Commission The constitution reflected his personal views of politicians and the restriction of using religions in politics His presidency restored the writ of government through the promulgated constitution and restored political freedom by lifting the martial law enforced since 1958 61 The new constitution respected Islam but did not declare Islam as the state religion and was viewed as a liberal constitution 61 It also provided for election of the president by 80 000 later raised to 120 000 Basic Democrats who could theoretically make their own choice but who were essentially under his control He justified this as analogous to the American Electoral College citation needed and cited Thomas Jefferson as his inspiration 62 The Ayub administration guided the print newspapers through his takeover of key opposition papers and while Ayub Khan permitted a National Assembly it had only limited powers 63 In 1961 he promulgated the Muslim Family Law Ordinance 64 Through this ordinance unmitigated polygamy was abolished Consent of the current wife was made mandatory for a second marriage and brakes were placed on the practice of instant divorce under Islamic tradition where men could divorce women by saying I divorce you three times The Arbitration Councils were set up under the law in the urban and rural areas to deal with cases of a grant of sanction to a person to contract a second marriage during the subsistence of a marriage b reconciliation of a dispute between a husband and a wife c grant of a maintenance allowance to the wife and children 65 Economy and infrastructure edit nbsp Kaptai Dam in East Pakistan being visited by Ayub KhanIndustrialization and rural development through constructing modern national freeways are considered his greatest achievements and his era is remembered for successful industrialization in the impoverished country Strong emphasis on capitalism and foreign direct investment FDI in the industry is often regarded as the Great Decade in the history of the country both economical and political history 66 The Decade of Development was celebrated which highlighted the development plans executed during the years of Ayub s rule the private consortium companies and industries and is credited with creating an environment where the private sector was encouraged to establish medium and small scale industries in Pakistan 66 This opened up avenues for new job opportunities and thus the economic graph of the country started rising 67 He oversaw the development and completion of mega projects such as hydroelectric dams power stations and barrages all over the country 68 During 1960 66 the annual GDP growth was recorded at 6 8 69 Several hydroelectric projects were completed including the Mangla Dam one of the world s largest dams several small dams and water reservoirs in West Pakistan and one dam in East Pakistan the Kaptai Dam citation needed President Ayub authorized planning of nuclear power plants 70 Dr Abdus Salam supported by the President personally approved the project in Karachi while the project in East Pakistan never materialized 71 Extensive education reforms were supposedly carried out and scientific development efforts were also supposedly made during his years These policies could not be sustained after 1965 when the economy collapsed and led to economic declines which he was unable to control 72 73 Ayub introduced new curricula and textbooks for universities and schools Many public sector universities and schools were built during his era 74 He also introduced agricultural reforms preventing anyone from occupying more than 500 acres of irrigated and 1000 acres of unirrigated land An oil refinery was established in Karachi These reforms led to 15 GNP growth of the country that was three times greater than that of India Despite the increase in the GNP growth the profit and revenue was gained by the famous 22 families of the time that controlled 66 of the industries and land of the country and 80 of the banking and insurance companies of Pakistan 75 Defence spending edit During the Ayub era the navy was able to introduce submarines and slowly modified itself by acquiring warships 25 However Ayub drastically reduced funding of the military in the 1950s and de prioritized nuclear weapons in the 1960s 70 76 The military relied on donations from the United States for major weapons procurements 77 Major funding was made available for military acquisitions and procurement towards conventional weaponry for conventional defence In the 1960s the Pakistani military acquired American produced conventional weapons such as Jeep CJs M48 Patton and M24 Chaffee tanks M16 rifles F 86 fighter airplanes and the submarine PNS Ghazi all through the US Foreign Military Sales program 77 In 1961 President Ayub started the nation s full fledged space program in cooperation with the air force and created the Suparco civilian space agency that launched sounding rockets throughout the 1960s 78 Ayub prioritized nuclear power generation over the use of nuclear technology for military purposes He reportedly spent 724 million on the civilian Karachi Nuclear Power Plant and related education of engineers and scientists 79 Ayub Khan filled more and more civil administrative positions with army officers increasing the military s influence over the bureaucracy He expanded the size of the army by more than half from the early 1960s to 1969 and maintained a high level of military spending as a percentage of GDP during that period peaking in the immediate aftermath of the Indo Pakistani War of 1965 80 Foreign policy edit U S alliance and 1960 U 2 incident edit nbsp President Ayub with President Kennedy in Washington D C 1961The main feature of Ayub Khan s foreign policy was prioritized relations with the United States and Europe Foreign relations with the Soviet Union were downplayed He enjoyed support from President Dwight Eisenhower in the 1950s and working with Prime Minister Ali Khan forged a military alliance with the United States against regional communism His obsession towards modernization of the armed forces in the shortest time possible saw relations with the United States as the only way to achieve his organizational and personal objectives as he argued against civilian supremacy that would affect American interests in the region as a result of an election nbsp President Ayub receiving Vice President Johnson in Karachi 1967The Central Intelligence Agency leased Peshawar Air Station in the 1950s and spying into the Soviet Union from the air station grew immensely with Ayub s full knowledge during his presidency When these activities were exposed in 1960 after a U 2 flying out of the air station was shot down and its pilot captured by the USSR 81 President Ayub was in the United Kingdom on a state visit When the local CIA station chief briefed President Ayub on the incident Ayub shrugged his shoulders and said that he had expected this would happen at some point 82 Soviet Secretary General Nikita Khrushchev threatened to bomb Peshawar if the United States continued to operate aircraft from there against the Soviet Union Ayub Khan apologised for the incident when he visited the Soviet Union five years later 83 nbsp President Ayub Khan meeting Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin in the 1960sPresident Ayub directed his Foreign Office to reduce tensions with the Soviet Union by facilitating state visits by Soviet Premier Kosygin and Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko and agreeing to downplay relations with the United States 83 In 1963 Ayub signed the historic Sino Pakistan Frontier Agreement with China despite US opposition 84 During 1961 65 Ayub lost much of his support from President John Kennedy and President Lyndon Johnson as they sought closer relations with India President Johnson placed an embargo on both nations during the war in 1965 85 Relations with the Soviet Union were eventually normalized when the Soviets facilitated a peace treaty between Pakistan and India in 1965 and reached a trade treaty with Pakistan the following year 86 In 1966 67 Ayub wrestled with the United States attempt to dictate Pakistan s foreign policy while he strengthened relations with the Soviet Union and China 87 Despite initiatives to normalize relations with the Soviet Union Ayub Khan remained inclined towards the United States and the western world receiving President Johnson in Karachi in 1967 88 In 1961 62 Ayub paid a state visit to the United Kingdom He attracted much attention from the British public when his involvement in the Christine Keeler affair was revealed 89 90 India 1959 joint defence and 1965 war edit Main article Indo Pakistani War of 1965 See also Operation Gibraltar In 1959 Ayub Khan s interest in building defence forces had already diminished when he made an offer of joint defense with India during the Sino Indo clashes in October 1959 in Ladakh in a move seen as a result of American pressure and a lack of understanding of foreign affairs 91 Upon hearing this proposal India s Prime Minister Nehru reportedly countered Defence Minister Ayub Joint Defence on what 87 84 86 India remained uninterested in such proposals and Prime Minister Nehru decided to push his country s role in the Non Aligned Movement 92 In 1960 President Ayub together with Prime Minister Nehru signed the Indus Waters Treaty brokered by the World Bank 93 In 1962 after India was defeated by China Ayub Khan disguised a few thousand soldiers as guerillas and sent them to Indian Kashmir to incite the people to rebel 94 In 1964 the Pakistan Army engaged with the Indian Army in several skirmishes and clandestine operations began The war with India in 1965 was a turning point in his presidency and it ended in a settlement reached by Ayub Khan at Tashkent called the Tashkent Declaration which was facilitated by the Soviet Union The settlement was perceived negatively by many Pakistanis and led Foreign Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto to resign his post and take up opposition to Ayub Khan 72 According to Morrice James For them Pakistanis Ayub had betrayed the nation and had inexcusably lost face before the Indians 95 According to Sartaj Aziz deputy chairman of the Planning Commission it was Foreign Minister Bhutto who had inadvertently set Pakistan on the road to war with India During a cabinet meeting Bhutto had gone on a populist anti Indian and anti American binge and succeeded in spellbinding President Ayub into thinking he was becoming a world statesman fawned upon by the enemies of the United States When Ayub authorized Operation Gibraltar the fomenting of an Kashmiri insurgency against India Aziz famously told the President Sir I hope you realize that our foreign policy and our economic requirements are not fully consistent in fact they are rapidly falling out of line Aziz opposed Operation Gibraltar fearing the economical turmoil that would jolt the country s economy but was in turn opposed by his own senior bureaucrats In that meeting Foreign Minister Bhutto convinced the president and the finance minister Muhammad Shoaib that India would not attack Pakistan due to Kashmir being a disputed territory and per Bhutto s remarks Pakistan s incursion into Indian occupied Kashmir at A khnoor would not provide India with the justification for attacking Pakistan across the international boundary because Kashmir was a disputed territory This theory proved wrong when India launched a full scale war against West Pakistan in 1965 96 His army C in C General Musa Khan did not order the Pakistan Army to respond without the confirmation by President Ayub Khan despite Foreign Minister Bhutto s urging 97 However after the Indian Army advanced towards the Rann of Kutch General Musa Khan ordered the army to respond against the opposing force 98 He faced serious altercations with and public criticism from air chief AM Asghar Khan for hiding the details of the war The Air AHQ began fighting the president over the contingency plans and this inter services rivalry ended with Asghar Khan s resignation 99 About the 1965 war s contingency plans AM Nur Khan briefly wrote that Rumours about an impending operation were rife but the army had not shared the plans with other forces 99 Ayub Khan s main sponsor the United States did not welcome the move and the Johnson administration placed an economic embargo that caused Pakistan to lose US 500 million in aid and grants that had been received through consortium 96 Ayub Khan could not politically survive in the aftermath of the 1965 war with India and fell from the presidency after surrendering presidential power to Army Commander General Yahya in 1969 citation needed Afghanistan Afghanistan Pakistan Confederation Plan This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2023 In the 1950s partly due to the complicated bilateral relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan over the Durand Line dispute Ayub Khan along with the Royal family of Afghanistan under King Zahir Shah proposed the Afghanistan Pakistan Confederation Plan to merge Afghanistan with Pakistan under a single confederation 100 This merger was proposed on the basis of mutual distrust and fears of security threats by the Indian government and the Soviets which wasn t able to amount to fruition due to the eventual Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the formation of a new communist Afghan regime 101 Presidential election of 1965 edit Main article 1965 Pakistani presidential election In 1964 President Ayub Khan was confident in his apparent popularity and saw the deep divisions within the political opposition which ultimately led him to announce presidential elections in 1965 He earned the nomination of the Pakistan Muslim League PML and was shocked when Fatima Jinnah was nominated by the Combined Opposition Parties 102 better source needed Ayub Khan s son Gohar Ayub Khan launched attacks on Jinnah supporters 103 During this time Ayub Khan used the Pakistani intelligence community for his own advantage Military Intelligence actively monitored politicians and political gatherings and the Intelligence Bureau taped politicians telephone conversations 102 This was the first departure of the intelligence community from national defence and security to direct interference with national politics an interference which continued in succeeding years 104 It was reported that the elections were widely rigged by the state authorities and machinery under the control of Ayub Khan and it is believed that had the elections been held via direct ballot Fatima Jinnah would have won The Electoral College consisted of only 80 000 Basic Democrats They were easily manipulated by President Ayub Khan who won the bitterly contested elections with 64 of the Electoral College vote 105 According to journalists of the time the election did not conform to international standards many viewed the election results with great suspicion 102 1969 protests and resignation edit Main article 1969 East Pakistan uprising The controversial victory over Fatima Jinnah in the 1965 presidential election and the outcome of the war with India in the same year brought devastating results for Ayub Khan s image and his presidency Khan s foreign minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto believed the Tashkent Declaration was a political surrender which turned a military victory into defeat 106 Bhutto began criticizing Ayub Khan openly and resigned in June 1966 In Karachi public resentment towards Ayub had been rising since the 1965 elections and his policies were widely disapproved 107 In 1967 Bhutto formed the Pakistan People s Party PPP and embarked on a nationwide tour where he attacked the Ayub administration s economic religious and social policies Bhutto was arrested for these activities 108 His detention further inflamed the opposition and demonstrations were sparked all over the country The East Pakistani Awami League charged the Ayub administration with discriminatory policies towards the East Labour unions called for strikes against Ayub Khan s administration and dissatisfaction was widespread in the country s middle class by the end of 1968 When Ayub Khan was confronted with the Six point movement led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and with the criticism by Bhutto s PPP he responded by imprisoning both leaders but that made matters worse for Ayub s administration 109 In 1968 he survived an assassination attempt while visiting Dacca and was visibly shaken afterwards according to close aides though this was not reported in the press of the day 110 In 1969 Ayub Khan opened negotiations with the opposition parties in what was termed as a Round Table Conference where he held talks with all major opposition parties However these discussions yielded no results and strong anti Ayub demonstrations calling for his resignation were sparked all over the country 109 During this time Ayub Khan survived a near fatal cardiac arrest that put him out of the office and later survived a paralysis attack that put him in a wheelchair 111 The police were unable to maintain law and order in the country especially in East Pakistan where riots and a serious uprising were quelled At one point Home and Defence Minister Vice Admiral Rahman told journalists that the country was under the Mob rule and that Police were not strong enough to tackle the situation 112 The PPP also led very strong protests street demonstrations and riots against the Ayub Khan s administration when the prices of food consumer products such as sugar tea and wheat hiked up Disapproval of Ayub Khan was widely expressed by chanted slogans and insults referring to him 113 On the streets of major cities of West Pakistan massive wall chalkings that employed derogatory and pejorative terms for Ayub made headlines in the print and broadcast media 114 Elements in the military began supporting the opposition political parties it was this that finally brought about the demise of Ayub Khan s era On 25 March 1969 President Ayub Khan after consulting Advocate Raja Muhammad Qalib Ali Khan the last person to meet the president before resignation resigned from office and invited commander in chief of the army General Yahya Khan to take over control of the country 115 116 Global policy editHe was one of the signatories of the agreement to convene a convention for drafting a world constitution 117 118 As a result for the first time in human history a World Constituent Assembly convened to draft and adopt a Constitution for the Federation of Earth 119 Death and legacy editAyub Khan did not comment on the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971 He died of a heart attack on 19 April 1974 at his villa near Islamabad 120 121 122 Ayub Khan s presidency allied Pakistan with the American led military alliance against the Soviet Union which helped Pakistan develop its strong economic background and its long term political and strategic relations with the United States 28 Major economic aid and trade from the United States and European Communities ultimately led Pakistan s industrial sector to develop rapidly but the consequences of cartelization included increased inequality in the distribution of wealth After 1965 he became extremely concerned about the arrogance and bossiness of the US over the direction of Pakistan s foreign policy when the US publicly criticized Pakistan for building ties with China and the Soviet Union he authored a book over this issue known as Friends not Masters 123 124 Ayub Khan began his diary in September 1966 and ended his record in October 1972 because of his failing health The diary covers events such as his resignation from office the assumption of power by Yahya Khan the independence of Bangladesh and the replacement of Yahya by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto After his death in 1972 the diary was not released to the public for thirty years due to opinions which would have been detrimental to the reputation of powerful individuals at the time Ayub Khan wanted his diary to be edited by his close associate Altaf Gauhar but after Ayub Khan s death the six year long diary was entrusted to Oxford University Press OUP to edit and publish At OUP Diaries of Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan 1966 1972 was edited and annotated by American historian Craig Baxter 125 The federal capital was relocated under the Ayub administration from the port city of Karachi to the new and carefully planned city of Islamabad in the mountains Facilitated by the World Bank the Ayub administration became a party to the Indus Waters Treaty with archrival India to resolve disputes regarding the sharing of the waters of the six rivers in the Punjab Doab that flow between the two countries Khan s administration also built a major network of irrigation canals high water dams and thermal and hydroelectric power stations 126 He subsidized fertilizers and modernized agriculture through irrigation development and spurred industrial growth with liberal tax benefits 28 In the decade of his rule the GNP rose by 45 and manufactured goods began to overtake such traditional exports as jute and cotton 124 However the economists in the Planning Commission alleged that his policies were tailored to reward the elite families and major landowners in the country In 1968 his administration celebrated the so called Decade of Development when the mass protests erupted all over the country due to an increasingly greater divide between the rich and the poor 124 127 128 129 130 Criticism edit After 1965 the corruption in government nepotism and suppression of free speech thought and press increased unrest and turmoil in the country against the Ayub administration 66 The 1965 presidential election where Ayub Khan was opposed by Fatima Jinnah was allegedly rigged In 2003 the nephew of the Quaid i Azam Akbar Pirbhai re ignited the controversy by suggesting that Fatima Jinnah s death in 1967 was an assassination by the Ayub Khan establishment 131 Gohar Ayub Khan became the subject of criticism by many writers when he was accused of leading a victory parade after the 1965 election right into the heartland of opposition territory in Karachi in a blatantly provocative move The civil administration s failure to stop the rally led to fierce clashes between opposing groups with many locals being killed 132 He was faced with allegations of widespread intentional vote riggings organizing political murders in Karachi His peace with India was considered by many Pakistanis an embarrassing compromise He is also blamed for not doing enough to tackle the significant economic disparity between East and West Pakistan Whilst he was aware of the acute grievances of East Pakistan he did try to address the situation However the Ayub Khan regime was so highly centralized that in the absence of democratic institutions densely populated and politicized East Pakistan province continued to feel it was being slighted 133 Historian Yasmin Saikia argues that the Islamization that is often blamed on Muhammad Zia ul Haq has its roots in the policies of Ayub Khan who injected a jihadi rhetoric into the Pakistan Army his re writing of Pakistan s history from a purely Islamic lenses and his categorization of Bengali Muslims as being too influenced by Hinduism 134 During his presidency differences between West and East Pakistan arose to an enormous degree that ultimately led to the independence of Bangladesh following the Bangladesh Liberation War Family edit Gohar Ayub Khan also faced criticisms during that time on questions of family corruption and cronyism through his business links with his father in law retired Lieutenant General Habibullah Khan Khattak One Western commentator in 1969 estimated Gohar Ayub s personal wealth at the time at 4 million while his family s wealth was put in the range of 10 20 million 135 Public criticism of Gohar s personal wealth and that of the President increased All these criticisms harmed President Ayub Khan s image citation needed After his death his descendants became active in national politics in the 1990s until the present however these family members have been controversial His son Gohar is an active member of the conservative PML N and was the Foreign Minister in the Sharif ministry in the 1990s but was removed due to his controversial and unauthorized statements about India 136 His daughter Nasim did not enter politics and married Miangul Aurangzeb the Wali of Swat 136 His son Shaukat was a successful businessman and had four children three sons and one daughter All three sons went into business and politics with Akbar Arshad and Yousaf Ayub Khan becoming successful members of the provincial and national assemblies 30 His grandson Omar served in the Aziz ministry as a Finance Minister in the 2000s but joined the PML N in 2010 he was declared ineligible for the 2013 general election after allegations of vote rigging were proved In 2018 he joined PTI Another grandson Yousaf who is a party worker of the PTI was also declared ineligible for submitting fake documents to the Election Commission citation needed Awards and decorations edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Nishan e Pakistan Order of Pakistan Hilal e Jurat Crescent of Courage Hilal e Pakistan HPk Pakistan Tamgha Pakistan Medal 1947 Tamgha e Jamhuria Republic Commemoration Medal 1956Member of the British Empire MBE The Legion of Merit Degree of Chief Commander US India General Service Medal 1936 1939 1945 StarBurma Star War Medal 1939 1945 India Service Medal 1939 1945 Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal 1953 Foreign Decorations edit Foreign Awards nbsp UK Order of St Michael and St George nbsp nbsp UK Member of the British Empire MBE nbsp nbsp US The Legion of Merit Degree of Chief Commander nbsp nbsp UK India General Service Medal 1936 nbsp nbsp UK 1939 1945 Star nbsp nbsp UK Burma Star nbsp nbsp UK War Medal 1939 1945 nbsp nbsp UK India Service Medal 1939 1945 nbsp nbsp UK Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal nbsp nbsp THA Knight Grand Commander of the Order of Rama nbsp nbsp YUG Order of the Yugoslav Great Star 137 nbsp Honours editNational honours edit nbsp Pakistan nbsp Recipient of the Nishan e Pakistan NPk nbsp Recipient of the Hilal e Jurat HJ nbsp Recipient of the Hilal e Pakistan HPk Commonwealth honours edit nbsp British India nbsp Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire MBE nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George GCMG 1961 nbsp Malaya nbsp Honorary Recipient of the Order of the Crown of the Realm D M N K 1962 138 Books editAmong the books Khan authored or which were based on his speeches talks and other output are 139 Authored edit Friends Not Masters A Political Autobiography Karachi Oxford University Press 1967 Ideology and Objectives Rawalpindi Ferozesons 1968 Agricultural Revolution in Pakistan Karachi Rana Tractors amp Equipment 1968 Edited by others edit Diaries of Field Marshall Mohammad Ayub Khan 1966 1972 Karachi Oxford University Press 2007 Edited by Craig Baxter Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan A Selection of Talks and Interviews 1964 1967 Karachi Oxford University Press 2010 Edited by Nadia Ghani See also editCold War Ayub National Park Ayub Medical College Americanism American cultural influence in PakistanNotes editFootnotes Ayub retired from active service in 1958 however he made himself field marshal in 1959 See Military Ruler Gets Himself Elevated Dawn 27 October 1959 Dawn October 27 1959 News Report President Ayub made Field MarshalGeneral Mohammad Ayub Khan was conferred the rank of Field Marshal by the presidential cabinet The communique said that the conferment of this rank will serve to demonstrate to the world in a humble way the high esteem in which he is held by his people and how grateful the nation is to its saviour The rank of Field Marshal is the highest rank of armies built on the patron of the British Army The press communique added that by a peaceful revolution last year the President had not only defended the territorial integrity of Pakistan but had also saved the very existence of the nation 3 Ayub never had an active regular military appointment of the rank of field marshal his last military appointment was the commander in chief of the Pakistan Army in the rank of full general Urdu محمد ایوب خانReferences edit a b Ankit Rakesh January 2010 The Defiant Douglas Epilogue vol 4 no 1 pp 46 47 Field Marshal Auchinleck with Begum Ayub Khan and Begum Shahid Hamid 1964 Maj Gen Syed Ali Hamid Gen Ayub becomes President Dawn 6 September 2017 Retrieved 23 October 2017 Gauhar Altaf 1993 Ayub Khan Pakistan s First Military Ruler Lahore Sang e Meel Publications p 35 ISBN 978 969 35 0295 4 Hussain Rizwan 2005 Pakistan and the emergence of Islamic militancy in Afghanistan Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 74 ISBN 978 0 7546 4434 7 Retrieved 22 August 2010 Amir Intikhab 23 April 2013 Where pragmatism holds sway Dawn Retrieved 5 April 2023 When it comes to Haripur s significance to the national political scene one can t help but refer to the country s first military dictator Field Marshal Ayub Khan A member of the politically significant Tareen clan of Haripur Gen Ayub s heirs are known for not shying away from changing loyalties in their pursuit for a prolonged stay in the corridors of power Sir Olaf Caroe The Pathans With An Epilogue On Russia Oxford in Asia Historical Reprints 550 B C A D 1957 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 577221 0 Retrieved 3 May 2023 p 453 NOTES 13a President Ayub is one of these Tarins a b Jaffrelot Christophe 2004 A history of Pakistan and its origins Anthem Press p 69 ISBN 978 1 84331 149 2 Retrieved 5 April 2023 p 69 Ayub Khan who had been army commander in chief since 1951 embodied this military institution better than anyone His ethnic origin was Pashtun he was born in the Punjab like Ghulam Muhammad and he believed in a centralized state dominated by the Punjab to which he was keen to rally members of his community Forming the govt PML N seeks Haripur tehsil triumph through bloodlines The Express Tribune 4 June 2015 Retrieved 19 September 2020 Malik 2008 p 147 Malik Iftikhar Haider 2008 The History of Pakistan Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780313341373 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Newman Karl J 1986 Pakistan unter Ayub Khan Bhutto und Zia ul Haq in German Weltforum Verlag p 31 ISBN 3 8039 0327 0 Rizvi Gowher 1985 Riding the Tiger Institutionalising the Military Regimes in Pakistan and Bangladesh In Clapham Christopher S Philip George D E eds The Political Dilemmas of Military Regimes Croom Helm p 203 ISBN 978 0 7099 3416 5 a b c Kassim Husain 2006 Ayub Khan Muhammad In Leonard Thomas M ed Encyclopedia of the Developing World Vol 1 Routledge p 125 ISBN 9781579583880 Retrieved 8 December 2023 Indian Army List 1928 Dec No 33353 The London Gazette 3 February 1928 p 766 No 33510 The London Gazette 28 June 1929 p 4274 No 33613 The London Gazette 6 June 1930 p 3572 No 34381 The London Gazette 19 March 1937 p 1827 No 37085 The London Gazette 18 May 1945 p 2577 See accounts of Sardar Shaukat Hayat Khan The Nation that Lost its Soul Memoirs Lahore Jang Publications 1992 p 187 and Lt Col r HE Empson Hard Times The Burmese Campaign 1942 1945 Aldershot Gale and Polden 1952 a b Burki Shahid Javed 2015 Historical Dictionary of Pakistan Rowman amp Littlefield Burki ISBN 9781442241480 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Nawaz 2008 p 33 Nawaz 2008 p 79 a b c Cheema Pervaiz I Riemer Manuel 22 August 1990 Pakistan s Defence Policy 1947 58 Springer Reimer p 82 ISBN 9781349209422 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Tudor Maya 2013 The Promise of Power The Origins of Democracy in India and Autocracy in Pakistan Cambridge University Press p 30 ISBN 9781107032965 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Siddiqui A R 25 April 2004 Army s top slot the seniority factor Dawn a b c Ayub Khan in US Country Studies US State Department Retrieved 16 November 2011 Retrieved 25 August 2015 Muhammad Ayub Khan profile Story of Pakistan website Archived from the original on 7 November 2014 Retrieved 14 April 2023 a b c Ouster of President Iskander Mirza Story of Pakistan part II June 2003 Retrieved 27 August 2015 Field Marshal Ayub Khan Becomes President 1962 1969 Story of Pakistan Part 1 June 2003 Retrieved 25 August 2015 Kal Tak 25 May 2011 Pakistan Politics Pkpolitics com Archived from the original on 9 May 2013 Retrieved 9 December 2012 Nawaz Shuja 2008 Crossed Swords Pakistan its Army and the Wars Within Oxford University Press p 80 ISBN 978 0 19 547660 6 Haqqani 2010 p 34 Cheema Pervaiz Iqbal 2002 The Armed Forces of Pakistan NYU Press Cheema pp 93 94 ISBN 9780814716335 Retrieved 3 November 2016 The rule of seniority by Kamal Zafar Sunday 5 March 2006 The Nation Archived 11 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Yesilbursa Behcet Kemal 2005 The Baghdad Pact Anglo American Defence Policies in the Middle East 1950 59 Routledge p 26 ISBN 978 1 135 76686 3 Yesilbursa Behcet Kemal 2005 The Baghdad Pact Anglo American Defence Policies in the Middle East 1950 59 Routledge Yesilbursa p 27 ISBN 978 1135766863 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Bahadur Kalim 1998 Democracy in Pakistan Crises and Conflicts Har Anand Publications pp 192 193 ISBN 978 81 241 0083 7 Bahadur Kalim 1998 Democracy in Pakistan Crises and Conflicts Har Anand Publications p 191 ISBN 978 81 241 0083 7 Bahadur Kalim 1998 Democracy in Pakistan Crises and Conflicts Har Anand Publications pp 191 192 ISBN 978 81 241 0083 7 Dixit J N 2003 India Pakistan in War and Peace Routledge p 124 ISBN 978 1 134 40758 3 Jaffrelot Christophe 2015 The Pakistan Paradox Instability and Resilience Oxford University Press pp 302 303 ISBN 978 0 19023 518 5 Jaffrelot Christophe 2015 The Pakistan Paradox Instability and Resilience Oxford University Press pp 124 211 ISBN 978 0 19023 518 5 Shah 2014 p 167 Rizvi Hasan Askari Shah Aqil Paul T V Fair C Christine 2015 The Military and Pakistan s Political and Security Disposition Asia Policy 19 147 151 ISSN 1559 0968 JSTOR 24905306 Sridharan E 2014 International Relations Theory and South Asia OIP Volume I Security Political Economy Domestic Politics Identities and Images Oxford University Press p 232 ISBN 978 0 19 908939 0 Ahmad Syed Sami 2004 History of Pakistan and Role of the Army Karachi Sindh Pakistan Royal Book Company ISBN 978 969 407 306 4 Singh Ravi Shekhar Narain Singh 2008 The Military Factor in Pakistan Lancer Publishers pp 381 382 ISBN 978 0 9815378 9 4 Singh Ravi Shekhar Narain Singh 2008 The Military Factor in Pakistan Lancer Publishers Singh p 383 ISBN 9780981537894 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Ghani Nadia 11 July 2010 NON FICTION The narcissist Dawn Retrieved 3 November 2016 Cheema Pervaiz Iqbal 2002 The Armed Forces of Pakistan NYU Press p 381 ISBN 978 0 8147 1633 5 Singh Ravi Shekhar Narain Singh 2008 The Military Factor in Pakistan Lancer Publishers p 94 ISBN 978 0 9815378 9 4 a b Rizvi Hasan Askari 2000 Military State and Society in Pakistan Macmillan Press p 83 ISBN 978 0 230 59904 8 Rizvi Hasan Askari 2000 Military State and Society in Pakistan Macmillan Press pp 82 83 ISBN 978 0 230 59904 8 Oborne Peter 2014 Wounded Tiger A History of Cricket in Pakistan Simon amp Schuster p 157 ISBN 978 0 85720 074 7 Retrieved 3 November 2016 a b Jalal Ayesha 2014 The Struggle for Pakistan A Muslim Homeland and Global Politics Belknap Press pp 98 100 ISBN 978 0 674 05289 5 Jalal Ayesha 2014 The Struggle for Pakistan A Muslim Homeland and Global Politics Belknap Press p 101 ISBN 978 0 674 05289 5 The joint authority of president and commander in chief was untenable and did not last more than a few weeks Even before the coup Mirza had been conspiring to replace Ayub as commander in chief By appearing to go along with the president Ayub bought precious time Once the Supreme Court headed by Chief Justice Munir dignified the coup as a revolutionary necessity Ayub sprang into action to establish himself as the undisputed leader of Pakistan With the backing of his top military commanders he packed off Mirza to permanent exile a b Martial Law Under Field Marshal Ayub Khan Provincial Assemblies were dissolved and all political activities were banned Story Of Pakistan Martial law 1 June 2003 Retrieved 3 November 2016 America Welcomes President Ayub Gordon Wilkison Collection Texas Archive of the Moving Image July 1961 Archived from the original on 20 January 2012 Retrieved 28 July 2011 a b The Constitution of 1962 Provided for a unicameral legislature Story Of Pakistan 1 June 2003 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Jackson Roy 2010 Mawlana Mawdudi and Political Islam Authority and the Islamic State Routledge Jackson p 75 ISBN 978 1 136 95036 0 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Islamic Pakistan ghazali net Retrieved 5 October 2020 Haq Farhat 2005 Women Islam and the State in Pakistan In Moghissi Haideh ed Women and Islam Critical Concepts in Sociology Vol 3 Routledge p 204 ISBN 978 0 415 32421 2 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Ghazali Abdul Sattar Islamic Pakistan Illusions amp Reality Ghazali net Retrieved 29 April 2010 a b c Muhammad Ayub Khan Part III Story of Pakistan Retrieved 11 February 2012 Democratising Pakistan Daily Times 4 December 2015 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Mason Colin 2014 First published 2000 A Short History of Asia 3rd ed Palgrave Macmillan p 181 ISBN 978 1 137 34061 0 Kukreja Veena 2003 Contemporary Pakistan Political Processes Conflicts and Crises SAGE p 304 ISBN 978 0 7619 9683 5 Retrieved 3 November 2016 a b Khan Feroz 2012 Eating Grass The Making of the Pakistani Bomb Stanford University Press p 54 ISBN 978 0 8047 8480 1 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Shahid ur Rehman Z A Bhutto A Man in Hurry for the Bomb Long Road To Chagai p 21 a b Muhammad Ayub Khan Part IV Story of Pakistan Retrieved 11 February 2012 Dawn review Aug 2015 Lall Marie Vickers Edward 2010 Education as a Political Tool in Asia Taylor amp Francis p 183 ISBN 978 0 415 59536 0 Retrieved 3 November 2016 CONSTITUTION THIRD AMENDMENT ACT 1974 pakistani org Retrieved 5 October 2020 Khan Zafar 2014 Pakistan s Nuclear Policy A Minimum Credible Deterrence Routledge p 55 ISBN 978 1 317 67601 0 a b Khan Zafar 2014 Pakistan s Nuclear Policy A Minimum Credible Deterrence Routledge p 22 ISBN 978 1 317 67601 0 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Khan Feroz 2012 Eating Grass The Making of the Pakistani Bomb Stanford University Press pp 235 236 ISBN 978 0 8047 8480 1 Khan Feroz 2012 Eating Grass The Making of the Pakistani Bomb Stanford University Press pp 53 60 ISBN 978 0 8047 8480 1 Jaffrelot Christophe 2015 The Pakistan Paradox Instability and Resilience Oxford University Press pp 309 310 ISBN 978 0 19023 518 5 Timeline History of US Pakistan relations Dawn 4 July 2012 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Tale of a love affair that never was 4 March 2012 Archived from the original on 4 March 2012 Retrieved 5 October 2020 a b Khan Feroz 2012 Eating Grass The Making of the Pakistani Bomb Stanford University Press pp 37 43 ISBN 978 0 8047 8480 1 Shah Sayed Wiqar Ali 2004 Pakistan People s Party The Twin Legacies of Socialism and Dynastic Rule In Mitra Subrata K Enskat Mike Spiess Clement eds Political Parties in South Asia Praeger p 157 ISBN 0 275 96832 4 Haqqani 2010 pp 44 45 Malik Hafeez 1990 Domestic Determinants of Soviet Foreign Policy towards South Asia and the Middle East Springer pp 171 175 ISBN 978 1 349 11318 7 Retrieved 6 November 2016 a b McGarr Paul M 2013 The Cold War in South Asia Britain the United States and the Indian Subcontinent 1945 1965 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 29226 0 Retrieved 6 November 2016 Malik Hafeez 1990 Domestic Determinants of Soviet Foreign Policy towards South Asia and the Middle East Springer p 174 ISBN 978 1 349 11318 7 von Tunzelmann Alex 11 July 2012 Scandal someone was taking notes The Guardian Retrieved 15 December 2015 Tariq Ali on Ayub Khan 4 January 2007 Retrieved December 2015 Iqbal Ahmad Khan 5 April 2009 Bhutto s foreign policy legacy Dawn Retrieved 11 February 2012 McGarr Paul M 2013 The Cold War in South Asia Britain the United States and the Indian Subcontinent 1945 1965 Cambridge University Press p 85 ISBN 978 1 107 29226 0 War over water The Guardian Monday 3 June 2002 01 06 BST Rashid Ahmed 2012 Pakistan in the Brink Allen Lane p 47 ISBN 978 1 84614 585 8 Schofield Victoria 2003 Kashmir in Conflict India Pakistan and the Unending War I B Tauris p 112 ISBN 1 86064 898 3 a b Ahmed Khaled 9 August 2009 Book Review Sartaj Aziz on excessive leaders Pakistan Times Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Hiro Dilip 2015 The Longest August The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan PublicAffairs pp 182 183 ISBN 978 1 56858 503 1 Hiro Dilip 2015 The Longest August The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan PublicAffairs p 183 ISBN 978 1 56858 503 1 a b Nur Khan reminisces 65 war Dawn Editorial Pakistan 6 September 2005 Retrieved 31 October 2016 Reality or Paranoia Why is Pakistan afraid of India Afghanistan ties Hudson Institute Retrieved 20 February 2023 Afghanistan and Pakistan s oft ignored history 1947 1978 The Express Tribune 10 September 2020 Retrieved 20 February 2023 a b c Presidential Election Elections were held on 2 January 1965 Story Of Pakistan 25 October 2013 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Ahmar Moonis 1996 Ethnicity and State Power in Pakistan The Karachi crisis Asian Survey 36 10 1032 doi 10 2307 2645632 JSTOR 2645632 Pike John Military Intelligence Pakistan Intelligence Agencies globalsecurity org global security Retrieved 5 November 2016 Trouble with Mother Time 25 December 1964 Archived from the original on 29 October 2007 Retrieved 29 April 2010 Haqqani 2010 p 49 Rath Saroj Kumar 2015 Fragile Frontiers The Secret History of Mumbai Terror Attacks Routledge ISBN 9781317562511 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Wynbrandt James 2009 A Brief History of Pakistan Facts on File p 196 ISBN 978 0 8160 6184 6 a b Wynbrandt James 2009 A Brief History of Pakistan Facts on File p 197 ISBN 978 0 8160 6184 6 Abbas Hassan 2004 Pakistan s Drift Into Extremism Allah the Army and America s War on Terror M E Sharpe p 53 ISBN 978 0 7656 1497 1 Akbar M K 1997 Pakistan from Jinnah to Sharif Mittal Publications pp 43 47 ISBN 9788170996743 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Siddiqui Kalim 1972 Conflict Crisis and War in Pakistan Springer p 130 ISBN 9781349013395 Retrieved 1 November 2016 Constable Pamela 2011 Playing with Fire Pakistan at War with Itself Random House Publishing Group pp 39 40 ISBN 9780679603450 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Constable Pamela 2011 Playing with Fire Pakistan at War with Itself Random House Publishing Group p 41 ISBN 978 0 679 60345 0 Pakistan AYUB KHAN countrystudies us Retrieved 5 October 2020 Akbar M K 1997 Pakistan from Jinnah to Sharif Mittal Publications p 48 ISBN 978 81 7099 674 3 Letters from Thane Read asking Helen Keller to sign the World Constitution for world peace 1961 Helen Keller Archive American Foundation for the Blind Retrieved 1 July 2023 Letter from World Constitution Coordinating Committee to Helen enclosing current materials Helen Keller Archive American Foundation for the Blind Retrieved 3 July 2023 Preparing earth constitution Global Strategies amp Solutions The Encyclopedia of World Problems The Encyclopedia of World Problems Union of International Associations UIA Retrieved 15 July 2023 Ex President of Pakistan Ayub Khan Dies Lawrence Journal World Vol 116 no 95 Islamabad Pakistan Associated Press 20 April 1974 p 13 Retrieved 21 August 2016 Ayub Khan dead at 67 Star News Vol 44 no 28 United Press International 20 April 1974 Retrieved 21 August 2016 Field Marshal Ayub Dead Ex President of Pakistan The New York Times 21 April 1974 Retrieved 21 August 2016 Khan Mohammad Ayub 1967 Friends Not Masters A Political Autobiography Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 211178 4 Retrieved 5 November 2016 a b c Megasthenes 2011 The Field Marshal from Beyond the Grave Daily Star Retrieved 5 November 2016 The power of US in Pakistan Khan Muhammad Ayub Friends Not Masters Oxford University Press 1967 Martial Law Under Field Marshal Ayub Khan 1958 62 Story of Pakistan Part 3 June 2003 Retrieved 25 August 2015 Dawn daily Aug 2015 article and review Pakistan s first rocket soars 80 miles high Dawn Pakistan 8 June 2012 Retrieved 7 September 2022 Story of Pakistan Part 1 Retrieved 25 August 2015 Fatima Jinnah Mother Of Nation Mader e Millat Pakistan Herald Archived from the original on 9 August 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2021 Mazari 1999 Pakistan THE AYUB KHAN ERA Mongabay com Retrieved 9 December 2012 Saikia Yasmin 3 April 2014 Ayub Khan and Modern Islam Transforming Citizens and the Nation in Pakistan South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 37 2 292 305 doi 10 1080 00856401 2014 889590 S2CID 143774121 Pick April 1969 a b Photo Archive Ayub Khan visits the US 1961 The Friday Times 16 September 2011 Archived from the original on 25 September 2011 Retrieved 19 September 2011 Јugoslovensko pakistanski politichki razogovri Borba 26 10 2 14 January 1961 Senarai Penuh Penerima Darjah Kebesaran Bintang dan Pingat Persekutuan Tahun 1962 PDF Profile Open Library Retrieved 13 June 2023 Bibliography editCloughly Brian 2006 Chapter 2 Ayub Khan Adjutant General to President A History of the Pakistan Army Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 57607 712 2 Khan Muhammad Ayub 1966 Diaries of Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan Karachi Oxford University Press p 599 ISBN 9780195474428 Khan Muhammad Ayub 1967 Friends Not Masters Oxford Oxford University Press p 290 ISBN 0192111787 Shah Aqil 2014 Military and Democracy Military Politics in Pakistan Harvard University Press ISBN 978 1 134 40758 3 Haqqani Husain 2010 Pakistan Between Mosque and Military Carnegie Endowment ISBN 978 0 87003 285 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Muhammed Ayub Khan Ayub Khan Bio Official profile at Pakistan Army website Video clip of Ayub Khan in Paris use QuickTime Player Video clip of Ayub Khan with General De Gaulle Video clip in Rawalpindi No 42035 The London Gazette 17 May 1960 p 3465 Creation as an Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George on 26 April 1960Military officesPreceded byDouglas Gracey C in C of the Pakistan Army1951 1958 Succeeded byMuhammad MusaPolitical officesPreceded byMuhammad Ali Bogra Minister of Defence1954 1955 Succeeded byChaudhry Muhammad AliPreceded byIskander Mirza President of Pakistan1958 1969 Succeeded byYahya KhanChief Martial Law Administrator1958 1969Preceded byMuhammad Ayub Khuhro Minister of Defence1958 1966 Succeeded byAfzal Rahman KhanPreceded byKhan Habibullah Khan Minister of the Interior1965 Succeeded byChaudhry Ali Akbar Khan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Muhammad Ayub Khan amp oldid 1207733313, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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