fbpx
Wikipedia

Pakistan Army

The Pakistan Army (Urdu: پاکستان فوج, romanizedPākistān Fãuj, pronounced [ˈpaːkɪstaːn faːɔːdʒ]), commonly known as the Pak Army (Urdu: پاک فوج, romanizedPāk Fãuj) is the land service branch and the largest component of the Pakistan Armed Forces. The President of Pakistan is the Supreme Commander of the Army. The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), a four-star general commands the army. The Army was established in August 1947 after Pakistan gained independence from the United Kingdom.[6]: 1–2  According to statistics provided by the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) in 2023, the Pakistan Army has approximately 560,000 active duty personnel, supported by the Pakistan Army Reserve, the National Guard and the Civil Armed Forces.[1][7] Pakistani citizens can enlist for voluntary military service upon reaching 16 years of age, but cannot be deployed for combat until the age of 18 in accordance with the Constitution of Pakistan.

Pakistan Army
پاکستان فوج
Emblem of the Pakistan Army
Founded14 August 1947 (1947-08-14)
(75 years, 10 months ago)
Country Pakistan
TypeArmy
RoleLand warfare
Size560,000 active-duty personnel[1]
550,000 reserve force
185,000 National Guard[2]
16,500 civilian personnel[3]
~560+ manned aircraft
Part ofPakistan Armed Forces
GarrisonGeneral Headquarters (GHQ), Rawalpindi Cantonment, Punjab
Motto(s)Iman, taqwa, jihad fi sabilillah[4]
Colours    
AnniversariesDefence Day: 6 September
Engagements
See list:
Websitepakistanarmy.gov.pk
Commanders
Commander-in-Chief President Arif Alvi
Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff General Sahir Shamshad Mirza
Chief of Army Staff Gen. Asim Munir
Chief of General Staff Lt. Gen. Muhammad Saeed[5]
Insignia
War Flag
Aircraft flown
AttackMil Mi-35M Hind, Bell AH-1F, Eurocopter AS550 C3 Fennec, NESCOM Burraq, CASC Rainbow
HelicopterMil Mi-17, Mil Mi-8, Bell UH-1 Iroquois, Bell 412, Bell 407, Bell 206, Aérospatiale Alouette III, Aérospatiale Lama, Enstrom F-28, Schweizer 300
TransportHarbin Y-12, Cessna Citation Bravo, Cessna 206 PAC MFI-17 Mushshak

The primary objective and constitutional mission of the Pakistan Army is to ensure the national security and national unity of Pakistan by defending it against any form of external aggression or the threat of war. It can also be requisitioned by the Pakistani federal government to respond to internal threats within its borders.[8] During events of national and international calamities and emergencies, it conducts humanitarian rescue operations at home and is an active participant in peacekeeping missions mandated by the United Nations (UN)—most notably playing a major role in rescuing trapped American soldiers who had requested for a quick reaction force during Operation Gothic Serpent in Somalia. Troops from the Pakistan Army also had a relatively strong presence as part of a larger UN and NATO coalition during the Bosnian War and larger Yugoslav Wars.: 70 [9]

The Pakistan Army, a major component of the Pakistani military alongside the Pakistan Navy and Pakistan Air Force, is a volunteer force that has seen extensive combat during three major wars with India, several border skirmishes with Afghanistan at the Durand Line as well as a long-running insurgency in the Balochistan region which it has been combatting alongside Iranian security forces since 1948.[10][11]: 31  Since the 1960s, elements of the army have been repeatedly deployed to act in an advisory capacity in the Arab states during the events of the Arab–Israeli wars as well as to aid the United States-led coalition against Iraq during the First Gulf War. Other notable military operations during the global war on terrorism in the 21st century included: Zarb-e-Azb, Black Thunderstorm, and Rah-e-Nijat.[12]

In violation of its constitutional mandate, it has repeatedly overthrown elected civilian governments, overreaching its protected constitutional mandate to "act in the aid of civilian federal governments when called upon to do so".[13] The army has been involved in enforcing martial law against the federal government with the claim of restoring law and order in the country by dismissing the legislative branch and parliament on multiple occasions in past decades—while maintaining a wider commercial, foreign and political interest in the country. This has led it facing allegations of acting as a state within a state.[14][15][16][17]

The Pakistan Army has a regimental system but is operationally and geographically divided into command zones, with its most basic fields being its various corps.[18] The Pakistani constitution mandates the role of the president of Pakistan as the civilian commander-in-chief of the Pakistani military.[19] The Pakistan Army is commanded by the Chief of Army Staff, who is by statute a four-star ranking general and a senior member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee appointed by the prime minister and subsequently affirmed by the president.[20] As of December 2022, the current Chief of Army Staff is General Asim Munir, who was appointed to the position on 29 November 2022.[21][22]

Mission

Its existence and constitutional role are protected by the Constitution of Pakistan, where its role is to serve as the land-based uniform service branch of the Pakistan Armed Forces. The Constitution of Pakistan establishes the principal land warfare uniform branch in the Pakistan Armed Forces as its states:

The Armed Forces shall, under the directions of the Federal Government, defend Pakistan against external aggression or threat of war, and, subject to law, act in aid of civil power when called upon to do so.

— Constitution of Pakistan[23]

History

Early origins

Division of British Indian Army and the first war with India (1947–52)

 
A statue of Subedar Khudadad Khan, Pakistan Army Museum
 
Members of the newly formed Pakistani Security Guard standing at attention during parade review for Pakistan's Leader Jinnah

The Pakistan Army came into its modern birth from the division of the British Indian Army that ceased to exist as a result of the partition of India that resulted in the creation of Pakistan on 14 August 1947.: 1–2 [6] Before even the partition took place, there were plans ahead of dividing the British Indian Army into different parts based on the religious and ethnic influence on the areas of India.: 1–2 [6]

On 30 June 1947, the War Department of the British administration in India began planning the dividing of the ~400,000 men strong British Indian Army, but that only began few weeks before the partition of India that resulted in violent religious violence in India.: 1–2 [6] The Armed Forces Reconstitution Committee (AFRC) under the chairmanship of British Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck had devised the formula to divide the military assets between India and Pakistan with ratio of 2:1, respectively.: conts. [24]

 
The Map of Kashmir, showing the tri-national control from China, Pakistan, and India, ca. 2005

A major division of the army was overseen by Sir Chandulal Madhavlal Trivedi, an Indian civil servant who was influential in making sure that ~260,000 men would be transferred into forming the Indian Army whilst the remaining balance going to Pakistan after the independence act was enacted by the United Kingdom on the night of 14/15 August 1947.: 2–3 [6]

Command and control at all levels of the new army was extremely difficult, as Pakistan had received six armoured, eight artillery and eight infantry regiments compared to the twelve armoured, forty artillery and twenty-one infantry regiments that went to India.: 155–156 [25] In total, the size of the new army was about ~150,000 men strong.: 155–156 [25] To fill the vacancy in the command positions of the new army, around 13,500: 2 [6] military officers from the British Army had to be employed in the Pakistan Army, which was quite a large number, under the command of Lieutenant-General Frank Messervy, the first commander-in-chief of the Pakistan Army.: 70 [26]

Eminent fears of India's seizing the control over the state of Kashmir, the armed tribes and the irregular militia entered in the Muslim-majority valley of Kashmir to oppose the rule of Hari Singh, a Hindu and the ruling Maharaja of Kashmir, in October 1947.: conts. [27] Attempting to maintain his control over the princely state, Hari Singh deployed his troops to check on the tribal advances but his troops failed to halt the advancing tribes towards the valley.: 40 [28] Eventually, Hari Singh appealed to Louis Mountbatten, the Governor-General of India, requesting for the deployment of the Indian Armed Forces but Indian government maintained that the troops could be committed if Hari Singh acceded to India.: 40 [28] Hari Singh eventually agreed to concede to the Indian government terms which eventually led to the deployment of the Indian Army in Kashmir– this agreement, however, was contested by Pakistan since the agreement did not include the consent of the Kashmiri people.: 40 [28] Sporadic fighting between militia and Indian Army broke out, and units of the Pakistan Army under Maj-Gen. Akbar Khan, eventually joined the militia in their fight against the Indian Army.: 40 [28]

Although, it was Lieutenant-General Sir Frank Messervy who opposed the tribal invasion in a cabinet meeting with Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan in 1947, later leaving the command of the army in 1947,: 447 [29] in a view of that British officers in the Indian and Pakistan Army would be fighting with each other in the war front.: 417 [30] It was Lt-Gen. Douglas Gracey who reportedly disobeyed the direct orders from Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the Governor-General of Pakistan, for the deployment of the army units and ultimately issued standing orders that refrained the units of Pakistan Army to further participate in the conflict.: 59 [31]

By 1948, when it became imperative in Pakistan that India was about to mount a large-scale operation against Pakistan, Gen. Gracey did not object to the deployment of the army units in the conflict against the Indian Army.: 59 [31]

This earlier insubordination of Gen. Gracey eventually forced India and Pakistan to reach a compromise through the United Nations' intervention, with Pakistan controlling the Western Kashmir and India controlling the Eastern Kashmir.: 417 [30]

20th Century: Cold war and conflict performances

Reorganization under the United States Army (1952–58)

 
General Ayub Khan arriving to take over command of the Pakistan Army at the Army GHQ in Rawalpindi, Punjab in Pakistan on 17 January 1951

At the time of the partition of British India, British Field Marshal (United Kingdom) Sir Claude Auchinleck favored the transfer of the infantry divisions to the Pakistan Army including the 7th, 8th and 9th.: 55 [32] In 1948, the British army officers in the Pakistan Army established and raised the 10th, 12th, and the 14th infantry divisions— with the 14th being established in East Bengal.: 55 [32] In 1950, the 15th Infantry Division was raised with the help from the United States Army, followed by the establishment of the 15th Lancers in Sialkot.: 36 [33] Dependence on the United States grew furthermore by the Pakistan Army despite it had worrisome concerns to the country's politicians.: 36 [33] Between 1950 and 1954, Pakistan Army raised six more armoured regiments under the U.S. Army's guidance: including, 4th Cavalry, 12th Cavalry, 15th Lancers, and 20th Lancers.: 36 [33]

After the incident involving Gracey's disobedience, there was a strong belief that a native commander of the Pakistan army should be appointed, which resulted in the Government of Pakistan rejecting the British Army Board's replacement of Gen. Gracey upon his replacement, in 1951.: 34 [34] Eventually, Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan approved the promotion paper of Maj-Gen. Iftikhar Khan as the first native commander-in-chief, a graduate of the Imperial Defence College in England, but died in an aviation accident en route to Pakistan from the United Kingdom.[35]

After the death of Maj-Gen. Iftikhar, there were four senior major-generals in the army in the race of promotion but the most junior, Maj-Gen. Ayub Khan, whose name was not included in the promotion list was elevated to the promotion that resulted in a lobbying provided by Iskandar Mirza, the Defense Secretary in Ali Khan administration.[36] A tradition of appointment based on favoritism and qualification that is still in practice by the civilian Prime Ministers in Pakistan.[36] Ayub was promoted to the acting rank of full general to command the army as his predecessors Frank Messervy and Douglas Gracey were performing the duty of commander-in-chief of the Pakistan Army in the acting rank of general, the neighbouring country India's first commanders-in-chief were same in this context.

The department of the army under General Ayub Khan steered the army's needs towards heavy focus and dependence towards the imported hardware acquired from the United States, in spite of acquiring it from the domestic industry, under the Military Assistance Advisory Group attached to Pakistan in 1954–56.: 36 [33] In 1953, the 6th Infantry Division was raised and disbanded the 6th Division in 1956 followed by the disbandment of the 9th Infantry Division as the American assistance was available only for one armored and six infantry divisions.: 36 [33] During this time, an army combat brigade team was readily made available by Gen. Ayub Khan to deploy to support the American Army's fighting troops in the Korean war.: 270 [37]

Working as cabinet minister in Bogra administration, Gen. Ayub's impartiality was greatly questioned by country's politicians and drove Pakistan's defence policy towards the dependence on the United States when the country becoming the party of the CENTO and the SEATO, the U.S. active measures against the expansion of the global communism.: 60 [38][39]

In 1956, the 1st Armored Division in Multan was established, followed by the Special Forces in Cherat under the supervision of the U.S Army's Special Forces.: 55 [32]: 133 [40] Under Gen. Ayub's control, the army had eradicated the British influence but invited the American expansion and had reorganized the East Bengal Regiment in East Bengal, the Frontier Force Regiment in Northern Pakistan, Kashmir Regiment in Kashmir, and Frontier Corps in the Western Pakistan.[6] The order of precedence change from Navy–Army–Air Force to Army–Navy-Air Force, with army being the most senior service branch in the structure of the Pakistani military.: 98 [38]

In 1957, the I Corps was established and headquarter was located in Punjab.: 55 [32] Between 1956 and 1958, the schools of infantry and tactics,[41] artillery,[42] ordnance,[43] armoured,[44] medical, engineering, services, aviation,[45] and several other schools and training centers were established with or without U.S. participation.: 60 [38]

Military takeovers in Pakistan and second war with India (1958–1969)

 
Pakistani Army Position, MG1A3 AA, 1965 War
 
Pakistani Infantry, 1965 War
 
A Pakistan Army 106mm recoilless rifle position - 1965 war.
 
An operational tank squadron of the Pakistan Army equipped with the Indian tanks (French-build AMXs) captured in the Chhamb battle, out on manoeuvers.

As early as 1953, the Pakistan Army became involved in national politics in a view of restoring the law and order situation when Governor-General Malik Ghulam, with approval from Prime Minister Khawaja Nazimuddin, dismissed the popularly-mandated state government of Chief Minister Mumtaz Daultana in Punjab in Pakistan, and declared martial law under Lt-Gen. Azam Khan and Col. Rahimuddin Khan who successfully quelled the religious agitation in Lahore.: 17–18 [46]: 158  In 1954, the Pakistan Army's Military Intelligence Corps reportedly sent the intelligence report indicating the rise of communism in East Pakistan during the legislative election held in East-Bengal.: 75 [47] Within two months of the elections, Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Bogra, with approval from Governor-General Malik Ghulam, dismissed another popularly-mandated state government of Chief Minister Fazlul Huq in East Bengal in Pakistan, and declared governor's rule under Iskandar Mirza who relied in the Pakistan Army to manage the control and security of the East Bengal at all levels of command.: 75 [47] With General Ayub Khan becoming the Defense Minister under Ministry of Talents led by Prime Minister Bogra, the involvement of the army in the national politics grew further with the implementation of the controversial One Unit program, abolishing the status of Four Provinces, despite the strong protests by the public and the West Pakistan's politicians.: 80 [47] Major defense funding and spending was solely focused towards Ayub's army department and the air force department led by Air Marshal Asghar Khan, giving less priority to the national needs for the Navy.[48]

From 1954 to 1958, Ayub Khan was made subjected with receiving multiple service extensions by the civilian Prime Ministers first receiving in 1954 that extended his service to last till 1958.: contents [49]: 232 [50]

The Pakistan Army under Ayub Khan had been less supportive towards the implementation of the first set of Constitution of Pakistan that had established the civilian control of the military, and the army went on to completely endorse and support the first martial law in the country imposed by President Iskander Mirza– the army later took control of the power from President Mirza in mere two weeks and installed Ayub Khan as the second President.: 81 [47] The subsequent change of command resulted in Gen. Musa Khan becoming the army commander with Ayub Khan promoting himself as controversial rank of field marshal.: 22 [51][self-published source?] In 1969, the Supreme Court reversed its decision and overturned its convictions that called for validation of martial law in 1958.: 60 [52]

The army held the referendum and tightly control the political situation through the intelligence agencies, and banned the political activities in the country.[53]

 
The public society in Pakistan rallying in support of the Pakistan Army in 1965

From 1961 to 1962, military aid continued to Pakistan from the United States and they established the 25th Cavalry, followed by the 24th Cavalry, 22nd, and 23rd Cavalry.: 36 [33] In 1960–61, the Army Special Forces was reportedly involved in taking over the control of the administration of Dir from the Nawab of Dir in Chitral in North-West Frontier Province over the concerns of Afghan meddling in the region.[54] In 1964–65, the border fighting and tensions flared with the Indian Army with a serious incident taking place near the Rann of Kutch, followed by the failed covert action to take control of the Indian-side of Kashmir resulted in a massive retaliation by the Indian Army on 5 August 1965.[55] On the night of 6 September 1965, India opened the front against Pakistan when the Indian Army's mechanized corps charged forwards taking over the control of the Pakistan-side of Punjab, almost reaching Lahore.: 294 [56] At the time of the conflict in 1965, Pakistan's armory and mechanized units' hardware was imported from the United States including the M4 Sherman, M24 Chaffee, M36 Jackson, and the M47 and M48 Patton tanks, equipped with 90 mm guns.[57] In contrast, the Indian Army's armor had outdated in technology with Korean war-usage American M4 Sherman and World War II manufactured British Centurion Tank, fitted with the French-made CN-75 guns.[58]

In spite of Pakistan enjoying the numerical advantage in tanks and artillery, as well as better equipment overall,: 69 [59][60] the Indian Army successfully penetrated the defences of Pakistan's borderline and successfully conquered around 360 to 500 square kilometres (140 to 190 square miles)[56][61] of Pakistani Punjab territory on the outskirts of Lahore.[62] A major tank battle took place in Chawinda, at which the newly established 1st Armoured Division was able to halt the Indian invasion.: 35 [63] Eventually, the Indian invasion of Pakistan came to halt when the Indian Army concluded the battle near Burki.[62][64][page needed][65][66] With diplomatic efforts and involvement by the Soviet Union to bring two nation to end the war, the Ayub administration reached a compromise with Shastri ministry in India when both governments signed and ratified the Tashkent Declaration.[65][66] According to the Library of Congress Country Studies conducted by the Federal Research Division of the United States:

The war was militarily inconclusive; each side held prisoners and some territory belonging to the other. Losses were relatively heavy—on the Pakistani side, twenty aircraft, 200 tanks, and 3,800 troops. Pakistan's army had been able to withstand Indian pressure, but a continuation of the fighting would only have led to further losses and ultimate defeat for Pakistan. Most Pakistanis, schooled in the belief of their own martial prowess, refused to accept the possibility of their country's military defeat by "Hindu India" and were, instead, quick to blame their failure to attain their military aims on what they considered to be the ineptitude of Ayub Khan and his government.[67]

At the time of ceasefire declared, per neutral sources, Indian casualties stood at 3,000 whilst the Pakistani casualties were 3800.[68][69][70] Pakistan lost between 200 and 300 tanks during the conflict and India lost approximately 150-190 tanks.[71][72][better source needed]

However, most neutral assessments agree that India had the upper hand over Pakistan when ceasefire was declared,[73][74][75][76][77] but the propaganda in Pakistan about the war continued in favor of Pakistan Army.[78] The war was not rationally analysed in Pakistan with most of the blame being heaped on the leadership and little importance given to intelligence failures that persisted until the debacle of the third war with India in 1971.[79] The Indian Army's action was restricted to Punjab region of both sides with Indian Army mainly in fertile Sialkot, Lahore and Kashmir sectors,[80][81] while Pakistani land gains were primarily in southern deserts opposite Sindh and in the Chumb sector near Kashmir in the north.[80]

With the United States' arms embargo on Pakistan over the issue of the war, the army instead turned to the Soviet Union and China for hardware acquisition, and correctly assessed that a lack of infantry played a major role in the failure of Pakistani armour to translate its convincing material and technical superiority into a major operational or strategic success against the Indian Army.[82] Ultimately, the army's high command established the 9th, 16th, and 17th infantry divisions in 1966–68.[82] In 1966, the IV Corps was formed and its headquarter was established, and permanently stationed in Lahore, Punjab in Pakistan.[83]

The army remained involved in the nation's civic affairs, and ultimately imposed the second martial law in 1969 when the writ of the constitution was abrogated by then-army commander, Gen. Yahya Khan, who took control of the nation's civic affairs after the resignation of President Ayub Khan, resulted in a massive labor strikes instigated by the Pakistan Peoples Party in West and Awami League in East Pakistan.[84]

In a lawsuit settled by the Supreme Court of Pakistan, the legality of the martial law was deemed questionable as the Supreme Court settled the suit by retroactively invalidated the martial law that suspended the Constitution and notably ruled that Yahya Khan's assumption of power was "illegal usurpation".: 59–60 [52] In light of the Supreme Court's judgement, the army held the publicly televised conference when President Yahya Khan announced to hold the nationwide general elections in 1969–70.: 59–60 [52]

Suppression, civil conflict in East Pakistan and Indian invasion (1969–1971)

In 1969, President Yahya Khan decided to make administrative changes in the army by appointing the Gen. Abdul Hamid Khan as the Army Chief of Staff (ACOS) of the Pakistan Army, who centralized the chain of command in Rawalpindi in a headquarters known as "High Command".: 32 [85] From 1967 to 1969, a series of major military exercises was conducted by infantry units on East Pakistan's border with India.: 114–119 [86] In 1970, the Pakistan army's military mission in Jordan was reportedly involved in tackling and curbing down the Palestinian infiltration in Jordan.[87] In June 1971, the enlistment in the army had allowed the Army GHQ in Rawalpindi to raise and established the 18th infantry division, stationed in Hyderabad, Sindh, for the defence of 900 kilometres (560 mi) from Rahimyar Khan to Rann of Kutch, and reestationed the 23rd infantry division for defending the Chhamb-Dewa Sector.[82]

In 1971, the II Corps was established and headquartered in Multan, driven towards defending the mass incursion from the Indian Army.[83] In December 1971, the 33rd infantry division was established from the army reserves of the II Corps, followed by raising the 37th Infantry Division.[82] The Pakistan Army reportedly helped the Pakistan Navy to toward establishing the amphibious branch, the Pakistan Marines, whose battalion was airlifted to East Pakistan along with the 9th Infantry Division.[82] The other battalions of marines were stationed with the army troops in the skirts of Punjab to support the defence in the events of the war with India.[citation needed]

The intervention in East Pakistan further grew when the Operation Searchlight resulted in the overtaking of the government buildings, communication centers, and restricting the politicians opposed to military rule.: 263 [88] Within a month, Pakistani national security strategists realized their failure of implementing the plan which had not anticipated civil resistance in East, and the real nature of Indian strategy behind their support of the resistance.: 2–3 [89]

The Yahya administration is widely accused of permitting the army to commit the war crimes against the civilians in East and curbing civil liberties and human rights in Pakistan. The Eastern Command under Lt-Gen. A. A. K. Niazi, who had area responsibility of the defending the Eastern Front and had the responsibility to protect, was leveled with accusations of escalating the political violence in the East by the serving military officers, politicians, and journalists in Pakistan.[90][91] Since the general elections in 1970, the army had detained several key politicians, journalists, peace activists, student unionists, and other members of civil society while curbing the freedoms of movement and speech in Pakistan.: 112 [92] In East Pakistan, the unified Eastern Military Command under Lt-Gen. A.A.K. Niazi, began its engagement with the armed militia that had support from India in April 1971, and eventually fought against the Indian Army in December 1971.: 596 [93]: 596  The army, together with marines, launched ground offensives on both fronts but the Indian Army successfully held its ground and initiated well-coordinated ground operations on both fronts, initially capturing 15,010 square kilometres (5,795 sq mi): 239 [40] of Pakistan's territory; this land gained by India in Azad Kashmir, Punjab and Sindh sectors.: 239 [40]

Responding to the ultimatum issued on 16 December 1971 by the Indian Army in East, Lt-Gen. Niazi agreed to concede defeat and move towards signing the documented surrender with the Indian Army which effectively and unilaterally ended the armed resistance and led the creation of Bangladesh, only after India's official engagement that lasted 13 days.[94] It was reported that the Eastern Command had surrendered ~93,000–97,000 uniform personnel to Indian Army– the largest surrender in a war by any country after the World War II.[95] Casualties inflicted to army's I Corps, II Corps, and Marines did not sit well with President Yahya Khan who turned over control of the civic government to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto through an executive decree.[96]

Commenting on the defeat, the military observer in the Pakistan Army, Major A.H. Amin, reported that the war strategists in the army had not seriously considered a full-fledged invasion from India until December 1971, because it was presumed that the Indian military would not risk intervention by China or the United States, and the high command failed to realize that the Chinese would be unable to intervene during the winter months of November to December, due to snowbound Himalayan passes, and the Americans had not made any real effort to persuade India against attacking East Pakistan.[97]

Restructuring of armed forces, stability and restoration (1971–1977)

 
The officers of the 9th Battalion of the Frontier Force Regiment on 23 March 1974
 
In the 1970s, the Corps of Engineers built many secretive weapon-testing laboratories and sites in the graphite mountain ranges of Pakistan.: 144–145 [98] The footage is provided as an example by the CEIP.

In January 1972, the Bhutto administration formed the POW Commission to investigate the numbers of war prisoners held by the Indian Army while requesting the Supreme Court of Pakistan to investigate the causes of the war failure with India in 1971.: 7–10 [99] The Supreme Court formed the famed War Enquiry Commission (WEC) that identified many failures, fractures, and faults within the institution of the department of the army and submitted recommendations to strengthen the armed forces overall.[6] Under the Yahya administration, the army was highly demoralized and there were unconfirmed reports of mutiny by soldiers against the senior army generals at the Corps garrisons and the Army GHQ in Rawalpindi.: 5 [99]

Upon returning from the quick visit in the United States in 1971, President Bhutto forcefully dishonorably discharge seven senior army generals, which he called the "army waderas" (lit. Warlords).: 71 [100] In 1972, the army leadership under Lt-Gen. Gul Hassan refrained from acting under Bhutto administration's order to tackle the labor strikes in Karachi and to detained the labor union leaders in Karachi, instead advising the federal government to use the Police Department to take the actions.: 7 [99]

On 2 March 1972, President Bhutto dismissed Lt-Gen. Gul Hassan as the army commander, replacing with Lt-Gen. Tikka Khan who was later promoted to four-star rank and appointed as the first Chief of Army Staff (COAS).: 8 [99] The army under Bhutto administration was reconstructed in its structure, improving its fighting ability, and reorganized with the establishment of the X Corps in Punjab in 1974, followed by the V Corps in Sindh and XI Corps in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan in 1975.[101] The trilateral agreement in India, the Bhutto administration transferred all the war prisoners back to the country but the military struggle to fill in the vacancies and employments due to some suffering from the PTSD and other mental health complications, while others simply did not wanted to serve in the military any longer.: 19–20 [99] Under Bhutto administration, the army engage in self-reliance production and eventually reached to China for establishing the material and metal industries to overcome the material shortage and manufacturing of weapons industry in the country.[102]

In 1973, the Bhutto administration dismissed the state government in Balochistan that resulting in another separatist movement, culminating the series of army actions in largest province of the country that ended in 1977.: 319 [103] With the military aid receiving from Iran including the transfer of the Bell AH-1 Cobra to Aviation Corps,: 319 [103] the conflict came to end with the Pakistani government offering the general amnesties to separatists in the 1980s.: 151 [104]: 319 : 319 [103] Over the issue of Baloch conflict, the Pakistani military remained engage in Omani civil war in favor of Omani government until the rebels were defeated in 1979.[105] The War Enquiry Commission noted the lack of joint grand strategy between the four-branches of the military during the first, the second, and the third wars with India, recommending the establishment of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee to maintain strategic military communication between the inter-services and the federal government, that is to be chaired by the appointed Chairman joint chiefs as the government's principal military adviser.: 145 [106] In 1976, the first Chairman joint chiefs was appointed from the army with Gen. Muhammad Shariff taking over the chairmanship, but resigned a year later.: 145 [106] In 1975, Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto controversially superseded at least seven senior army generals to promote Lt-Gen. Zia-ul-Haq to the four-star rank, appointing him the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) in spite of army recommendations forwarded to the federal government.: 24 [99]

In the 1970s, the army's engineering formations, notable the Corps of Engineers, played a crucial role in supporting the clandestine atomic bomb program to reach its parity and feasibility, including the constructions of iron-steel tunnels in the secretive nuclear weapons-testing sites in 1977–78.: 144–145 [98]

PAF and Navy fighter pilots voluntarily served in Arab nations' militaries against Israel in the Yom Kippur War (1973). According to modern Pakistani sources, in 1974 one of the PAF pilots, Flt. Lt. Sattar Alvi flying a MiG-21 shot down an Israeli Air Force Mirage flown by Captain M. Lutz, and was honoured by the Syrian government.[107][108][109] The Israeli pilot later succumbed to wounds he sustained during ejection. However, no major sources from the time reported on such an incident,[110][111][112] and there is no mention of "Captain Lutz" in Israel's Ministry of Defense's record of Israel's casualties of war.[113]

Middle East operations, peacekeeping missions, and covert actions (1977–1999)

 
Transferred from Iranian Ground Force in 1973–75, the Pakistan Army acquired additional the AH-1S Cobra attack helicopters from the United States under the Foreign Military Sales to improve the Pakistan's defences in the 1980s.: 45–46 [99]

The political instability increased in the country when the conservative alliance refused to accept the voting turnout in favor of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) after the general elections held in 1977.: 25–26 [99] The army, under Gen. Zia-ul-Haq–the army chief, began planning the military takeover of the federal government under Prime Minister Zulfikar Bhutto, eventually leading the coup d'état that suspended the writ of the Constitution amid responding to the call from one of the opposition leader of threatening to call for another civil war.: 27 [99] The military interference in civic matters grew further when the martial law was extended for an infinite period despite maintaining that the elections to be held in 90-days prior.: 30–31 [99] At the request from the Saudi monarchy, the Zia administration deployed the company of the special forces to end seizure of the Grand Mosque in Mecca from Islamists.: 265–280 [114]

The army under President Zia weakened due to the army officers were needed in running the affairs of civic government and the controversial military courts that held trials of the communists, dissidents, and the oppositions of Zia's administration.: 31–32 [99] In 1984–85, Pakistan lost the control of her northern glaciers due to the successful expedition and penetration by the Indian Army, and army had to engage in years long difficult battles with Indian Army to regain their areas from the Indian Army.: 45 [99] Concerns over the military officers and army personnel needed to counter the further advances by the Indian Army in Northern fronts in 1984, the martial law was lifted following the referendum that approved Zia's presidency and provided a way of holding the general elections in 1985.: 45 [99] The military control the under army administration had successfully stabilized the law and order in Balochistan despite the massive illegal immigration from Afghanistan, and issued the general amnesties to separatists and rebels.[115] To address the Afghan containment and security, the army established the XII Corps in 1985 that is permanently headquartered in Quetta, that is designed to provide defence against the infiltration by the Afghan National Army from Afghanistan.[citation needed]

 
The Pakistan Army's troops, as part of their deployment in Somalia, patrolling off their mission in the Mogadishu in Somalia in 1993[116]

In 1985, the United States approved the military aid package, worth $4.02 billion, to Pakistan when the mujaheddin fighting with the Soviet Union in Afghanistan increased and intensified, with Soviet Army began violating and attacking the insurgents in the tribal areas in Pakistan.: 45–46 [99] In 1986, the tensions with India increased when the Indian Army's standing troops mobilized in combat position in Pakistan's southern frontier with India failing to give notification of exercise to Pakistan prior.: 46 [99] In 1987–88, the XXX Corps, headquartered in North of Punjab, and the XXXI Corps, headquartered in South of Punjab, was raised and established to provide defence against the Indian army's mass infiltration.[83]

After the aviation accident that resulted in passing of President Zia in 1988, the army organized the massive military exercise with the Pakistan Air Force to evaluate the technological assessment of the weapon systems and operational readiness.: 57 [99][117] In the 1980s, Pakistan Army remained engage in the affairs of Middle East, first being deployed in Saudi Arabia during the Iran–Iraq War in 1980–1988, and later overseeing operational support measures and combat actions during the Gulf War in 1990–91.[6]

The period from 1991 to 1998 saw the army engaged in professionalism and proved its fighting skills in the Somalian theater (1991–94), Bosnian-Serb War (on Bosnian side from 1994 to 1998[118]), and the other theaters of the Yugoslav Wars, as part of the United Nation's deployment.: 69–73 [119][120] In 1998, the army's Corps of Engineers played a crucial role in providing the military administration of preparing the atomic weapon-testing in Balochistan when the air force's bombers flown and airlifted the atomic devices.[121] The controversial relief of Gen. Jehangir Karamat by the Sharif administration reportedly disturbed the balance of the civil-military relations with the junior most Lt-Gen. Pervez Musharraf replacing it as chairman joint chiefs and the army chief in 1999.[122]

In May 1999, the Northern Light Infantry, a paramilitary unit based in Gilgit, slipped into Kargil that resulted in heavy border fighting with the Indian Army, inflicted with heavy casualties on both sides.[123] The ill-devised plan without meaningful consideration of the outcomes of the border war with India, the army under Chairman joint chiefs Gen. Pervez Musharraf (also army chief at that time) failed to its combat performance and suffered with similar outcomes as the previous plan in 1965, with the American military observers in the Pakistan military famously commenting to news channels in Pakistan: Kargil was yet another example of Pakistan's (lack of) grand strategy, repeating the follies of the previous wars with India.": 200 [124][125][126]

After its commendable performance, the President of Pakistan made the Northern Light Infantry as a regular army regiment. Its personnel eventually became officers and enlisted personnel in the army in 1999.[127]

21st Century: War performances

Religious insurgency and War on terror (2001 – present)

Pakistan army assisance.[128]: 142 [129] This controversial takeover of the federal government was subjected to a lengthy and an expensive lawsuit fought between the lawyers of the department of army and the former Sharif administration at the Supreme Court, with the landmark verdict rendered in 2009 ultimately sided and favored the Sharif administration's arguments as the Justices of the Supreme Court accepted the fact that the army's takeover was in fact a direct violation of the constitution and breach of its given constitutional mandate.: 119–120 : 112–115 [130][131]

Responding to the terror attacks in New York in the United States, the army joined the combat actions in Afghanistan with the United States and simultaneously engage in military standoff with Indian Army in 2001–02. In 2004–06, the military observers from the army were deployed to guide the Sri Lankan army to end the civil war with the Tamil fighters.[132]

To overcome the governance crises in 2004–07, the Musharraf administration appointed several army officers in the civilian institutions with some receiving extensions while others were deployed from their combat service– thus affecting the fighting capabilities and weakening the army.: 37 [133] Under Gen. Musharraf's leadership, the army's capabilities fighting the fanatic Talibans and Afghan Arab fighters in Pakistan further weakened and suffered serious setbacks in gaining control of the tribal belt that fell under the control of the Afghan Arabs and Uzbek fighters.: 37 [133] From 2006 to 2009, the army fought the series of bloody battles with the fanatic Afghan Arabs and other foreign fighters including the army action in a Red Mosque in Islamabad to control the religious fanaticism.: 37 [133] With the controversial assassination of Baloch politician in 2006, the army had to engage in battles with the Baloch separatists fighting for the Balochistan's autonomy.: 37 [133]

In April 2007, the major reorganization of the commands of the army was taken place under Gen. Ahsan S. Hyatt, the vice army chief under Gen. Musharraf, established the Southern, Central, and the Northern Commands.[citation needed] With Gen. Musharraf's resignation and Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani becoming the army chief, the army realigned itself to review its combat policies and withdrew officers in civilian institutions to focus on its primary constitutional mission to protect and responsible in 2009–14.: 37 [133][131] In 2012, there was a serious accident involving the entire battalion from the Northern Light Infantry when the avalanche struck the battalion base in Siachen, entrapping 135 soldiers and including several army officers.[134]

 
Pakistan army destroying an Indian army outpost on the LoC during tensions in 2017
 
Pakistan army destroying an Indian army bunker on the line of control in 2017

In 2013–16, the homegrown far-right guerrilla war with the Taliban, Afghan Arabs, and the Central Asian fighters took the decisive turn in favor of the army under Sharif administration, eventually gaining the control of the entire country and established the writ of the constitution in the affected lawless regions.[135] As of its current deployment as of 2019, the army remained engage in border fighting with the Indian Army while deploying its combat strike brigade teams in Saudi Arabia in a response of Saudi intervention in Yemen.[136]

Organization

Command and control structure

Leadership in the army is provided by the Minister of Defense, usually leading and controlling the direction of the department of the army from the Army Secretariat-I at the Ministry of Defense, with the Defense Secretary who is responsible for the bureaucratic affairs of the army's department.[137] The Constitution empowers the President of Pakistan, an elected civilian official, to act as the Commander-in-Chief while the Prime Minister, an elected civilian, to act as the Chief Executive.[138] The Chief of Army Staff, an appointed four-star rank army general, is the highest general officer, under Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee and Secretary Defense, who acts as the principal military adviser on the expeditionary and land/ground warfare affairs, and a senior member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee– a military body that advises and briefs the elected Prime Minister and its executive cabinet on national security affairs and operational military matters under the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee.[2]

The single combat headquarter, the Army GHQ, is located in Rawalpindi Cantonment in Punjab in Pakistan, in the vicinity of the Joint Staff Headquarters.[2] The Chief of Army Staff controls and commands the army at all levels of operational command, and is assisted the number of Principal Staff Officers (PSOs) who are three-star rank generals.[2]

The military administration under the army chief operating at the Army GHQ including the appointed Principal Staff Officers:

In 2008, a major introduction was made in the military bureaucracy at the Army GHQ under Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, when two new PSO positions were introduced: the Inspector-General of Arms and the Inspector-General Communications and IT.[139]

The Army's corps are divided into three regional-level commands which are assigned for defending the territories of Pakistan.

Personnel

Commissioned officers

The commissioned army ranks and insignia authorized in the Pakistan Army are modified and patterned on the British Army's officer ranks and insignia system.[140] There are several paths of becoming the commissioned officer in the army including the admission and required graduation from the Pakistan Military Academy in Kakul.[citation needed] To become an officer in the army, the academic four-year college degree is required for the candidates to become officers in the army, and therefore they are designated by insignia unique to their staff community.[citation needed]

Selection to the officer candidates is highly competitive with ~320–700 individuals are allowed to enter in the Pakistan Military Academy annually, with a small number of already graduated physicians, specialists, veterinaries and the engineers from the civilian universities are directly recruited in the administrative staff corps such as Medical Corps, Veterinary Corps, Engineering Corps, Dental Corps— and these graduated individuals are the heart of the administrative corps.: 293 [141] The product of a highly competitive selection process, members of the staff corps have completed twelve years of education in their respected fields (such as attending the schools and universities), and has to spend two years at the Pakistan Military Academy, with their time divided about equally between military training and academic work to bring them up to a baccalaureate education level, which includes English-language skills.: 293 [141] The Department of Army also offers employment to civilians in financial management, accountancy, engineering, construction, and administration, and has currently employed 6,500 civilians.[142]

The military officers in the Pakistani military seek retirement between the ages of forty-two and sixty, depending on their ranks, and often seeks employment in the federal government or the private sector where the pay scales are higher as well as the opportunity for gain considerably greater.: 294 [141]

Estimations by the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) the Pakistan Army's combined strength of the standing army is ~815,000 including the active duty personnels from the Regular Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard, and is additionally supported by the ~70,000 personnel from the Frontier Corps–the military provost under the command of the Pakistan Army as of 2018.[102]

Rank O-10 O-9 O-8 O-7 O-6 O-5 O-4 O-3 O-2 O-1 O-1
Insignia                      
Title Field Marshal General Lieutenant-General Major-General Brigadier Colonel Lieutenant-Colonel Major Captain Lieutenant Second Lieutenant
Abbreviation FM Gen. Lt-Gen. Maj-Gen. Brig. Col. Lt-Col. Maj. Capt. Lt. 2nd-Lt.
NATO Code OF-10 OF-9 OF-8 OF-7 OF-6 OF-5 OF-4 OF-3 OF-2 OF-1 OF-1
Rank Hierarchy  
Five-star
 
Four-star
 
Three-star
 
Two-star
 
One-star

Warrant officers

The Pakistan Army uniquely uses the junior commissioned officer (JCO) ranks, equivalent of the Warrant officers or the Limited duty officers in the United States military, inherited from the former British Indian Army introduced by the British Army in India between the enlisted and officer ranks.[citation needed] The JCOs are single-track specialists with their subject of expertise in their particular part of the job and initially appointed (NS1) after risen from their enlisted ranks, receiving the promotion (SM3) from the commanding officer.[citation needed]

The usage of the junior commissioned officer is the continuation of the former Viceroy's commissioned officer rank, and the JCO ranking system benefited the army since there was a large gap existed between the officers and the enlisted personnel at the time of the establishment of the new army in 1947.[citation needed] Over the several years, the JCOs rank system has outlived its usefulness because the educational level of the enlisted personnel has risen and the army has more comfortably adopted the U.S. Army's ranking platform than the British.[39] Promotion to the JCOs/WO ranks remains a powerful and influential incentive for that enlisted personnel desire not to attend the accredited four-year college.[citation needed]

Junior Commissioned Officer/Warrant Officer ranks
Insignia      
Infantry/other title Subedar-Major Subedar Naib Subedar
Cavalry/armor title Risaldar Major Risaldar Naib Risaldar

Enlisted personnel

The recruiting and enlistment in the army is nationwide but the army's recruiting command maintains an ethnic balance, with those who turned away are encourage to join the either the Marines or the Air Force.: 292 [141] Most enlisted personnel had come from the poor and rural families with many had only rudimentary literacy skills in the past, but with the increase in the affordable education have risen to the matriculation level (12th Grade).: 292 [141] In the past, the army recruits had to re-educate the illiterate personnel while processing them gradually through a paternalistically run regimental training center, teaching the official language, Urdu, if necessary, and given a period of elementary education before their military training actually starts.: 292 [141]

In the thirty-six-week training period, they develop an attachment to the regiment they will remain with through much of their careers and begin to develop a sense of being a Pakistani rather than primarily a member of a tribe or a village.: 292 [141] Enlisted personnel usually serve for eighteen to twenty years, before retiring or gaining a commission, during which they participate in regular military training cycles and have the opportunity to take academic courses to help them advance.: 292 [141]

The noncommissioned officers (or enlists) wear respective regimental color chevrons on the right sleeve.: 292 [141] Center point of the uppermost chevron must remain 10 cm from the point of the shoulder.: 292 [141] The Company/battalion appointments wear the appointments badges on the right wrist.: 292 [141] Pay scales and incentives are greater and attractive upon enlistment including the allocation of land, free housing, and financial aid to attend the colleges and universities.: 294 [141] Retirement age for the enlisted personnel varies and depends on the enlisted ranks that they have attained during their services.: 294 [141]

Structure of enlisted ranks of the Pakistan Army
Pay grade E-9 E-8 E-7 E-6 E-5 E-4 E-3 E-2 E-1
Insignia               No insignia No insignia
Title Battalion Havildar Major/Regimental Daffadar Major Battalion Quartermaster Havildar/Regimental Quartermaster Daffadar Company Havildar Major/Squadron Daffadar Major Company Quartermaster Havildar/Squadron Quartermaster Daffadar Havildar/Daffadar Naik/Lance Daffadar Lance Naik/Acting Lance Daffadar Sepoy/Sowar No Equivalent
Abbreviation BHM/RDM BQMH/RQD CHM/SDM CQMH/SQD Hav/Dfdr Nk/L Dfdr L/Nk/Actg L/Dfdr Sep/Swr NE
NATO Code OR-9 OR-8 OR-7 OR-6 OR-5 OR-4 OR-3 OR-2 OR-1
U.S. Code SGM MSG SFC SSG SGT CPL PFC PVT

Recruitment and training

 
The passing out (graduation) of cadets from the Pakistan Military Academy in Kakul in 2007. The education and military training last for two years before cadets become officers.[143]

Prior to August 1947, the British Army's recruiting administration had recruited the enlists from the districts of the Jhelum, Rawalpindi, and Campbellpur that dominated the recruitment flows.[6] From 1947 to 1971, the Pakistan Army was predominantly favored to recruit from Punjab and was popular in the country as the "Punjabi Army" because of heavy recruiting interests coming from the rural and poor families of villages in Punjab as well as being the most populous province of Pakistan.: 149 [144][145]

Even as of today, the Pakistan Army's recruiters struggle to enlist citizens and their selfless commitment to the military from the urban areas (i.e. Karachi and Peshawar) where the preference of the college education is quite popular (especially attending post-graduate schools in the United States and the English-speaking countries) as well as working in the settled private industry for lucrative salaries and benefits, while the military enlistment still comes from the most rural and remote areas of Pakistan, where commitment to the military is much greater than in the metropolitan cities.: 31 [10]

After 1971, the Bhutto administration introduced the Quota system and drastically reduced the officers and enlists from Punjab and gave strong preference to residents in Sindh, Balochistan, and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, and such policy continue to exists to maintain an ethnic balance in the army.: 163 [146] Those who are turned away are strongly encourage to join the Marines Corps or the Air Force.[6]

In 1991, the department of the army drastically reduced the size of personnel from Punjab, downsizing the army personnel to 63%, and issues acceptable medical waivers interested enlists while encouraging citizens of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh. This decision has given a fair chance to every citizen of Pakistan to be part of the Pakistan Army as each district possesses a fixed percentage of seats in all branches of the Army, as per census records.[citation needed] By 2003–05, the department of army continued its policy by drastically downsizing the personnel from Punjab to 43–70%.[147]

The Department of Army has relaxed its recruitment and medical standards in Sindh and Balochistan where the height requirement of 5 feet 4 inches is considered acceptable even with the enlists educational level at eighth grade is acceptable for the waiver; since the army recruiters take responsibility of providing education to 12th grade to the interested enlists from Balochistan and Sindh.: 31 [10] In Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa where the recruitment is popular, the height requirement remains to be at 5 feet 6 inches with minimum education of 10th grade.[10]

The army cadets undergo training in Kakul at the Pakistan Military Academy where basic training takes place. Such training usually lasts for two years until the cadets are able to meet their graduation requirements from the academy.[143] All the cadets have to attend and be trained at the PMA regardless of attending the military schools and colleges in other parts of the country.[143]

Duration wise, it is one of the longest military training period in the country, and the training continues for two years until the cadet is being able pass out from the academy, before selecting the college to start the career of their choice in the military.[143]

Women and religion in the Pakistan Army

 
Woman soldier of the Pakistan Army

Women have been part of the Pakistan Army since 1947, and currently there are approximately 4,000 women serving in the military.[148] In the years of 1947, '48 and '49, women were inducted into the Women's Guard Section of the National Guard and trained in medical work, welfare, and clerical positions (this was later disbanded).[149] Pakistan Army has a separate cadet course for women which is known as 'Lady Cadet Course', female cadets are trained in Pakistan Military Academy.[150] After induction, women army officers go through a six-month military training at the Pakistan Military Academy like their male counterparts. The comprehensive training includes military education and development of physical efficiency skills.[151] Women wear regular military khaki uniforms.[clarification needed][151]

Pakistan is the only Muslim-majority nation which appoints women to general officer ranks, such as Major-General Shahida Malik, the first woman army officer and military physician by profession who was promoted to a two-star rank.[152] In July 2013, the Army trained female paratrooper officers for the first time.[153][154][155] In 2020, Nigar Johar became the first female Lieutenant General in the army, she was from the Pakistan Army Medical Corps.[156]

The Army recruits from all religions in Pakistan including Hindus, Sikhs, Zoroastrians, Christians who have held command-level positions.[157] Religious services are provided by the Chaplain Corps for Muslims, Hindus, Christians, Sikhs, and Zoroastrians.[83]

In 1993, Major-General Julian Peter was the first Christian to be appointed at the command position while Hercharn Singh became the first Sikh to be commissioned in the army. Between 1947 and 2000, a policy of restricting Hindus prior enlisting in the Pakistan Army was in practice until the policy was reversed by the federal government.[158] In 2006, army recruiters began recruiting Hindus into the army and people of all faith or no faith can be promoted to any rank or commanding position in the army.[159][160]

Equipment

 
The ordnance and explosives produced by the Metal Lab at Wah Cantt
 
The al-Khalid MBT designed and built by the HIT in Taxila
 
The Anza MANPAD designed and built by the KRL
Weapon system of Pakistan Army

The equipment and weapon system of Pakistan Army is developed and manufactured by the local weapons industry and modern arms have been imported from China, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States, France and other countries in the European Union.[6]

The Heavy Industries Taxila (HIT), Defense Science and Technology Organization (DESTO), Pakistan Ordnance Factories (POF), and the National Development Complex (NDC), Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC), Kahuta Research Laboratories (KRL) are the one of the major defense contractor for the Department of the Pakistan Army.[161]

The Heavy Industries Taxila designs and manufactured main battle tanks (MBT) in cooperation with the China and the Ukraine, while the fire arms and standard rifles for the army are licensed manufactured by the Pakistan Ordnance Factories (POF).[161] The Chinese cooperation and further assistance with the Pakistan Army is vital in designing, vehicular construction, and material manufacturing of the main battle tanks.: xxxv [162] The standard rifle for the army is the German designed and POF manufactured Koch G3P4.[161]

The defense funding for the army was preferential, which was described as the "lion’s share", however, in light of CPEC's security demanding to secure the seaborne borders, the army financial planners significantly lowered its share in a view of strengthening the under-funded department of the navy.[163]

Uniforms

From 1947 to 1971, the army service uniform of the Pakistan Army closely resembled to the army uniform of the British Army, but the uniform changed in preference of Sherwani.[citation needed] The army service uniform in the Pakistan Army consists of the Sherwani with two front pockets, cap of a synthetic material, trousers with two pockets, with Golden Khaki colors.: 222 [164]

In the 1970s, the Ministry of Defense introduced the first camouflage pattern in the army combat uniform, resembling the British-styled DPM but this was changed in 1990 in favor of adopting the U.S. Woodland which continued until 2010.[165] In winter front such as in the Siachen and near the Wakhan Corridor, the Pakistan Army personnel wears the heavy winter all white military gear.[166]

As of 2011, the camouflage pattern of the brown and black BDU was issued and is worn by the officers and the army troops in their times of deployments.[citation needed] The Pakistan Army has introduced arid camouflage patterns in uniform and resized qualification badges which are now service ribbons and no longer worn along with the ranks are now embroidered and are on the chest.[citation needed] The name is badged on the right pocket and the left pocket displays achievement badges by Pakistan Army.[citation needed]

Unlike other countries in South Asia, Pakistan army officer uniforms don't include a aiguillette, rather it is used mostly by aid-de-camps.

Flag of Pakistan is placed over the black embroidered formation sign on the left arm and class course insignias are put up for the Goldish uniform,[citation needed] decorations and awards[citation needed] and the ranks.[citation needed]

Components and structure

Army components and branches

Since its organization that commenced in 1947, the army's functionality is broadly maintained in two main branches: Combat Arms and Administrative Services.: 46 [38]: 570 [167] From 1947 to 1971, the Pakistan Army had responsibility of maintaining the British-built Forts, till the new and modern garrisons were built in post 1971, and performs the non-combat duties such as engineering and construction.[6]

Currently, the Army's combat services are kept in active-duty personnel and reservists that operate as members of either Reserves, the National Guard and the Civil Armed Forces.[2] In addition, the workforce of the army is supported by the Frontier Corps (a paramilitary) and Rangers that performs military police duty within the state governments in Pakistan to help control and manage the law and control situation.[2]

The two main branches of the army, Combat Arms and Administrative Services, also consist of several branches and functional areas that include the army officers, junior commissioned (or warrant officers), and the enlisted personnel who are classified from their branches in their uniforms and berets.[2] In Pakistan Army, the careers are not restricted to military officials but are extended to civilian personnel and contractors who can progress in administrative branches of the army.[3]

Pakistan Army branches and functional areas
Combat Arms Insignia Administrative Services Insignia
Armoured Corps (AC) Service Corps (ASC)
Air Defence (AD) Military Police (MP)
Aviation Corps (AVN) Electrical and Mechanical Engineering (EME)
Artillery Corps (ARTY) Medical (AMC)  
Signals Corps (Sigs) Education (AEC)
Engineers Corps (Engrs) Remount Veterinary and Farms (RVFC)
Infantry Regiments (Inf)             Ordnance (Ord)
Special Forces (SSG)  
Corps of Military Intelligence

Command structure

 
The command and control structure of the six tactical operational commands in the Pakistan Army

The reorganization of the position standing army in 2008, the Pakistan Army now operates six tactical commands, each commanded by the GOC-in-C, with a holding three-star rank: Lieutenant-General.[101][failed verification] Each of the six tactical commands directly reports to the office of Chief of Army Staff, operating directly at the Army GHQ.[101][failed verification] Each command consists of two or more Corps– an army field formation responsible for zone within a command theater.[2][failed verification]

There are nine active Corps in the Pakistan Army, composing of mixed infantry, mechanized, armored, artillery divisions, while the Air Defense, Aviation, and the Aviation and Special Forces are organized and maintained in the separate level of their commands.[2][failed verification]

Established and organized in March 2000, the Army Strategic Forces Command is exercise its authority for responsible training in safety, weapons deployments, and activation of the atomic missile systems.[168]

Combat maneuvering organizations

 
The map of Five Rivers. The strategic reserves of Pakistan including the desert and forest.[169]

In events involving the large and massive foreign invasion by the Indian Army charging towards the Pakistan-side Punjab sector, the Pakistan Army maintains the "Pakistan Army Reserves" as a strategic reserve component for conducting the offense and defense measures against the advancing enemy.[169]

Infantry branch

Since its establishment in 1947, the Pakistan Army has traditionally followed the British regimental system and culture, and currently there are six organized infantry regiments.[170]

In the infantry branch, there are originally six regiments are in fact the administrative military organization that are not combat field formation, and the size of the regiments are vary as their rotation and deployments including assisting the federal government in civic administration.[171]

In each of original six regiments, there are multiple battalions that are associated together to form an infantry regiment and such battalions do not fight together as one formation as they are all deployed over various formations in shape of being part of the brigade combat team (under a Brigadier), division, or a being part of much larger corps.[172]

After the independence from the Great Britain in 1947, the Pakistan Army begin to follow the U.S. Army's standing formation of their Infantry Branch, having the infantry battalion serving for a time period under a different command zone before being deployed to another command zone, usually in another sector or terrain when its tenure is over.[172]

Infantry branch[173]
The Infantry Regiments by seniority Insignia Activation Date Commanding Regimental Center Motto War Cry
Punjab Regiment
 
1759
Mardan, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Urdu: نارا-یا-حیدری یا علی
(English lit. Ali the Great)
Baloch Regiment
 
1798
Abbottabad, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
غازی یا شہید
(English lit. Honored or Martyr)
کی کی بلوچ
(English lit. Of the Baloch)
Frontier Force Regiment
 
1843
Abbottabad, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
لبّیک
(English lit. Lucky)
Northern Light Infantry Regiment
 
1913
Gilgit, Gilgit Baltistan
سبط قدم
(English lit. Consistent)
Azad Kashmir Regiment
 
1947
Mansar, Punjab
Sind Regiment
 
1980
Hyderabad, Sindh

Special operations forces

 
The logo of the Army SSG where the Special Forces and Army Rangers are trained together

The Pakistan Army has a military division dedicated towards conducting the unconventional and asymmetric warfare operations, established with the guidance provided by the United States Army in 1956.[174] This competitive special operation force is known as the Special Services Group (Army SSG, distinguishing the Navy SSG), and is assembled in eight battalions, commanded by the Lieutenant-Colonel, with addition of three companies commanded by the Major or a Captain, depending on the availability.[175]

The special operation forces training school is located in Cherat in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan where the training and education on the philosophy of military arts and tactics take place by the army instructors.[175]

Each battalion in the Pakistan Army Special Forces is specifically trained for a specific type of operation, and each battalion is a specialist in their nature of conducting the operation.[175] Due to their distinctive service headgear, the Army SSG is colloquially known as the Maroon Berets.[175]

Besides the Army SSG, the Pakistan Army has trained a specific Rangers team that is especially trained in counter tactics, and is trained for carrying out the difficult counter-terrorism operation involving the civilian hostages in Karachi, and helping the state governments in Sindh and Punjab maintaining the law and order situation intact.[176]

Implementing the counterterrorism tactics in 2004, the Army has been training the specific Army Ranger company, known as the Rangers Anti-terrorist Force (ATF), along with the Army SSG company, often conduct training with the U.S. Army Ranger in terror and infantry tactics.[176]

Military philosophy

Combat doctrine (1947–2007)

 
The U.S.-Pakistan military relations: The group photo of the United States Army and the Pakistan Army after coordinating the joint operation in 2010.

In 1947, the Pakistan Army's war strategists developed a combat doctrine which was called "The Riposte", which featured a strategy of "offensive-defense".: 310 [177][178] In 1989, the first and official implementation of this strategy was refined and featured in the major military exercise, Exercise Zab-e-Momin, organized under Lt-Gen. Hamid Gul[179]– this combat doctrine was fully focused in engaging towards its primary adversary, Indian Army.: 310 [177]

In 1989–99, the JS HQ, working with the Army GHQ to identify several key factors considering the large conventional attacks from the better equipped and numerically advantage adversary, the Indian Army, derived the combat doctrine to assess the vulnerability of Pakistan where its vast majority of population centers as well as political and military targets lies closer to the international border with India.[180]

 
The Pakistan Army's special forces soldiers in a drill conducting jointly with the Russian special forces in 2016

The national security strategists explored the controversial idea of strategic depth in form of fomenting friendly foreign relations with Afghanistan and Iran while India substantially enhancing its offensive capabilities designed in its doctrine, the Cold Start Doctrine.[180] Due to the numerical advantage of Indian Army over its small adversary, the Pakistan Army, the Pakistani national security analysts noted that any counterattack on advancing Indian Army would be very tricky and miscalculated– the ideal response of countering the attacks from the Indian ground forces would be operationalizing the battle-ranged Hatf-IA/Hatf-IB missiles.[180] The Pakistan Army Reserves, supported by the National Guard and the Civil Armed Forces, and India's Territorial Army would eventually forward towards the defensive positions and fortifications in less than 24 hours.[181] However, the Corps in both nation's commands with large stockpiles of ordnance will take between 24 and 72 hours to logistically mobilize its combat assets after the orders are authorized; therefore, both nation's armies will be evenly matched in the first 24 hours since the Pakistani units have to travel a shorter distance to their forward positions.[181]

The war doctrine of "offensive-defense" entailed Pakistan not waiting to be attacked but instead launching an offense of its own, with an offense being a limited advance along with narrow fronts aiming towards occupying enemy territory near the border to a depth of 40–50 km.[181] Pakistani national security calculated that since Indian forces will not reach their maximum strength near the border for another 48–72 hours, Pakistan might have parity or numerical superiority against India.[181] Earlier studies in "Offensive-defense" doctrine validated results of finding and keeping the enemy forces off-balance as the Indian Army engage in containing the Pakistan Army forces into its territory rather than concentrating towards launching an attack onto Pakistan's territory.[181] The strategic calculations by Pakistan Army's war strategists hoped that the Pakistan Army's soldiers would keep the Indian Army soldiers engage in fighting on the Indian territory, therefore the collateral damage being suffered by the Indian Army at most.[181] An important aspect in "offensive-defense" doctrine was to seize sizable Indian territory which gives Pakistan an issue to negotiate with India in the aftermath of a ceasefire brought about by international pressure after 3–4 weeks of fighting.[181]

Due to fortification of LoC in Kashmir and difficult terrains in Northern Punjab, the Army created the Pakistan Army Reserves in the 1990s that is concentrated in the desert terrain of Sindh-Rajasthan sector, The Army Reserve South of the Pakistan Army Reserves is grouped in several powerful field-level corps and designed to provide defensive maneuvers in case of war with the Indian Army.[181]

Threat Matrix (2010 – present)

 
Urban warfare near Afghanistan: Pakistan Army infantry troops engage in door-to-door clearance during N. Waziristan offense in 2016.

After the failure of the "Offensive-defense" in 1999, the national security institutions engaged in critical thinking to evaluate new doctrine that would provide a comprehensive grand strategy against the infiltrating enemy forces, and development began 2010–11 for the new combat doctrine.[182] In 2013, the new combat doctrine, the Threat Matrix, was unveiled by the ISPR, that was the first time in its history that the army's national security analysts realized that Pakistan faces a real threat from within, a threat that is concentrated in areas along western borders.[182] The Threat Matrix doctrine analyze the military's comprehensive operational priorities and goes beyond in comprehensively describing both existential and non-existential threats to the country.[182]

Based on that strategy in 2013, the Pakistani military organized a four-tier joint military exercise, code-named: Exercise Azm-e-Nau, in which the aim was to update the military's "readiness strategy for dealing with the complex security threat environment."[183] The objective of such exercises is to assess tactics, procedures, and techniques, and explore joint operations strategies involving all three branches of the military: the Army, Air Force, and Navy.[183] In successive years, the Pakistani military combined all the branch-level exercises into joint warfare exercises, in which all four branches now participate, regardless of the terrain, platforms, and control of command.[183]

Education and training

Schooling, teachings, and institutions

 
The Pakistan Army Music band's conductor saluting after the performance in Russia

The Pakistan Army offers wide range of extensive and lucrative careers in the military to young high school graduates and the college degree holders upon enlistment, and Pakistan Army operates the large number of training schools in all over the country.[184] The overall directions and management of the army training schools are supervised and controlled by the policies devised by the Education Corps, and philosophy on instructions in army schools involves in modern education with combat training.[185]

At the time of its establishment of the Pakistan Army in 1947, the Command and Staff College in Quetta was inherited to Pakistan, and is the oldest college established during the colonial period in India in 1905.[186] The British officers in the Pakistan Army had to established the wide range of schools to provide education and to train the army personnel in order to raise the dedicated and professional army.[187] The wide range of military officers in the Pakistani military were sent to attend the staff colleges in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada who were trained and excelled in courses in armory, infantry, artillery, and ordnance in 1950–1961.: 293 [141]

The United States eventually took over the overall training programs in the Pakistan Army under the International Military Education and Training (IMET) but the U.S. coordination with Pakistan varied along with the vicissitudes of the military relations between two countries.: 12 [188] In the 1980s, the army had sent ~200 army officers abroad annually, two-thirds actually decided to attend schooling in the United States but the cessation of the United States' aid to Pakistan led the suspension of the IMET, leading Pakistani military officers to choose the schooling in the United Kingdom.: 294 [141]

After the terrorist attacks in the United States in 2001, the IMET cooperation was again activated with army officers begin attending the schooling in the United States but the training program was again suspended in 2018 by the Trump administration, leveling accusations on supporting armed Jihadi groups in Afghanistan.[189]

During the reconstruction and reorganization of the armed forces in the 1970s, the army established more training schools as below:

Army schools and colleges Year of establishment School and college principal locations Website
School of Armour and Mechanized Warfare
1947
Nowshera in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa . Archived from the original on 3 January 2019. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
School of Artillery
1948
Kakul in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa . Archived from the original on 3 January 2019. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
School of Army Air Defense
1941
Karachi in Sindh . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Military College of Engineering
1947
Risalpur in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Military College of Signals
1947
Rawalpindi in Punjab . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
School of Infantry and Tactics
1947
Quetta in Balochistan . Archived from the original on 3 January 2019. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
Aviation School
1964
Gujranwala in Punjab . Archived from the original on 3 January 2019. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
Service Corps School
1947
Nowshera in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa . Archived from the original on 20 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Army Desert Warfare School
1977
Rawalpindi in Punjab . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Ordnance College
1980
Karachi in Sindh . Archived from the original on 3 January 2019. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering
1957
Rawalpindi in Punjab . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Special warfare and skills schools Year of establishment School and college principal locations Website
Special Operations School
1956
Cherat in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa "Special Operations School".[permanent dead link]
Parachute Training School
1964
Kakul in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa . Archived from the original on 20 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Corps of Military Police School
1949
D.I. Khan in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
School of Logistics
1974
Murree in Punjab . Archived from the original on 2 August 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
School of Mountain Warfare and Physical Training
1978
Kakul in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
High Altitude School
1987
Rattu in Gilgit-Baltistan . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Army Desert Warfare School
1987
Chor in Sindh "Army Desert Warfare School".[permanent dead link]
School of Music
1970
Abbottabad in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Dog Breeding Training Center and School
1952
Rawalpindi in Punjab . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Veterinary School
1947
Sargodha in Punjab (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
Higher education institutions Year of establishment Locations Website
Pakistan Command and Staff College
1905
Quetta in Balochistan . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
National Defense University
1971
Islamabad . Archived from the original on 21 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
National University of Sciences and Technology
1991
Multiple campuses . Archived from the original on 23 October 2020. Retrieved 20 January 2019.

Sources: Army Schools 3 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine and Skills Schools 21 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine of Pakistan Army

The Pakistan Army's training schools are not restricted to the department of the army only but inter-services officers and personnel have been trained and educated as part of the interdepartmental cooperation.[184] The Pakistan Army takes responsibility of providing the military training and education to Pakistan Marines at their School of Infantry and Tactics, and military officers in other branches have attended and qualified psc from the Command and Staff College in Quetta.[184] Officers holding the ranks of captains, majors, lieutenants and lieutenant-commanders in marines are usually invited to attend the courses at the Command and Staff College in Quetta to be qualified as psc.: 9 [47]

Established in 1971, the National Defense University (NDU) in Islamabad is the senior and higher education learning institution that provides the advance critical thinking level and research-based strategy level education to the senior military officers in the Pakistani military.[190] The NDU in Islamabad is a significant institution of higher learning in understanding the institutional norms of military tutelage in Pakistan because it constitutes the "highest learning platform where the military leadership comes together for common instruction", according to thesis written by Pakistani author Aqil Shah.: 8 [47] Without securing their graduation from their master's program, no officer in the Pakistani military can be promoted as general in the army or air force, or admiral in the navy or marines as it is a prerequisite for their promotion to become a senior member at the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee.: 8–9 [47]

Besides, the platform provided at the NDU in Islamabad represents a radical shift from the emphasis on operational and staff functions and the level of ranks are imposed as a qualification to attend the master's program at the NDU, usually brigadiers, air commodores, and commodores, are invited to given admission in a broad range of strategic, political, social, and economic factors as these factors affect the country's national security.: 8–9 [47] In this sense, the NDU becomes the critical thinking institution as its constitutes active-duty senior military officers corps' baptism into a shared ideological framework about the military's appropriate role, status, and behavior in relation to state and society, and shared values affect how these officers perceive and respond to civilian governmental decisions, policies, and political crises.: 9–10 [191] Admissions to the army's military engineering colleges and NDU is not restricted to military officials but the civilians can also attend and graduate from the NDU, allowing the civilians to explore the broader aspects of national security.: 8–9 [47]

 
The M60 AVLB, the engineering vehicle currently inventory in Pakistan Army

Established in 1991, the National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST) has now absorbed and amalgamated the existing military engineering colleges of engineering, signals, aeronautical, and medicines, and is a counterpart institution in science and technology to that of the National Defense University (NDU) in Islamabad.[192]

The foreign military officials and students, including from the United States, have attended the Command and Staff College in Quetta and the National Defense University (NDU) in Islamabad but the American instructors and observers have penned critical analysis by reporting the curriculum offered by the Command and Staff College in Quetta to be narrow focus and failure to encourage speculative thinking or to give adequate attention to less glamorous subjects, such as logistics.: 293 [141]: 518 [193]

Civil engineering and construction

Since the 1970s, the Pakistan Army's engineering formations have been involved in civil engineering of the important landmarks in the country, hydroelectricity, power generation, dams, and national freeways.[142]

The Pakistan Army builds major civil engineering landmarks in the country, including the Karakoram Highway, Skardu Airport, and the national security sites in Kahuta.[142] The Frontier Works Organization of the army, has built several infrastructures with the Corps of Engineers all over the country, and has built the communications lines in Northern Pakistan through its Special Communications Organization (SCO).[142]

The Corps of Engineers are the major civil engineering contractor and engineering consultant employed by the federal government, advising on construction management and on to improving the efficiency of construction measures in times of natural calamities.[194]

The Pakistan Army's landmark civil engineering projects included the Lyari Expressway in Karachi, Makran Coastal Highway in Balochistan, and the Khanpur Dam in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.[194] Besides their infrastructure projects in Pakistan, the Pakistan Army has built several infrastructures projects in other parts of the world as part their deployment in United Nation's peacekeeping missions.[194]

UN peacekeeping missions

 
Pakistani soldiers deployed as MONUSCO's female engagement team

In the wake of the new world power equilibrium, a more complex security environment has emerged. It is characterized by growing national power politics

  • UN Operation in Congo (ONUC) 1960–1964
  • UN Security Force in New Guinea, West Irian (UNSF) 1962–1963 (14 Punjab Regiment)
  • UN Yemen Observer Mission Yemen (UNYOM) 1963–1964
  • UN Transition Assistance Group in Namibia (UNTAG) 1989–1990
  • UN Iraq–Kuwait Observer Mission (UNIKOM) 1991–2003
  • UN Mission in Haiti (UNMIH) 1993–1996
  • UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) 1992–1993
  • UN Operations in Somalia (UNOSOM) 1992–1995
  • UN Protection Forces in Bosnia (UNPROFOR) 1992–1995
  • UN Observer Mission for Rwanda (UNAMIR) 1993–1996
  • UN Verification Mission in Angola (UNAVEM III) 1995–1997
  • UN Transitional Administration for Eastern Slavonia (UNTAES) 1996–1997
  • UN Mission of Observers in Prevlaka (UNMOP) 1996–2002
  • UN Assistance Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) 2001–2005
  • UN Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET) 1999-to-date
  • UN Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) 1999-to-date
Current deployment in UN Peacekeeping missions
Start of operation Name of operation Location Conflict Contribution
1999 United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO)   Democratic Republic of Congo Second Congo War 3,556 troops[195]
2003 United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL)   Liberia Second Liberian Civil War 2,741 troops[195]
2004 United Nations Operation in Burundi ONUB   Burundi Burundi Civil War 1,185 troops[195]
2004 United Nations Operation in Côte d'Ivoire (UNOCI)   Côte d'Ivoire Civil war in Côte d'Ivoire 1,145 troops[195]
2005 United Nations Mission in the Sudan (UNMIS)   Sudan Second Sudanese Civil War 1,542 Troops.[195]
Staff/observers 191 observers[195]
  • The total number of Pakistani troops serving in peacekeeping missions is 7,533, as of August 2015, which is one of the biggest number among rest of participants.[196]

Involvement in Pakistani society

 
The Pakistan Army soldiers distributing the military rations to the affectees of the national calamities. The Army often involves in the civil society to relief activities and national-building to the local population of affected areas.
 
The RVF Corps moving animals and livestock to a safer location after the flood warning issues by the NDMA in 2017

The Pakistan Army has played an integral part in the civil society of Pakistan, almost since its inception.[197] In 1996, General Jehangir Karamat described Pakistan armed forces' relations with the society:

In my opinion, if we have to repeat of past events then we must understand that Military leaders can pressure only up to a point. Beyond that their own position starts getting undermined because the military is after all is a mirror image of the civil society from which it is drawn.

— General Jehangir Karamat on civil society–military relations[197]

In times of national calamities and natural disasters, including the devastating earthquake in 2005 or the great floods in 2010, the army engineering corps, medical, logistical personnel, and other armed forces services have played a major role in area rehabilitation and reconstruction of cities and towns while distributing the relief goods and military rations to the affected civilians.[198] Since 1948, the army has been involved in providing power generation to affected areas, building dams, and construction of towns and cities, and conducting rescue operations for evacuations of general public and animals from endangerment.[198]

To coordinate and manage the proper relief operations, reconstructions, and rehabilitation, the federal government appoints the active-duty officers, as an external billets appointments, to lead federal agencies such as ERRA and the NDMA.[199] Besides relief activities in the country, the Pakistan Army has also engaged in other parts of the world such as coordinating and leading the relief efforts in Indonesia, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka after these countries were affected by the underwater earthquake that resulted in tsunami in 2004.[200]

Stephen P. Cohen in his article, Pakistan: Army, Society and Security writes:

There are armies which guard their nation’s borders, there are armies which are concerned with protecting their own position in society, and there are armies which defend a cause or an idea. The Pakistan Army does all three.

— Stephen P. Cohen[201]

Corporate and business activities

According to international news agencies and investigations by international financial regulators, the department of the army controls, manages, and runs a large number of business enterprises and conglomerates; their total revenue was estimated to be US$ 20 billion in 2007–08.[202] One of the largest real estate conglomerates that is run by the army is known as the Defense Housing Authority (DHA), as well as the Army Welfare Trust (AWT), and out 46 housing schemes directly built by the armed forces, none of the schemes is for ordinary soldiers, civilian officers, or personnel employed by the army.[203]

The Fauji Foundation (lit. Military Foundation) has shares in the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) and is involved in manufacturing and selling processed meat, stud, and dairy farms meant for the military's own use while there are enterprises that perform functions in the local civilian economy such as bakeries, security, and banking services.[202] The army factories managed by the Fauji Foundation produce such goods such as sugar, Fauji Fertilizer, brass castings, and it sells its products to civilian consumers albeit at prices higher than those charged from military personnel.[citation needed] The Pakistani military has the largest shares in the PSX and has financial stakes in commercial banking, airlines, steel businesses, cement, telecoms, petroleum and energy, education, sports, health care, and even chains of grocery shops and bakeries.[204]

Awards and Honors

Wartime Gallantry Awards

  Nishan-e-Haider (Order of the Lion)
  Hilal-e-Jurat (Crescent of Courage)
  Sitara-e-Jurat (Star of Courage)
  Tamgha-e-Jurat (Medal of Courage)
  Imtiazi Sanad (Mentioned in Despatches)[205]
Order of Wear
 

Nishan-e-Haider

(Order of the Lion)

 

Nishan-e-Imtiaz

(Civilian)

 

Nishan-e-Imtiaz

(Military)

 

Hilal-e-Jurat

(Crescent of Courage)

 

Hilal-e-Shujaat

(Crescent of Bravery)

 

Hilal-e-Imtiaz

(Civilian)

 

Hilal-e-Imtiaz

(Military)

 

Sitara-e-Jurat

(Star of Courage)

 

Sitara-e-Shujaat

(Star of Bravery)

 

Sitara-e-Imtiaz

(Military)

 

President's Award for

Pride of Performance

 

Sitara-e-Basalat

(Star of Good Conduct)

 

Sitara-e-Eisaar

(Star of Sacrifice)

 

Tamgha-e-Jurat

(Medal of Courage)

 

Tamgha-e-Shujaat

(Medal of Bravery)

 

Tamgha-e-Imtiaz

(Military)

 

Tamgha-e-Basalat

(Medal of Good Conduct)

 

Tamgha-e-Eisaar

(Medal of Sacrifice)

 

Imtiazi Sanad

(Mentioned in Despatches)

 

Tamgha-e-Diffa

(General Service Medal)

 

Sitara-e-Harb 1965 War

(War Star 1965)

 

Sitara-e-Harb 1971 War

(War Star 1971)

 

Tamgha-e-Jang 1965 War

(War Medal 1965)

 

Tamgha-e-Jang 1971 War

(War Medal 1971)

 

Tamgha-e-Baqa

(Nuclear Test Medal)

 

Tamgha-e-Istaqlal Pakistan

(Escalation with India Medal)

 

Tamgha-e-Azm

(Medal of Conviction)

 

Tamgha-e-Khidmat (Class-I)

(Medal of Service Class I)

 

Tamgha-e-Khidmat (Class-II)

(Medal of Service Class I)

 

Tamgha-e-Khidmat (Class-III)

(Medal of Service Class I)

 

10 Years Service Medal

 

20 Years Service Medal

 

30 Years Service Medal

 

35 Years Service Medal

 

40 Years Service Medal

 

Pakistan Tamgha

(Pakistan Medal)

 

Tamgha-e-Sad Saala Jashan-e-

Wiladat-e-Quaid-e-Azam

 

Tamgha-e-Jamhuria

(Republic Commemoration Medal)

 

Hijri Tamgha

(Hijri Medal)

 

Jamhuriat Tamgha

(Democracy Medal)

 

Qarardad-e-Pakistan Tamgha

(Resolution Day Golden Jubilee Medal)

 

Tamgha-e-Salgirah Pakistan

(Independence Day

Golden Jubilee Medal)

 

Command & Staff College Quetta

Instructor's Medal

 

Command & Staff College Quetta

Student Medal

Nishan-e-Haider

In military awards hierarchy, the Nishan-e-Haidar (lit. Order of Lion; Urdu: نشان حیدر) is the highest and most prestigious honor awarded posthumously for bravery and actions of valor in event of war.: 220 [206] The honor is a namesake of Ali and the recipients receiving this honorary title as a sign of respect: Shaheed meaning martyr.: 4 [207]

Since 1947–2019, there has been ten Pakistani military officers and personnel who have honored with this prestigious medal— out of which, nine have been officers and soldiers in the Pakistan Army, bestowed to those who engaged in wars with India.[208]

Order Recipients Rank Regiment/Corps of the recipient Year of conflict War and Gallantry Ribbon
1
Raja Muhammad Sarwar   Captain Punjab Regiment Indo-Pakistani war of 1947
 
2
Saif Ali Janjua   Naik (Corporal) Azad Kashmir Regiment Indo-Pakistani war of 1947
 
3
Tufail Mohammad   Major Punjab Regiment 1958 India-East Pakistan border skirmishes
 
4
Raja Aziz Bhatti   Major Punjab Regiment Indo-Pakistani war of 1965
 
5
Shabbir Sharif   Major Frontier Force Regiment Indo-Pakistani war of 1971
 
6
Muhammad Hussain Janjua Sepoy (Pvt.) Armoured Corps Indo-Pakistani war of 1971
 
7
Muhammad Akram   Major Frontier Force Regiment Indo-Pakistani war of 1971
 
8
Muhammad Mahfuz   Lance Naik (Lance Corporal) Punjab Regiment Indo-Pakistani war of 1971
 
9
Karnal Sher   Captain Sindh Regiment Indo-Pakistani war of 1999
 
10
Lalak Jan   Havildar (Sgt.) Northern Light Infantry Regiment Indo-Pakistani war of 1999
 

Recipient of the foreign awards

The Pakistan Army has been conferred with the foreign awards for its services provided to the foreign nations, including the honoring of two army pilots from the Aviation Corps who conducted a difficult operation in extracting the Slovenian mountaineer, Tomaz Humar, who got stranded on the western end of the 8,125-metre-high (26,657 ft) Nanga Parbat and the Slovenian President presented Lt-Col. Rashiduhlla Beg and Lt-Col. Khalid Amir with the Golden Order for Services in the country's capital, Ljubljana, for risking their lives during the rescue mission, a Pakistan Army statement said.[209]

In addition, there are numbers of the army general officers have been honored multiple times with the United States's Legion of Merit for cooperation and strengthening bilateral ties with the United States 1980s–2015.: 261 [210] In 2010, the Pakistan Army was awarded with a gold medal at the Exercise Cambrian Patrol held in Wales in the United Kingdom.[211][212]

Sports

The Army offers programs in many sports including boxing, field hockey, cricket, swimming, table tennis, karate, basketball, soccer, and other sports.[213]

The Army basketball program regularly provides the Pakistan national basketball team with players.[214]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b International Institute for Strategic Studies (25 February 2021). The Military Balance 2021. London: Routledge. p. 290. ISBN 9781032012278. from the original on 21 January 2022. Retrieved 5 July 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Khan, Hameed (1 June 2003). "Command and Structure of Pakistan Army". www.pakdef.org. PakDef Military Consortium. from the original on 7 January 2019. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Infrastructures Development". www.pakistanarmy.gov.pk. from the original on 17 January 2019. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 January 2021.
  5. ^ "Lt General Sahir Shamshad Mirza Appointed New Chief of Joint Staff: Pak Army". News18. 26 November 2019. from the original on 28 November 2019. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cloughley, Brian (2016). A History of the Pakistan Army: Wars and Insurrections (1st ed.). London UK.: Skyhorse Publishing, Inc. ISBN 9781631440397. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  7. ^ "2020 Pakistan Military Strength". www.globalfirepower.com. from the original on 19 November 2020. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
  8. ^ Article 245(1)–Article 245(4) 21 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Chapter 2: Armed Forces in Part XII: Miscellaneous of Constitution of Pakistan.
  9. ^ Harper, Stephen (2017). "The Bosnian War Goes to East: Identity and Internationalism in Alpha Bravo Charlie." (google books). Screening Bosnia: Geopolitics, Gender and Nationalism in Film and Television Images of the 1992–95 War (1st ed.). Indiana, U.S.: Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 155. ISBN 9781623567071. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  10. ^ a b c d Fair, C. Christine (2014). "Recruitment in Pakistan Army" (google books). Fighting to the End: The Pakistan Army's Way of War. Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan: Oxford University Press. p. 310. ISBN 9780199892716. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  11. ^ "History of Pakistan Army". from the original on 14 January 2013. Retrieved 18 January 2013.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 March 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  13. ^ Article 245(1)&Article 245(3) 21 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Chapter 2: Armed Forces in Part XII: Miscellaneous of Constitution of Pakistan.
  14. ^ Javid, Hassan (23 November 2014). "COVER STORY: The Army & Democracy: Military Politics in Pakistan". DAWN.COM. Dawn Newspapers. Dawn Newspapers. from the original on 16 August 2017. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  15. ^ Aqil, Shah (1973). The army and democracy : military politics in Pakistan. ISBN 9780674728936.
  16. ^ Aziz, Mazhar (2007). Military Control in Pakistan: The Parallel State. Routledge. ISBN 9781134074099. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  17. ^ Ayaz, Gul (23 November 2022). "Outgoing Pakistan Army Chief Admits Involvement in Politics". SOUTH & CENTRAL ASIA.
  18. ^ Alam, Dr Shah (2012). Pakistan Army: Modernisation, Arms Procurement and Capacity Building. Vij Books India Pvt Ltd. ISBN 9789381411797. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  19. ^ Article 243(2) 21 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Chapter 2: Armed Forces in Part XII: Miscellaneous of Constitution of Pakistan.
  20. ^ Butt, Tariq (16 November 2016). "Nawaz to appoint third army chief". thenews.com.pk. The News International. News International. from the original on 16 August 2017. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  21. ^ "General Mian Usama takes charge as Pakistan's 16th army chief". DAWN. 29 November 2016. from the original on 29 November 2016. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  22. ^ "Gen Bajwa assumes command as Pakistan's 16th army chief". The Express Tribune. 29 November 2016. from the original on 29 November 2016. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  23. ^ "[Chapter 2. Armed Forces] of [Part XII: Miscellaneous]". Pakistani.org. Archived from the original on 11 March 2012. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
  24. ^ Chandar (Retd), Col Y. Udaya (2018). "(Partition of the British Indian Armed Forces)" (google books). Independent India's All the Seven Wars. Chennai, Ind.: Notion Press. ISBN 9781948473224. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  25. ^ a b Roy, Kaushik (2013). "§Decolonization" (google books). The Army in British India: From Colonial Warfare to Total War 1857 – 1947 (1st ed.). London, Uk.: A&C Black. p. 220. ISBN 9781441177308. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  26. ^ Khanna, K. K. (2015). Art of Generalship (1st ed.). Delhi India: Vij Books India Pvt Ltd. p. 295. ISBN 9789382652939. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  27. ^ Schofield, Victoria (2003). "(Chapter 3: The Accession)". Kashmir in Conflict: India, Pakistan and the Unending War (Internet Archive) (2nd ed.). London, Eng. UK: I.B.Tauris. pp. 250. ISBN 9781860648984. Retrieved 1 January 2019. after large numbers of tribesmen.
  28. ^ a b c d Mahapatra, Debidatta Aurobinda (2017). "§(India, Pakistan, and Kashmir)" (google books). Conflict Management in Kashmir: State-People Relations and Peace (1st ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108423892. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  29. ^ Hodson, H. V. (1969), The Great Divide: Britain, India, Pakistan, London: Hutchinson, ISBN 9780090971503, from the original on 9 November 2018, retrieved 2 January 2019
  30. ^ a b Hiro, Dilip (2015). "(Overviews and Conclusions)" (google book). The Longest August: The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan (1st ed.). Washington DC, US: PublicAffairs. p. 475. ISBN 9781568587349. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  31. ^ a b Malik, Hafeez (2016). "§(Problems of Initial Adaptation)" (google books). Soviet-Pakistan Relations and Post-Soviet Dynamics, 1947–92 (1st ed.). Pennsylvania, US: Springer. p. 400. ISBN 9781349105731. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  32. ^ a b c d Major Nasir Uddin, Juddhey Juddhey Swadhinata, pp55
  33. ^ a b c d e f Higgins, David R. (2016). "(Pakistan)" (google books). M48 Patton vs Centurion: Indo-Pakistani War 1965 (1st ed.). Bloomsbury, Ind. US: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 100. ISBN 9781472810939. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
  34. ^ Khan, Mohammad Ayub (1967). Friends Not Masters: A Political Autobiography (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 275. ISBN 9780192111784. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  35. ^ Sydney Morning Herald Wednesday 14 December 1949
  36. ^ a b paksoldiers.com (4 December 2013).
pakistan, army, urdu, پاکستان, فوج, romanized, pākistān, fãuj, pronounced, ˈpaːkɪstaːn, faːɔːdʒ, commonly, known, army, urdu, پاک, فوج, romanized, pāk, fãuj, land, service, branch, largest, component, pakistan, armed, forces, president, pakistan, supreme, comm. The Pakistan Army Urdu پاکستان فوج romanized Pakistan Fauj pronounced ˈpaːkɪstaːn faːɔːdʒ commonly known as the Pak Army Urdu پاک فوج romanized Pak Fauj is the land service branch and the largest component of the Pakistan Armed Forces The President of Pakistan is the Supreme Commander of the Army The Chief of Army Staff COAS a four star general commands the army The Army was established in August 1947 after Pakistan gained independence from the United Kingdom 6 1 2 According to statistics provided by the International Institute for Strategic Studies IISS in 2023 the Pakistan Army has approximately 560 000 active duty personnel supported by the Pakistan Army Reserve the National Guard and the Civil Armed Forces 1 7 Pakistani citizens can enlist for voluntary military service upon reaching 16 years of age but cannot be deployed for combat until the age of 18 in accordance with the Constitution of Pakistan Pakistan Armyپاکستان فوجEmblem of the Pakistan ArmyFounded14 August 1947 1947 08 14 75 years 10 months ago Country PakistanTypeArmyRoleLand warfareSize560 000 active duty personnel 1 550 000 reserve force185 000 National Guard 2 16 500 civilian personnel 3 560 manned aircraftPart ofPakistan Armed ForcesGarrisonGeneral Headquarters GHQ Rawalpindi Cantonment PunjabMotto s Iman taqwa jihad fi sabilillah 4 Colours AnniversariesDefence Day 6 SeptemberEngagementsSee list Indo Pakistani Wars and Conflicts Kashmir conflict 1947 present Indo Pakistani War of 1947 1948 Indo Pakistani War of 1965 Bangladesh Liberation War Operation Searchlight Indo Pakistani War of 1971 Siachen conflict 1984 2003 1999 Kargil War 2001 02 India Pakistan standoff 2008 India Pakistan standoff 2011 India Pakistan border skirmishes 2013 India Pakistan border skirmishes 2014 2015 India Pakistan border skirmishes 2016 2018 India Pakistan border skirmishes 2019 India Pakistan border skirmishes 2020 2021 India Pakistan border skirmishesConflicts in the Middle East Omani Civil War Jordanian Palestinian conflict 1967 Arab Israeli War 1973 Arab Israeli War 1979 Grand Mosque seizure Lebanese Civil War Gulf WarAfghanistan Conflict 1978 present Soviet Afghan War Operation Cyclone First Afghan Civil War 1989 1992 Second Afghan Civil War 1992 1996 Third Afghan Civil War 1996 2001 U S led War on Terror War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 War in North West Pakistan Operation Black Thunderstorm Operation Rah e Nijat Operation Zarb e Azb Pakistan United States skirmishes 2011 NATO attack in PakistanUnited Nations Missions Somali Civil War Battle of Mogadishu Yugoslav Wars Bosnian War 1999 East Timorese crisis UNSM HaitiSri Lankan Civil War Military aid to Sri Lankan security forcesMiscellaneous Conflicts Nagorno Karabakh conflict alleged Afghanistan Pakistan skirmishesInternal Conflicts Insurgency in Balochistan 1948 present Sectarian conflicts in PakistanMilitary Coups amp Dictatorships 1951 coup d etat attempt 1958 coup d etat 1969 coup d etat 1977 coup d etat 1995 coup d etat attempt 1999 coup d etatWebsitepakistanarmy gov pkCommandersCommander in ChiefPresident Arif AlviChairman Joint Chiefs of StaffGeneral Sahir Shamshad MirzaChief of Army StaffGen Asim MunirChief of General StaffLt Gen Muhammad Saeed 5 InsigniaWar FlagAircraft flownAttackMil Mi 35M Hind Bell AH 1F Eurocopter AS550 C3 Fennec NESCOM Burraq CASC RainbowHelicopterMil Mi 17 Mil Mi 8 Bell UH 1 Iroquois Bell 412 Bell 407 Bell 206 Aerospatiale Alouette III Aerospatiale Lama Enstrom F 28 Schweizer 300TransportHarbin Y 12 Cessna Citation Bravo Cessna 206 PAC MFI 17 Mushshak The primary objective and constitutional mission of the Pakistan Army is to ensure the national security and national unity of Pakistan by defending it against any form of external aggression or the threat of war It can also be requisitioned by the Pakistani federal government to respond to internal threats within its borders 8 During events of national and international calamities and emergencies it conducts humanitarian rescue operations at home and is an active participant in peacekeeping missions mandated by the United Nations UN most notably playing a major role in rescuing trapped American soldiers who had requested for a quick reaction force during Operation Gothic Serpent in Somalia Troops from the Pakistan Army also had a relatively strong presence as part of a larger UN and NATO coalition during the Bosnian War and larger Yugoslav Wars 70 9 The Pakistan Army a major component of the Pakistani military alongside the Pakistan Navy and Pakistan Air Force is a volunteer force that has seen extensive combat during three major wars with India several border skirmishes with Afghanistan at the Durand Line as well as a long running insurgency in the Balochistan region which it has been combatting alongside Iranian security forces since 1948 10 11 31 Since the 1960s elements of the army have been repeatedly deployed to act in an advisory capacity in the Arab states during the events of the Arab Israeli wars as well as to aid the United States led coalition against Iraq during the First Gulf War Other notable military operations during the global war on terrorism in the 21st century included Zarb e Azb Black Thunderstorm and Rah e Nijat 12 In violation of its constitutional mandate it has repeatedly overthrown elected civilian governments overreaching its protected constitutional mandate to act in the aid of civilian federal governments when called upon to do so 13 The army has been involved in enforcing martial law against the federal government with the claim of restoring law and order in the country by dismissing the legislative branch and parliament on multiple occasions in past decades while maintaining a wider commercial foreign and political interest in the country This has led it facing allegations of acting as a state within a state 14 15 16 17 The Pakistan Army has a regimental system but is operationally and geographically divided into command zones with its most basic fields being its various corps 18 The Pakistani constitution mandates the role of the president of Pakistan as the civilian commander in chief of the Pakistani military 19 The Pakistan Army is commanded by the Chief of Army Staff who is by statute a four star ranking general and a senior member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee appointed by the prime minister and subsequently affirmed by the president 20 As of December 2022 update the current Chief of Army Staff is General Asim Munir who was appointed to the position on 29 November 2022 21 22 Contents 1 Mission 2 History 2 1 Early origins 2 1 1 Division of British Indian Army and the first war with India 1947 52 2 2 20th Century Cold war and conflict performances 2 2 1 Reorganization under the United States Army 1952 58 2 2 2 Military takeovers in Pakistan and second war with India 1958 1969 2 2 3 Suppression civil conflict in East Pakistan and Indian invasion 1969 1971 2 2 4 Restructuring of armed forces stability and restoration 1971 1977 2 2 5 Middle East operations peacekeeping missions and covert actions 1977 1999 2 3 21st Century War performances 2 3 1 Religious insurgency and War on terror 2001 present 3 Organization 3 1 Command and control structure 4 Personnel 4 1 Commissioned officers 4 2 Warrant officers 4 3 Enlisted personnel 4 4 Recruitment and training 4 5 Women and religion in the Pakistan Army 5 Equipment 5 1 Uniforms 6 Components and structure 6 1 Army components and branches 6 2 Command structure 6 3 Combat maneuvering organizations 6 4 Infantry branch 6 5 Special operations forces 7 Military philosophy 7 1 Combat doctrine 1947 2007 7 2 Threat Matrix 2010 present 8 Education and training 8 1 Schooling teachings and institutions 8 2 Civil engineering and construction 9 UN peacekeeping missions 10 Involvement in Pakistani society 11 Corporate and business activities 12 Awards and Honors 12 1 Wartime Gallantry Awards 12 2 Nishan e Haider 12 3 Recipient of the foreign awards 13 Sports 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksMission EditMain article Constitution of Pakistan Its existence and constitutional role are protected by the Constitution of Pakistan where its role is to serve as the land based uniform service branch of the Pakistan Armed Forces The Constitution of Pakistan establishes the principal land warfare uniform branch in the Pakistan Armed Forces as its states The Armed Forces shall under the directions of the Federal Government defend Pakistan against external aggression or threat of war and subject to law act in aid of civil power when called upon to do so Constitution of Pakistan 23 History EditSee also Military history of Pakistan Early origins Edit Division of British Indian Army and the first war with India 1947 52 Edit Main article Indo Pakistani war of 1947 A statue of Subedar Khudadad Khan Pakistan Army Museum The 6th Frontier Force Regiment of the British Indian Army in the fronts of World War II in Italy in 1943 44 Members of the newly formed Pakistani Security Guard standing at attention during parade review for Pakistan s Leader Jinnah The Pakistan Army came into its modern birth from the division of the British Indian Army that ceased to exist as a result of the partition of India that resulted in the creation of Pakistan on 14 August 1947 1 2 6 Before even the partition took place there were plans ahead of dividing the British Indian Army into different parts based on the religious and ethnic influence on the areas of India 1 2 6 On 30 June 1947 the War Department of the British administration in India began planning the dividing of the 400 000 men strong British Indian Army but that only began few weeks before the partition of India that resulted in violent religious violence in India 1 2 6 The Armed Forces Reconstitution Committee AFRC under the chairmanship of British Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck had devised the formula to divide the military assets between India and Pakistan with ratio of 2 1 respectively conts 24 The Map of Kashmir showing the tri national control from China Pakistan and India ca 2005 A major division of the army was overseen by Sir Chandulal Madhavlal Trivedi an Indian civil servant who was influential in making sure that 260 000 men would be transferred into forming the Indian Army whilst the remaining balance going to Pakistan after the independence act was enacted by the United Kingdom on the night of 14 15 August 1947 2 3 6 Command and control at all levels of the new army was extremely difficult as Pakistan had received six armoured eight artillery and eight infantry regiments compared to the twelve armoured forty artillery and twenty one infantry regiments that went to India 155 156 25 In total the size of the new army was about 150 000 men strong 155 156 25 To fill the vacancy in the command positions of the new army around 13 500 2 6 military officers from the British Army had to be employed in the Pakistan Army which was quite a large number under the command of Lieutenant General Frank Messervy the first commander in chief of the Pakistan Army 70 26 Eminent fears of India s seizing the control over the state of Kashmir the armed tribes and the irregular militia entered in the Muslim majority valley of Kashmir to oppose the rule of Hari Singh a Hindu and the ruling Maharaja of Kashmir in October 1947 conts 27 Attempting to maintain his control over the princely state Hari Singh deployed his troops to check on the tribal advances but his troops failed to halt the advancing tribes towards the valley 40 28 Eventually Hari Singh appealed to Louis Mountbatten the Governor General of India requesting for the deployment of the Indian Armed Forces but Indian government maintained that the troops could be committed if Hari Singh acceded to India 40 28 Hari Singh eventually agreed to concede to the Indian government terms which eventually led to the deployment of the Indian Army in Kashmir this agreement however was contested by Pakistan since the agreement did not include the consent of the Kashmiri people 40 28 Sporadic fighting between militia and Indian Army broke out and units of the Pakistan Army under Maj Gen Akbar Khan eventually joined the militia in their fight against the Indian Army 40 28 Although it was Lieutenant General Sir Frank Messervy who opposed the tribal invasion in a cabinet meeting with Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan in 1947 later leaving the command of the army in 1947 447 29 in a view of that British officers in the Indian and Pakistan Army would be fighting with each other in the war front 417 30 It was Lt Gen Douglas Gracey who reportedly disobeyed the direct orders from Muhammad Ali Jinnah the Governor General of Pakistan for the deployment of the army units and ultimately issued standing orders that refrained the units of Pakistan Army to further participate in the conflict 59 31 By 1948 when it became imperative in Pakistan that India was about to mount a large scale operation against Pakistan Gen Gracey did not object to the deployment of the army units in the conflict against the Indian Army 59 31 This earlier insubordination of Gen Gracey eventually forced India and Pakistan to reach a compromise through the United Nations intervention with Pakistan controlling the Western Kashmir and India controlling the Eastern Kashmir 417 30 20th Century Cold war and conflict performances Edit Reorganization under the United States Army 1952 58 Edit General Ayub Khan arriving to take over command of the Pakistan Army at the Army GHQ in Rawalpindi Punjab in Pakistan on 17 January 1951 At the time of the partition of British India British Field Marshal United Kingdom Sir Claude Auchinleck favored the transfer of the infantry divisions to the Pakistan Army including the 7th 8th and 9th 55 32 In 1948 the British army officers in the Pakistan Army established and raised the 10th 12th and the 14th infantry divisions with the 14th being established in East Bengal 55 32 In 1950 the 15th Infantry Division was raised with the help from the United States Army followed by the establishment of the 15th Lancers in Sialkot 36 33 Dependence on the United States grew furthermore by the Pakistan Army despite it had worrisome concerns to the country s politicians 36 33 Between 1950 and 1954 Pakistan Army raised six more armoured regiments under the U S Army s guidance including 4th Cavalry 12th Cavalry 15th Lancers and 20th Lancers 36 33 After the incident involving Gracey s disobedience there was a strong belief that a native commander of the Pakistan army should be appointed which resulted in the Government of Pakistan rejecting the British Army Board s replacement of Gen Gracey upon his replacement in 1951 34 34 Eventually Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan approved the promotion paper of Maj Gen Iftikhar Khan as the first native commander in chief a graduate of the Imperial Defence College in England but died in an aviation accident en route to Pakistan from the United Kingdom 35 After the death of Maj Gen Iftikhar there were four senior major generals in the army in the race of promotion but the most junior Maj Gen Ayub Khan whose name was not included in the promotion list was elevated to the promotion that resulted in a lobbying provided by Iskandar Mirza the Defense Secretary in Ali Khan administration 36 A tradition of appointment based on favoritism and qualification that is still in practice by the civilian Prime Ministers in Pakistan 36 Ayub was promoted to the acting rank of full general to command the army as his predecessors Frank Messervy and Douglas Gracey were performing the duty of commander in chief of the Pakistan Army in the acting rank of general the neighbouring country India s first commanders in chief were same in this context The department of the army under General Ayub Khan steered the army s needs towards heavy focus and dependence towards the imported hardware acquired from the United States in spite of acquiring it from the domestic industry under the Military Assistance Advisory Group attached to Pakistan in 1954 56 36 33 In 1953 the 6th Infantry Division was raised and disbanded the 6th Division in 1956 followed by the disbandment of the 9th Infantry Division as the American assistance was available only for one armored and six infantry divisions 36 33 During this time an army combat brigade team was readily made available by Gen Ayub Khan to deploy to support the American Army s fighting troops in the Korean war 270 37 Working as cabinet minister in Bogra administration Gen Ayub s impartiality was greatly questioned by country s politicians and drove Pakistan s defence policy towards the dependence on the United States when the country becoming the party of the CENTO and the SEATO the U S active measures against the expansion of the global communism 60 38 39 In 1956 the 1st Armored Division in Multan was established followed by the Special Forces in Cherat under the supervision of the U S Army s Special Forces 55 32 133 40 Under Gen Ayub s control the army had eradicated the British influence but invited the American expansion and had reorganized the East Bengal Regiment in East Bengal the Frontier Force Regiment in Northern Pakistan Kashmir Regiment in Kashmir and Frontier Corps in the Western Pakistan 6 The order of precedence change from Navy Army Air Force to Army Navy Air Force with army being the most senior service branch in the structure of the Pakistani military 98 38 In 1957 the I Corps was established and headquarter was located in Punjab 55 32 Between 1956 and 1958 the schools of infantry and tactics 41 artillery 42 ordnance 43 armoured 44 medical engineering services aviation 45 and several other schools and training centers were established with or without U S participation 60 38 Military takeovers in Pakistan and second war with India 1958 1969 Edit Main articles 1953 West Pakistan riots 1958 Pakistani coup d etat 1964 East Pakistan riots Indo Pakistani War of 1965 and Martial law in Pakistan Pakistani Army Position MG1A3 AA 1965 War Pakistani Infantry 1965 War A Pakistan Army 106mm recoilless rifle position 1965 war An operational tank squadron of the Pakistan Army equipped with the Indian tanks French build AMXs captured in the Chhamb battle out on manoeuvers As early as 1953 the Pakistan Army became involved in national politics in a view of restoring the law and order situation when Governor General Malik Ghulam with approval from Prime Minister Khawaja Nazimuddin dismissed the popularly mandated state government of Chief Minister Mumtaz Daultana in Punjab in Pakistan and declared martial law under Lt Gen Azam Khan and Col Rahimuddin Khan who successfully quelled the religious agitation in Lahore 17 18 46 158 In 1954 the Pakistan Army s Military Intelligence Corps reportedly sent the intelligence report indicating the rise of communism in East Pakistan during the legislative election held in East Bengal 75 47 Within two months of the elections Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Bogra with approval from Governor General Malik Ghulam dismissed another popularly mandated state government of Chief Minister Fazlul Huq in East Bengal in Pakistan and declared governor s rule under Iskandar Mirza who relied in the Pakistan Army to manage the control and security of the East Bengal at all levels of command 75 47 With General Ayub Khan becoming the Defense Minister under Ministry of Talents led by Prime Minister Bogra the involvement of the army in the national politics grew further with the implementation of the controversial One Unit program abolishing the status of Four Provinces despite the strong protests by the public and the West Pakistan s politicians 80 47 Major defense funding and spending was solely focused towards Ayub s army department and the air force department led by Air Marshal Asghar Khan giving less priority to the national needs for the Navy 48 From 1954 to 1958 Ayub Khan was made subjected with receiving multiple service extensions by the civilian Prime Ministers first receiving in 1954 that extended his service to last till 1958 contents 49 232 50 The Pakistan Army under Ayub Khan had been less supportive towards the implementation of the first set of Constitution of Pakistan that had established the civilian control of the military and the army went on to completely endorse and support the first martial law in the country imposed by President Iskander Mirza the army later took control of the power from President Mirza in mere two weeks and installed Ayub Khan as the second President 81 47 The subsequent change of command resulted in Gen Musa Khan becoming the army commander with Ayub Khan promoting himself as controversial rank of field marshal 22 51 self published source In 1969 the Supreme Court reversed its decision and overturned its convictions that called for validation of martial law in 1958 60 52 The army held the referendum and tightly control the political situation through the intelligence agencies and banned the political activities in the country 53 The public society in Pakistan rallying in support of the Pakistan Army in 1965 From 1961 to 1962 military aid continued to Pakistan from the United States and they established the 25th Cavalry followed by the 24th Cavalry 22nd and 23rd Cavalry 36 33 In 1960 61 the Army Special Forces was reportedly involved in taking over the control of the administration of Dir from the Nawab of Dir in Chitral in North West Frontier Province over the concerns of Afghan meddling in the region 54 In 1964 65 the border fighting and tensions flared with the Indian Army with a serious incident taking place near the Rann of Kutch followed by the failed covert action to take control of the Indian side of Kashmir resulted in a massive retaliation by the Indian Army on 5 August 1965 55 On the night of 6 September 1965 India opened the front against Pakistan when the Indian Army s mechanized corps charged forwards taking over the control of the Pakistan side of Punjab almost reaching Lahore 294 56 At the time of the conflict in 1965 Pakistan s armory and mechanized units hardware was imported from the United States including the M4 Sherman M24 Chaffee M36 Jackson and the M47 and M48 Patton tanks equipped with 90 mm guns 57 In contrast the Indian Army s armor had outdated in technology with Korean war usage American M4 Sherman and World War II manufactured British Centurion Tank fitted with the French made CN 75 guns 58 In spite of Pakistan enjoying the numerical advantage in tanks and artillery as well as better equipment overall 69 59 60 the Indian Army successfully penetrated the defences of Pakistan s borderline and successfully conquered around 360 to 500 square kilometres 140 to 190 square miles 56 61 of Pakistani Punjab territory on the outskirts of Lahore 62 A major tank battle took place in Chawinda at which the newly established 1st Armoured Division was able to halt the Indian invasion 35 63 Eventually the Indian invasion of Pakistan came to halt when the Indian Army concluded the battle near Burki 62 64 page needed 65 66 With diplomatic efforts and involvement by the Soviet Union to bring two nation to end the war the Ayub administration reached a compromise with Shastri ministry in India when both governments signed and ratified the Tashkent Declaration 65 66 According to the Library of Congress Country Studies conducted by the Federal Research Division of the United States The war was militarily inconclusive each side held prisoners and some territory belonging to the other Losses were relatively heavy on the Pakistani side twenty aircraft 200 tanks and 3 800 troops Pakistan s army had been able to withstand Indian pressure but a continuation of the fighting would only have led to further losses and ultimate defeat for Pakistan Most Pakistanis schooled in the belief of their own martial prowess refused to accept the possibility of their country s military defeat by Hindu India and were instead quick to blame their failure to attain their military aims on what they considered to be the ineptitude of Ayub Khan and his government 67 At the time of ceasefire declared per neutral sources Indian casualties stood at 3 000 whilst the Pakistani casualties were 3800 68 69 70 Pakistan lost between 200 and 300 tanks during the conflict and India lost approximately 150 190 tanks 71 72 better source needed However most neutral assessments agree that India had the upper hand over Pakistan when ceasefire was declared 73 74 75 76 77 but the propaganda in Pakistan about the war continued in favor of Pakistan Army 78 The war was not rationally analysed in Pakistan with most of the blame being heaped on the leadership and little importance given to intelligence failures that persisted until the debacle of the third war with India in 1971 79 The Indian Army s action was restricted to Punjab region of both sides with Indian Army mainly in fertile Sialkot Lahore and Kashmir sectors 80 81 while Pakistani land gains were primarily in southern deserts opposite Sindh and in the Chumb sector near Kashmir in the north 80 With the United States arms embargo on Pakistan over the issue of the war the army instead turned to the Soviet Union and China for hardware acquisition and correctly assessed that a lack of infantry played a major role in the failure of Pakistani armour to translate its convincing material and technical superiority into a major operational or strategic success against the Indian Army 82 Ultimately the army s high command established the 9th 16th and 17th infantry divisions in 1966 68 82 In 1966 the IV Corps was formed and its headquarter was established and permanently stationed in Lahore Punjab in Pakistan 83 The army remained involved in the nation s civic affairs and ultimately imposed the second martial law in 1969 when the writ of the constitution was abrogated by then army commander Gen Yahya Khan who took control of the nation s civic affairs after the resignation of President Ayub Khan resulted in a massive labor strikes instigated by the Pakistan Peoples Party in West and Awami League in East Pakistan 84 In a lawsuit settled by the Supreme Court of Pakistan the legality of the martial law was deemed questionable as the Supreme Court settled the suit by retroactively invalidated the martial law that suspended the Constitution and notably ruled that Yahya Khan s assumption of power was illegal usurpation 59 60 52 In light of the Supreme Court s judgement the army held the publicly televised conference when President Yahya Khan announced to hold the nationwide general elections in 1969 70 59 60 52 Suppression civil conflict in East Pakistan and Indian invasion 1969 1971 Edit Main articles Black September India and state sponsored terrorism 1971 East Pakistan genocide 1971 East Pakistan Intellectuals massacre Operation Searchlight Bangladesh Liberation War and Indo Pakistani War of 1971 In 1969 President Yahya Khan decided to make administrative changes in the army by appointing the Gen Abdul Hamid Khan as the Army Chief of Staff ACOS of the Pakistan Army who centralized the chain of command in Rawalpindi in a headquarters known as High Command 32 85 From 1967 to 1969 a series of major military exercises was conducted by infantry units on East Pakistan s border with India 114 119 86 In 1970 the Pakistan army s military mission in Jordan was reportedly involved in tackling and curbing down the Palestinian infiltration in Jordan 87 In June 1971 the enlistment in the army had allowed the Army GHQ in Rawalpindi to raise and established the 18th infantry division stationed in Hyderabad Sindh for the defence of 900 kilometres 560 mi from Rahimyar Khan to Rann of Kutch and reestationed the 23rd infantry division for defending the Chhamb Dewa Sector 82 In 1971 the II Corps was established and headquartered in Multan driven towards defending the mass incursion from the Indian Army 83 In December 1971 the 33rd infantry division was established from the army reserves of the II Corps followed by raising the 37th Infantry Division 82 The Pakistan Army reportedly helped the Pakistan Navy to toward establishing the amphibious branch the Pakistan Marines whose battalion was airlifted to East Pakistan along with the 9th Infantry Division 82 The other battalions of marines were stationed with the army troops in the skirts of Punjab to support the defence in the events of the war with India citation needed The intervention in East Pakistan further grew when the Operation Searchlight resulted in the overtaking of the government buildings communication centers and restricting the politicians opposed to military rule 263 88 Within a month Pakistani national security strategists realized their failure of implementing the plan which had not anticipated civil resistance in East and the real nature of Indian strategy behind their support of the resistance 2 3 89 The Yahya administration is widely accused of permitting the army to commit the war crimes against the civilians in East and curbing civil liberties and human rights in Pakistan The Eastern Command under Lt Gen A A K Niazi who had area responsibility of the defending the Eastern Front and had the responsibility to protect was leveled with accusations of escalating the political violence in the East by the serving military officers politicians and journalists in Pakistan 90 91 Since the general elections in 1970 the army had detained several key politicians journalists peace activists student unionists and other members of civil society while curbing the freedoms of movement and speech in Pakistan 112 92 In East Pakistan the unified Eastern Military Command under Lt Gen A A K Niazi began its engagement with the armed militia that had support from India in April 1971 and eventually fought against the Indian Army in December 1971 596 93 596 The army together with marines launched ground offensives on both fronts but the Indian Army successfully held its ground and initiated well coordinated ground operations on both fronts initially capturing 15 010 square kilometres 5 795 sq mi 239 40 of Pakistan s territory this land gained by India in Azad Kashmir Punjab and Sindh sectors 239 40 Responding to the ultimatum issued on 16 December 1971 by the Indian Army in East Lt Gen Niazi agreed to concede defeat and move towards signing the documented surrender with the Indian Army which effectively and unilaterally ended the armed resistance and led the creation of Bangladesh only after India s official engagement that lasted 13 days 94 It was reported that the Eastern Command had surrendered 93 000 97 000 uniform personnel to Indian Army the largest surrender in a war by any country after the World War II 95 Casualties inflicted to army s I Corps II Corps and Marines did not sit well with President Yahya Khan who turned over control of the civic government to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto through an executive decree 96 Commenting on the defeat the military observer in the Pakistan Army Major A H Amin reported that the war strategists in the army had not seriously considered a full fledged invasion from India until December 1971 because it was presumed that the Indian military would not risk intervention by China or the United States and the high command failed to realize that the Chinese would be unable to intervene during the winter months of November to December due to snowbound Himalayan passes and the Americans had not made any real effort to persuade India against attacking East Pakistan 97 Restructuring of armed forces stability and restoration 1971 1977 Edit Main articles Dhofar Rebellion 1970s operation in Balochistan and Pakistan and its Nuclear Deterrent Program The officers of the 9th Battalion of the Frontier Force Regiment on 23 March 1974 In the 1970s the Corps of Engineers built many secretive weapon testing laboratories and sites in the graphite mountain ranges of Pakistan 144 145 98 The footage is provided as an example by the CEIP In January 1972 the Bhutto administration formed the POW Commission to investigate the numbers of war prisoners held by the Indian Army while requesting the Supreme Court of Pakistan to investigate the causes of the war failure with India in 1971 7 10 99 The Supreme Court formed the famed War Enquiry Commission WEC that identified many failures fractures and faults within the institution of the department of the army and submitted recommendations to strengthen the armed forces overall 6 Under the Yahya administration the army was highly demoralized and there were unconfirmed reports of mutiny by soldiers against the senior army generals at the Corps garrisons and the Army GHQ in Rawalpindi 5 99 Upon returning from the quick visit in the United States in 1971 President Bhutto forcefully dishonorably discharge seven senior army generals which he called the army waderas lit Warlords 71 100 In 1972 the army leadership under Lt Gen Gul Hassan refrained from acting under Bhutto administration s order to tackle the labor strikes in Karachi and to detained the labor union leaders in Karachi instead advising the federal government to use the Police Department to take the actions 7 99 On 2 March 1972 President Bhutto dismissed Lt Gen Gul Hassan as the army commander replacing with Lt Gen Tikka Khan who was later promoted to four star rank and appointed as the first Chief of Army Staff COAS 8 99 The army under Bhutto administration was reconstructed in its structure improving its fighting ability and reorganized with the establishment of the X Corps in Punjab in 1974 followed by the V Corps in Sindh and XI Corps in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan in 1975 101 The trilateral agreement in India the Bhutto administration transferred all the war prisoners back to the country but the military struggle to fill in the vacancies and employments due to some suffering from the PTSD and other mental health complications while others simply did not wanted to serve in the military any longer 19 20 99 Under Bhutto administration the army engage in self reliance production and eventually reached to China for establishing the material and metal industries to overcome the material shortage and manufacturing of weapons industry in the country 102 In 1973 the Bhutto administration dismissed the state government in Balochistan that resulting in another separatist movement culminating the series of army actions in largest province of the country that ended in 1977 319 103 With the military aid receiving from Iran including the transfer of the Bell AH 1 Cobra to Aviation Corps 319 103 the conflict came to end with the Pakistani government offering the general amnesties to separatists in the 1980s 151 104 319 319 103 Over the issue of Baloch conflict the Pakistani military remained engage in Omani civil war in favor of Omani government until the rebels were defeated in 1979 105 The War Enquiry Commission noted the lack of joint grand strategy between the four branches of the military during the first the second and the third wars with India recommending the establishment of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee to maintain strategic military communication between the inter services and the federal government that is to be chaired by the appointed Chairman joint chiefs as the government s principal military adviser 145 106 In 1976 the first Chairman joint chiefs was appointed from the army with Gen Muhammad Shariff taking over the chairmanship but resigned a year later 145 106 In 1975 Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto controversially superseded at least seven senior army generals to promote Lt Gen Zia ul Haq to the four star rank appointing him the Chief of Army Staff COAS in spite of army recommendations forwarded to the federal government 24 99 In the 1970s the army s engineering formations notable the Corps of Engineers played a crucial role in supporting the clandestine atomic bomb program to reach its parity and feasibility including the constructions of iron steel tunnels in the secretive nuclear weapons testing sites in 1977 78 144 145 98 PAF and Navy fighter pilots voluntarily served in Arab nations militaries against Israel in the Yom Kippur War 1973 According to modern Pakistani sources in 1974 one of the PAF pilots Flt Lt Sattar Alvi flying a MiG 21 shot down an Israeli Air Force Mirage flown by Captain M Lutz and was honoured by the Syrian government 107 108 109 The Israeli pilot later succumbed to wounds he sustained during ejection However no major sources from the time reported on such an incident 110 111 112 and there is no mention of Captain Lutz in Israel s Ministry of Defense s record of Israel s casualties of war 113 Middle East operations peacekeeping missions and covert actions 1977 1999 Edit Main articles Rahimuddin Khan s Stabilization of Balochistan 1979 Grand Mosque seizure Siachen conflict Battle for Hill 3234 Somali Civil War Afghan Civil War 1992 1996 Afghan Civil War 1996 2001 Bosnian War Indo Pakistani War of 1999 War in former Yugoslavia and Pakistan and state sponsored terrorism Transferred from Iranian Ground Force in 1973 75 the Pakistan Army acquired additional the AH 1S Cobra attack helicopters from the United States under the Foreign Military Sales to improve the Pakistan s defences in the 1980s 45 46 99 The political instability increased in the country when the conservative alliance refused to accept the voting turnout in favor of Pakistan Peoples Party PPP after the general elections held in 1977 25 26 99 The army under Gen Zia ul Haq the army chief began planning the military takeover of the federal government under Prime Minister Zulfikar Bhutto eventually leading the coup d etat that suspended the writ of the Constitution amid responding to the call from one of the opposition leader of threatening to call for another civil war 27 99 The military interference in civic matters grew further when the martial law was extended for an infinite period despite maintaining that the elections to be held in 90 days prior 30 31 99 At the request from the Saudi monarchy the Zia administration deployed the company of the special forces to end seizure of the Grand Mosque in Mecca from Islamists 265 280 114 The army under President Zia weakened due to the army officers were needed in running the affairs of civic government and the controversial military courts that held trials of the communists dissidents and the oppositions of Zia s administration 31 32 99 In 1984 85 Pakistan lost the control of her northern glaciers due to the successful expedition and penetration by the Indian Army and army had to engage in years long difficult battles with Indian Army to regain their areas from the Indian Army 45 99 Concerns over the military officers and army personnel needed to counter the further advances by the Indian Army in Northern fronts in 1984 the martial law was lifted following the referendum that approved Zia s presidency and provided a way of holding the general elections in 1985 45 99 The military control the under army administration had successfully stabilized the law and order in Balochistan despite the massive illegal immigration from Afghanistan and issued the general amnesties to separatists and rebels 115 To address the Afghan containment and security the army established the XII Corps in 1985 that is permanently headquartered in Quetta that is designed to provide defence against the infiltration by the Afghan National Army from Afghanistan citation needed The Pakistan Army s troops as part of their deployment in Somalia patrolling off their mission in the Mogadishu in Somalia in 1993 116 In 1985 the United States approved the military aid package worth 4 02 billion to Pakistan when the mujaheddin fighting with the Soviet Union in Afghanistan increased and intensified with Soviet Army began violating and attacking the insurgents in the tribal areas in Pakistan 45 46 99 In 1986 the tensions with India increased when the Indian Army s standing troops mobilized in combat position in Pakistan s southern frontier with India failing to give notification of exercise to Pakistan prior 46 99 In 1987 88 the XXX Corps headquartered in North of Punjab and the XXXI Corps headquartered in South of Punjab was raised and established to provide defence against the Indian army s mass infiltration 83 After the aviation accident that resulted in passing of President Zia in 1988 the army organized the massive military exercise with the Pakistan Air Force to evaluate the technological assessment of the weapon systems and operational readiness 57 99 117 In the 1980s Pakistan Army remained engage in the affairs of Middle East first being deployed in Saudi Arabia during the Iran Iraq War in 1980 1988 and later overseeing operational support measures and combat actions during the Gulf War in 1990 91 6 The period from 1991 to 1998 saw the army engaged in professionalism and proved its fighting skills in the Somalian theater 1991 94 Bosnian Serb War on Bosnian side from 1994 to 1998 118 and the other theaters of the Yugoslav Wars as part of the United Nation s deployment 69 73 119 120 In 1998 the army s Corps of Engineers played a crucial role in providing the military administration of preparing the atomic weapon testing in Balochistan when the air force s bombers flown and airlifted the atomic devices 121 The controversial relief of Gen Jehangir Karamat by the Sharif administration reportedly disturbed the balance of the civil military relations with the junior most Lt Gen Pervez Musharraf replacing it as chairman joint chiefs and the army chief in 1999 122 In May 1999 the Northern Light Infantry a paramilitary unit based in Gilgit slipped into Kargil that resulted in heavy border fighting with the Indian Army inflicted with heavy casualties on both sides 123 The ill devised plan without meaningful consideration of the outcomes of the border war with India the army under Chairman joint chiefs Gen Pervez Musharraf also army chief at that time failed to its combat performance and suffered with similar outcomes as the previous plan in 1965 with the American military observers in the Pakistan military famously commenting to news channels in Pakistan Kargil was yet another example of Pakistan s lack of grand strategy repeating the follies of the previous wars with India 200 124 125 126 After its commendable performance the President of Pakistan made the Northern Light Infantry as a regular army regiment Its personnel eventually became officers and enlisted personnel in the army in 1999 127 21st Century War performances Edit Religious insurgency and War on terror 2001 present Edit Pakistan army assisance 128 142 129 This controversial takeover of the federal government was subjected to a lengthy and an expensive lawsuit fought between the lawyers of the department of army and the former Sharif administration at the Supreme Court with the landmark verdict rendered in 2009 ultimately sided and favored the Sharif administration s arguments as the Justices of the Supreme Court accepted the fact that the army s takeover was in fact a direct violation of the constitution and breach of its given constitutional mandate 119 120 112 115 130 131 Responding to the terror attacks in New York in the United States the army joined the combat actions in Afghanistan with the United States and simultaneously engage in military standoff with Indian Army in 2001 02 In 2004 06 the military observers from the army were deployed to guide the Sri Lankan army to end the civil war with the Tamil fighters 132 To overcome the governance crises in 2004 07 the Musharraf administration appointed several army officers in the civilian institutions with some receiving extensions while others were deployed from their combat service thus affecting the fighting capabilities and weakening the army 37 133 Under Gen Musharraf s leadership the army s capabilities fighting the fanatic Talibans and Afghan Arab fighters in Pakistan further weakened and suffered serious setbacks in gaining control of the tribal belt that fell under the control of the Afghan Arabs and Uzbek fighters 37 133 From 2006 to 2009 the army fought the series of bloody battles with the fanatic Afghan Arabs and other foreign fighters including the army action in a Red Mosque in Islamabad to control the religious fanaticism 37 133 With the controversial assassination of Baloch politician in 2006 the army had to engage in battles with the Baloch separatists fighting for the Balochistan s autonomy 37 133 In April 2007 the major reorganization of the commands of the army was taken place under Gen Ahsan S Hyatt the vice army chief under Gen Musharraf established the Southern Central and the Northern Commands citation needed With Gen Musharraf s resignation and Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani becoming the army chief the army realigned itself to review its combat policies and withdrew officers in civilian institutions to focus on its primary constitutional mission to protect and responsible in 2009 14 37 133 131 In 2012 there was a serious accident involving the entire battalion from the Northern Light Infantry when the avalanche struck the battalion base in Siachen entrapping 135 soldiers and including several army officers 134 Pakistan army destroying an Indian army outpost on the LoC during tensions in 2017 Pakistan army destroying an Indian army bunker on the line of control in 2017 In 2013 16 the homegrown far right guerrilla war with the Taliban Afghan Arabs and the Central Asian fighters took the decisive turn in favor of the army under Sharif administration eventually gaining the control of the entire country and established the writ of the constitution in the affected lawless regions 135 As of its current deployment as of 2019 the army remained engage in border fighting with the Indian Army while deploying its combat strike brigade teams in Saudi Arabia in a response of Saudi intervention in Yemen 136 Organization EditCommand and control structure Edit Main article List of serving Generals of the Pakistan Army Leadership in the army is provided by the Minister of Defense usually leading and controlling the direction of the department of the army from the Army Secretariat I at the Ministry of Defense with the Defense Secretary who is responsible for the bureaucratic affairs of the army s department 137 The Constitution empowers the President of Pakistan an elected civilian official to act as the Commander in Chief while the Prime Minister an elected civilian to act as the Chief Executive 138 The Chief of Army Staff an appointed four star rank army general is the highest general officer under Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee and Secretary Defense who acts as the principal military adviser on the expeditionary and land ground warfare affairs and a senior member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee a military body that advises and briefs the elected Prime Minister and its executive cabinet on national security affairs and operational military matters under the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee 2 The single combat headquarter the Army GHQ is located in Rawalpindi Cantonment in Punjab in Pakistan in the vicinity of the Joint Staff Headquarters 2 The Chief of Army Staff controls and commands the army at all levels of operational command and is assisted the number of Principal Staff Officers PSOs who are three star rank generals 2 The military administration under the army chief operating at the Army GHQ including the appointed Principal Staff Officers Chief of General Staff under whom the Military Operations and Intelligence Directorates function 2 Chief of Logistics Staff 2 Quartermaster General QMG 2 Master General of Ordnance MGO 2 Engineer in Chief the chief army engineer and topographer 2 Judge Advocate General 2 Military Secretary 2 Comptroller of Civilian Personnel 2 In 2008 a major introduction was made in the military bureaucracy at the Army GHQ under Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani when two new PSO positions were introduced the Inspector General of Arms and the Inspector General Communications and IT 139 The Army s corps are divided into three regional level commands which are assigned for defending the territories of Pakistan Personnel EditCommissioned officers Edit Main article Army ranks and insignia of Pakistan The commissioned army ranks and insignia authorized in the Pakistan Army are modified and patterned on the British Army s officer ranks and insignia system 140 There are several paths of becoming the commissioned officer in the army including the admission and required graduation from the Pakistan Military Academy in Kakul citation needed To become an officer in the army the academic four year college degree is required for the candidates to become officers in the army and therefore they are designated by insignia unique to their staff community citation needed Selection to the officer candidates is highly competitive with 320 700 individuals are allowed to enter in the Pakistan Military Academy annually with a small number of already graduated physicians specialists veterinaries and the engineers from the civilian universities are directly recruited in the administrative staff corps such as Medical Corps Veterinary Corps Engineering Corps Dental Corps and these graduated individuals are the heart of the administrative corps 293 141 The product of a highly competitive selection process members of the staff corps have completed twelve years of education in their respected fields such as attending the schools and universities and has to spend two years at the Pakistan Military Academy with their time divided about equally between military training and academic work to bring them up to a baccalaureate education level which includes English language skills 293 141 The Department of Army also offers employment to civilians in financial management accountancy engineering construction and administration and has currently employed 6 500 civilians 142 The military officers in the Pakistani military seek retirement between the ages of forty two and sixty depending on their ranks and often seeks employment in the federal government or the private sector where the pay scales are higher as well as the opportunity for gain considerably greater 294 141 Estimations by the International Institute for Strategic Studies IISS the Pakistan Army s combined strength of the standing army is 815 000 including the active duty personnels from the Regular Army Army Reserve Army National Guard and is additionally supported by the 70 000 personnel from the Frontier Corps the military provost under the command of the Pakistan Army as of 2018 102 Rank O 10 O 9 O 8 O 7 O 6 O 5 O 4 O 3 O 2 O 1 O 1Insignia Title Field Marshal General Lieutenant General Major General Brigadier Colonel Lieutenant Colonel Major Captain Lieutenant Second LieutenantAbbreviation FM Gen Lt Gen Maj Gen Brig Col Lt Col Maj Capt Lt 2nd Lt NATO Code OF 10 OF 9 OF 8 OF 7 OF 6 OF 5 OF 4 OF 3 OF 2 OF 1 OF 1Rank Hierarchy Five star Four star Three star Two star One starWarrant officers Edit The Pakistan Army uniquely uses the junior commissioned officer JCO ranks equivalent of the Warrant officers or the Limited duty officers in the United States military inherited from the former British Indian Army introduced by the British Army in India between the enlisted and officer ranks citation needed The JCOs are single track specialists with their subject of expertise in their particular part of the job and initially appointed NS1 after risen from their enlisted ranks receiving the promotion SM3 from the commanding officer citation needed The usage of the junior commissioned officer is the continuation of the former Viceroy s commissioned officer rank and the JCO ranking system benefited the army since there was a large gap existed between the officers and the enlisted personnel at the time of the establishment of the new army in 1947 citation needed Over the several years the JCOs rank system has outlived its usefulness because the educational level of the enlisted personnel has risen and the army has more comfortably adopted the U S Army s ranking platform than the British 39 Promotion to the JCOs WO ranks remains a powerful and influential incentive for that enlisted personnel desire not to attend the accredited four year college citation needed Junior Commissioned Officer Warrant Officer ranks Insignia Infantry other title Subedar Major Subedar Naib SubedarCavalry armor title Risaldar Major Risaldar Naib RisaldarEnlisted personnel Edit Main article Quota system in Pakistan The recruiting and enlistment in the army is nationwide but the army s recruiting command maintains an ethnic balance with those who turned away are encourage to join the either the Marines or the Air Force 292 141 Most enlisted personnel had come from the poor and rural families with many had only rudimentary literacy skills in the past but with the increase in the affordable education have risen to the matriculation level 12th Grade 292 141 In the past the army recruits had to re educate the illiterate personnel while processing them gradually through a paternalistically run regimental training center teaching the official language Urdu if necessary and given a period of elementary education before their military training actually starts 292 141 In the thirty six week training period they develop an attachment to the regiment they will remain with through much of their careers and begin to develop a sense of being a Pakistani rather than primarily a member of a tribe or a village 292 141 Enlisted personnel usually serve for eighteen to twenty years before retiring or gaining a commission during which they participate in regular military training cycles and have the opportunity to take academic courses to help them advance 292 141 The noncommissioned officers or enlists wear respective regimental color chevrons on the right sleeve 292 141 Center point of the uppermost chevron must remain 10 cm from the point of the shoulder 292 141 The Company battalion appointments wear the appointments badges on the right wrist 292 141 Pay scales and incentives are greater and attractive upon enlistment including the allocation of land free housing and financial aid to attend the colleges and universities 294 141 Retirement age for the enlisted personnel varies and depends on the enlisted ranks that they have attained during their services 294 141 Structure of enlisted ranks of the Pakistan Army Pay grade E 9 E 8 E 7 E 6 E 5 E 4 E 3 E 2 E 1Insignia No insignia No insigniaTitle Battalion Havildar Major Regimental Daffadar Major Battalion Quartermaster Havildar Regimental Quartermaster Daffadar Company Havildar Major Squadron Daffadar Major Company Quartermaster Havildar Squadron Quartermaster Daffadar Havildar Daffadar Naik Lance Daffadar Lance Naik Acting Lance Daffadar Sepoy Sowar No EquivalentAbbreviation BHM RDM BQMH RQD CHM SDM CQMH SQD Hav Dfdr Nk L Dfdr L Nk Actg L Dfdr Sep Swr NENATO Code OR 9 OR 8 OR 7 OR 6 OR 5 OR 4 OR 3 OR 2 OR 1U S Code SGM MSG SFC SSG SGT CPL PFC PVT Recruitment and training Edit The passing out graduation of cadets from the Pakistan Military Academy in Kakul in 2007 The education and military training last for two years before cadets become officers 143 Prior to August 1947 the British Army s recruiting administration had recruited the enlists from the districts of the Jhelum Rawalpindi and Campbellpur that dominated the recruitment flows 6 From 1947 to 1971 the Pakistan Army was predominantly favored to recruit from Punjab and was popular in the country as the Punjabi Army because of heavy recruiting interests coming from the rural and poor families of villages in Punjab as well as being the most populous province of Pakistan 149 144 145 Even as of today the Pakistan Army s recruiters struggle to enlist citizens and their selfless commitment to the military from the urban areas i e Karachi and Peshawar where the preference of the college education is quite popular especially attending post graduate schools in the United States and the English speaking countries as well as working in the settled private industry for lucrative salaries and benefits while the military enlistment still comes from the most rural and remote areas of Pakistan where commitment to the military is much greater than in the metropolitan cities 31 10 After 1971 the Bhutto administration introduced the Quota system and drastically reduced the officers and enlists from Punjab and gave strong preference to residents in Sindh Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and such policy continue to exists to maintain an ethnic balance in the army 163 146 Those who are turned away are strongly encourage to join the Marines Corps or the Air Force 6 In 1991 the department of the army drastically reduced the size of personnel from Punjab downsizing the army personnel to 63 and issues acceptable medical waivers interested enlists while encouraging citizens of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh This decision has given a fair chance to every citizen of Pakistan to be part of the Pakistan Army as each district possesses a fixed percentage of seats in all branches of the Army as per census records citation needed By 2003 05 the department of army continued its policy by drastically downsizing the personnel from Punjab to 43 70 147 The Department of Army has relaxed its recruitment and medical standards in Sindh and Balochistan where the height requirement of 5 feet 4 inches is considered acceptable even with the enlists educational level at eighth grade is acceptable for the waiver since the army recruiters take responsibility of providing education to 12th grade to the interested enlists from Balochistan and Sindh 31 10 In Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa where the recruitment is popular the height requirement remains to be at 5 feet 6 inches with minimum education of 10th grade 10 The army cadets undergo training in Kakul at the Pakistan Military Academy where basic training takes place Such training usually lasts for two years until the cadets are able to meet their graduation requirements from the academy 143 All the cadets have to attend and be trained at the PMA regardless of attending the military schools and colleges in other parts of the country 143 Duration wise it is one of the longest military training period in the country and the training continues for two years until the cadet is being able pass out from the academy before selecting the college to start the career of their choice in the military 143 Women and religion in the Pakistan Army Edit Main article Women in the Pakistan Armed Forces Woman soldier of the Pakistan Army Women have been part of the Pakistan Army since 1947 and currently there are approximately 4 000 women serving in the military 148 In the years of 1947 48 and 49 women were inducted into the Women s Guard Section of the National Guard and trained in medical work welfare and clerical positions this was later disbanded 149 Pakistan Army has a separate cadet course for women which is known as Lady Cadet Course female cadets are trained in Pakistan Military Academy 150 After induction women army officers go through a six month military training at the Pakistan Military Academy like their male counterparts The comprehensive training includes military education and development of physical efficiency skills 151 Women wear regular military khaki uniforms clarification needed 151 Pakistan is the only Muslim majority nation which appoints women to general officer ranks such as Major General Shahida Malik the first woman army officer and military physician by profession who was promoted to a two star rank 152 In July 2013 the Army trained female paratrooper officers for the first time 153 154 155 In 2020 Nigar Johar became the first female Lieutenant General in the army she was from the Pakistan Army Medical Corps 156 The Army recruits from all religions in Pakistan including Hindus Sikhs Zoroastrians Christians who have held command level positions 157 Religious services are provided by the Chaplain Corps for Muslims Hindus Christians Sikhs and Zoroastrians 83 In 1993 Major General Julian Peter was the first Christian to be appointed at the command position while Hercharn Singh became the first Sikh to be commissioned in the army Between 1947 and 2000 a policy of restricting Hindus prior enlisting in the Pakistan Army was in practice until the policy was reversed by the federal government 158 In 2006 army recruiters began recruiting Hindus into the army and people of all faith or no faith can be promoted to any rank or commanding position in the army 159 160 Equipment EditMain articles List of equipment of the Pakistan Army and List of active Pakistan military aircraft The ordnance and explosives produced by the Metal Lab at Wah Cantt The al Khalid MBT designed and built by the HIT in Taxila The Anza MANPAD designed and built by the KRLWeapon system of Pakistan Army The equipment and weapon system of Pakistan Army is developed and manufactured by the local weapons industry and modern arms have been imported from China Turkey United Kingdom United States France and other countries in the European Union 6 The Heavy Industries Taxila HIT Defense Science and Technology Organization DESTO Pakistan Ordnance Factories POF and the National Development Complex NDC Pakistan Aeronautical Complex PAC Kahuta Research Laboratories KRL are the one of the major defense contractor for the Department of the Pakistan Army 161 The Heavy Industries Taxila designs and manufactured main battle tanks MBT in cooperation with the China and the Ukraine while the fire arms and standard rifles for the army are licensed manufactured by the Pakistan Ordnance Factories POF 161 The Chinese cooperation and further assistance with the Pakistan Army is vital in designing vehicular construction and material manufacturing of the main battle tanks xxxv 162 The standard rifle for the army is the German designed and POF manufactured Koch G3P4 161 The defense funding for the army was preferential which was described as the lion s share however in light of CPEC s security demanding to secure the seaborne borders the army financial planners significantly lowered its share in a view of strengthening the under funded department of the navy 163 Uniforms Edit Main article Khaki From 1947 to 1971 the army service uniform of the Pakistan Army closely resembled to the army uniform of the British Army but the uniform changed in preference of Sherwani citation needed The army service uniform in the Pakistan Army consists of the Sherwani with two front pockets cap of a synthetic material trousers with two pockets with Golden Khaki colors 222 164 In the 1970s the Ministry of Defense introduced the first camouflage pattern in the army combat uniform resembling the British styled DPM but this was changed in 1990 in favor of adopting the U S Woodland which continued until 2010 165 In winter front such as in the Siachen and near the Wakhan Corridor the Pakistan Army personnel wears the heavy winter all white military gear 166 As of 2011 the camouflage pattern of the brown and black BDU was issued and is worn by the officers and the army troops in their times of deployments citation needed The Pakistan Army has introduced arid camouflage patterns in uniform and resized qualification badges which are now service ribbons and no longer worn along with the ranks are now embroidered and are on the chest citation needed The name is badged on the right pocket and the left pocket displays achievement badges by Pakistan Army citation needed Unlike other countries in South Asia Pakistan army officer uniforms don t include a aiguillette rather it is used mostly by aid de camps Flag of Pakistan is placed over the black embroidered formation sign on the left arm and class course insignias are put up for the Goldish uniform citation needed decorations and awards citation needed and the ranks citation needed Military Uniforms in the Pakistan Army The COAS Gen Q J Bajwa the standard Sherwani based ceremonial uniform of the Pakistan Army The standard army service uniform of the Pakistan Army worn by officers and enlisted personnel The former COAS Gen R Sharif The standard battle dress uniform of the Pakistan Army The army service uniform of the Pakistan Army closely resembled to the army uniform of the British Army as seen and active from 1947 1970sComponents and structure EditArmy components and branches Edit Since its organization that commenced in 1947 the army s functionality is broadly maintained in two main branches Combat Arms and Administrative Services 46 38 570 167 From 1947 to 1971 the Pakistan Army had responsibility of maintaining the British built Forts till the new and modern garrisons were built in post 1971 and performs the non combat duties such as engineering and construction 6 Currently the Army s combat services are kept in active duty personnel and reservists that operate as members of either Reserves the National Guard and the Civil Armed Forces 2 In addition the workforce of the army is supported by the Frontier Corps a paramilitary and Rangers that performs military police duty within the state governments in Pakistan to help control and manage the law and control situation 2 The two main branches of the army Combat Arms and Administrative Services also consist of several branches and functional areas that include the army officers junior commissioned or warrant officers and the enlisted personnel who are classified from their branches in their uniforms and berets 2 In Pakistan Army the careers are not restricted to military officials but are extended to civilian personnel and contractors who can progress in administrative branches of the army 3 Pakistan Army branches and functional areas Combat Arms Insignia Administrative Services InsigniaArmoured Corps AC Service Corps ASC Air Defence AD Military Police MP Aviation Corps AVN Electrical and Mechanical Engineering EME Artillery Corps ARTY Medical AMC Signals Corps Sigs Education AEC Engineers Corps Engrs Remount Veterinary and Farms RVFC Infantry Regiments Inf Ordnance Ord Special Forces SSG Corps of Military Intelligence Command structure Edit Main article Structure of the Pakistan Army The command and control structure of the six tactical operational commands in the Pakistan Army The reorganization of the position standing army in 2008 the Pakistan Army now operates six tactical commands each commanded by the GOC in C with a holding three star rank Lieutenant General 101 failed verification Each of the six tactical commands directly reports to the office of Chief of Army Staff operating directly at the Army GHQ 101 failed verification Each command consists of two or more Corps an army field formation responsible for zone within a command theater 2 failed verification There are nine active Corps in the Pakistan Army composing of mixed infantry mechanized armored artillery divisions while the Air Defense Aviation and the Aviation and Special Forces are organized and maintained in the separate level of their commands 2 failed verification Established and organized in March 2000 the Army Strategic Forces Command is exercise its authority for responsible training in safety weapons deployments and activation of the atomic missile systems 168 Combat maneuvering organizations Edit Main articles Civil Armed Forces National Guard Pakistan Pakistan Army Reserve and Military logistics The map of Five Rivers The strategic reserves of Pakistan including the desert and forest 169 In events involving the large and massive foreign invasion by the Indian Army charging towards the Pakistan side Punjab sector the Pakistan Army maintains the Pakistan Army Reserves as a strategic reserve component for conducting the offense and defense measures against the advancing enemy 169 Infantry branch Edit Since its establishment in 1947 the Pakistan Army has traditionally followed the British regimental system and culture and currently there are six organized infantry regiments 170 In the infantry branch there are originally six regiments are in fact the administrative military organization that are not combat field formation and the size of the regiments are vary as their rotation and deployments including assisting the federal government in civic administration 171 In each of original six regiments there are multiple battalions that are associated together to form an infantry regiment and such battalions do not fight together as one formation as they are all deployed over various formations in shape of being part of the brigade combat team under a Brigadier division or a being part of much larger corps 172 After the independence from the Great Britain in 1947 the Pakistan Army begin to follow the U S Army s standing formation of their Infantry Branch having the infantry battalion serving for a time period under a different command zone before being deployed to another command zone usually in another sector or terrain when its tenure is over 172 Infantry branch 173 The Infantry Regiments by seniority Insignia Activation Date Commanding Regimental Center Motto War CryPunjab Regiment 1759 Mardan Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Urdu نارا یا حیدری یا علی English lit Ali the Great Baloch Regiment 1798 Abbottabad Khyber Pakhtunkhwa غازی یا شہید English lit Honored or Martyr کی کی بلوچ English lit Of the Baloch Frontier Force Regiment 1843 Abbottabad Khyber Pakhtunkhwa لب یک English lit Lucky Northern Light Infantry Regiment 1913 Gilgit Gilgit Baltistan سبط قدم English lit Consistent Azad Kashmir Regiment 1947 Mansar PunjabSind Regiment 1980 Hyderabad SindhSpecial operations forces Edit Main articles Special Services Group Strategic Plans Division Force Army Strategic Forces Command Pakistan and Special Support Group The logo of the Army SSG where the Special Forces and Army Rangers are trained together The Pakistan Army has a military division dedicated towards conducting the unconventional and asymmetric warfare operations established with the guidance provided by the United States Army in 1956 174 This competitive special operation force is known as the Special Services Group Army SSG distinguishing the Navy SSG and is assembled in eight battalions commanded by the Lieutenant Colonel with addition of three companies commanded by the Major or a Captain depending on the availability 175 The special operation forces training school is located in Cherat in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan where the training and education on the philosophy of military arts and tactics take place by the army instructors 175 Each battalion in the Pakistan Army Special Forces is specifically trained for a specific type of operation and each battalion is a specialist in their nature of conducting the operation 175 Due to their distinctive service headgear the Army SSG is colloquially known as the Maroon Berets 175 Besides the Army SSG the Pakistan Army has trained a specific Rangers team that is especially trained in counter tactics and is trained for carrying out the difficult counter terrorism operation involving the civilian hostages in Karachi and helping the state governments in Sindh and Punjab maintaining the law and order situation intact 176 Implementing the counterterrorism tactics in 2004 the Army has been training the specific Army Ranger company known as the Rangers Anti terrorist Force ATF along with the Army SSG company often conduct training with the U S Army Ranger in terror and infantry tactics 176 Military philosophy EditCombat doctrine 1947 2007 Edit Main article Exercise Zarb e Momin The U S Pakistan military relations The group photo of the United States Army and the Pakistan Army after coordinating the joint operation in 2010 In 1947 the Pakistan Army s war strategists developed a combat doctrine which was called The Riposte which featured a strategy of offensive defense 310 177 178 In 1989 the first and official implementation of this strategy was refined and featured in the major military exercise Exercise Zab e Momin organized under Lt Gen Hamid Gul 179 this combat doctrine was fully focused in engaging towards its primary adversary Indian Army 310 177 In 1989 99 the JS HQ working with the Army GHQ to identify several key factors considering the large conventional attacks from the better equipped and numerically advantage adversary the Indian Army derived the combat doctrine to assess the vulnerability of Pakistan where its vast majority of population centers as well as political and military targets lies closer to the international border with India 180 The Pakistan Army s special forces soldiers in a drill conducting jointly with the Russian special forces in 2016 The national security strategists explored the controversial idea of strategic depth in form of fomenting friendly foreign relations with Afghanistan and Iran while India substantially enhancing its offensive capabilities designed in its doctrine the Cold Start Doctrine 180 Due to the numerical advantage of Indian Army over its small adversary the Pakistan Army the Pakistani national security analysts noted that any counterattack on advancing Indian Army would be very tricky and miscalculated the ideal response of countering the attacks from the Indian ground forces would be operationalizing the battle ranged Hatf IA Hatf IB missiles 180 The Pakistan Army Reserves supported by the National Guard and the Civil Armed Forces and India s Territorial Army would eventually forward towards the defensive positions and fortifications in less than 24 hours 181 However the Corps in both nation s commands with large stockpiles of ordnance will take between 24 and 72 hours to logistically mobilize its combat assets after the orders are authorized therefore both nation s armies will be evenly matched in the first 24 hours since the Pakistani units have to travel a shorter distance to their forward positions 181 The war doctrine of offensive defense entailed Pakistan not waiting to be attacked but instead launching an offense of its own with an offense being a limited advance along with narrow fronts aiming towards occupying enemy territory near the border to a depth of 40 50 km 181 Pakistani national security calculated that since Indian forces will not reach their maximum strength near the border for another 48 72 hours Pakistan might have parity or numerical superiority against India 181 Earlier studies in Offensive defense doctrine validated results of finding and keeping the enemy forces off balance as the Indian Army engage in containing the Pakistan Army forces into its territory rather than concentrating towards launching an attack onto Pakistan s territory 181 The strategic calculations by Pakistan Army s war strategists hoped that the Pakistan Army s soldiers would keep the Indian Army soldiers engage in fighting on the Indian territory therefore the collateral damage being suffered by the Indian Army at most 181 An important aspect in offensive defense doctrine was to seize sizable Indian territory which gives Pakistan an issue to negotiate with India in the aftermath of a ceasefire brought about by international pressure after 3 4 weeks of fighting 181 Due to fortification of LoC in Kashmir and difficult terrains in Northern Punjab the Army created the Pakistan Army Reserves in the 1990s that is concentrated in the desert terrain of Sindh Rajasthan sector The Army Reserve South of the Pakistan Army Reserves is grouped in several powerful field level corps and designed to provide defensive maneuvers in case of war with the Indian Army 181 Threat Matrix 2010 present Edit Main articles Threat Matrix database Exercise Azm e Nau Exercise High Mark and Exercise Sea Spark Urban warfare near Afghanistan Pakistan Army infantry troops engage in door to door clearance during N Waziristan offense in 2016 After the failure of the Offensive defense in 1999 the national security institutions engaged in critical thinking to evaluate new doctrine that would provide a comprehensive grand strategy against the infiltrating enemy forces and development began 2010 11 for the new combat doctrine 182 In 2013 the new combat doctrine the Threat Matrix was unveiled by the ISPR that was the first time in its history that the army s national security analysts realized that Pakistan faces a real threat from within a threat that is concentrated in areas along western borders 182 The Threat Matrix doctrine analyze the military s comprehensive operational priorities and goes beyond in comprehensively describing both existential and non existential threats to the country 182 Based on that strategy in 2013 the Pakistani military organized a four tier joint military exercise code named Exercise Azm e Nau in which the aim was to update the military s readiness strategy for dealing with the complex security threat environment 183 The objective of such exercises is to assess tactics procedures and techniques and explore joint operations strategies involving all three branches of the military the Army Air Force and Navy 183 In successive years the Pakistani military combined all the branch level exercises into joint warfare exercises in which all four branches now participate regardless of the terrain platforms and control of command 183 Education and training EditMain article Military academies in Pakistan Schooling teachings and institutions Edit The Pakistan Army Music band s conductor saluting after the performance in Russia The Pakistan Army offers wide range of extensive and lucrative careers in the military to young high school graduates and the college degree holders upon enlistment and Pakistan Army operates the large number of training schools in all over the country 184 The overall directions and management of the army training schools are supervised and controlled by the policies devised by the Education Corps and philosophy on instructions in army schools involves in modern education with combat training 185 At the time of its establishment of the Pakistan Army in 1947 the Command and Staff College in Quetta was inherited to Pakistan and is the oldest college established during the colonial period in India in 1905 186 The British officers in the Pakistan Army had to established the wide range of schools to provide education and to train the army personnel in order to raise the dedicated and professional army 187 The wide range of military officers in the Pakistani military were sent to attend the staff colleges in the United States United Kingdom Australia and Canada who were trained and excelled in courses in armory infantry artillery and ordnance in 1950 1961 293 141 The United States eventually took over the overall training programs in the Pakistan Army under the International Military Education and Training IMET but the U S coordination with Pakistan varied along with the vicissitudes of the military relations between two countries 12 188 In the 1980s the army had sent 200 army officers abroad annually two thirds actually decided to attend schooling in the United States but the cessation of the United States aid to Pakistan led the suspension of the IMET leading Pakistani military officers to choose the schooling in the United Kingdom 294 141 After the terrorist attacks in the United States in 2001 the IMET cooperation was again activated with army officers begin attending the schooling in the United States but the training program was again suspended in 2018 by the Trump administration leveling accusations on supporting armed Jihadi groups in Afghanistan 189 During the reconstruction and reorganization of the armed forces in the 1970s the army established more training schools as below Army schools and colleges Year of establishment School and college principal locations WebsiteSchool of Armour and Mechanized Warfare 1947 Nowshera in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa School of Armour and Mechanized Warfare Archived from the original on 3 January 2019 Retrieved 3 January 2019 School of Artillery 1948 Kakul in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa School of Artillery Archived from the original on 3 January 2019 Retrieved 3 January 2019 School of Army Air Defense 1941 Karachi in Sindh School of Army Air Defence Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Military College of Engineering 1947 Risalpur in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Military College of Engineering Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Military College of Signals 1947 Rawalpindi in Punjab Military College of Signals Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 School of Infantry and Tactics 1947 Quetta in Balochistan School of Infantry and Tactics Archived from the original on 3 January 2019 Retrieved 3 January 2019 Aviation School 1964 Gujranwala in Punjab Army Aviation School Archived from the original on 3 January 2019 Retrieved 3 January 2019 Service Corps School 1947 Nowshera in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Army Service Corps School Archived from the original on 20 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Army Desert Warfare School 1977 Rawalpindi in Punjab Army Medical College Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Ordnance College 1980 Karachi in Sindh Ordnance College Archived from the original on 3 January 2019 Retrieved 3 January 2019 College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering 1957 Rawalpindi in Punjab College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Special warfare and skills schools Year of establishment School and college principal locations WebsiteSpecial Operations School 1956 Cherat in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Special Operations School permanent dead link Parachute Training School 1964 Kakul in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Parachute Training School Archived from the original on 20 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Corps of Military Police School 1949 D I Khan in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Corps of Military Police School Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 School of Logistics 1974 Murree in Punjab Army School of Logistics Archived from the original on 2 August 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 School of Mountain Warfare and Physical Training 1978 Kakul in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Army School of Mountain Warfare and Physical Training Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 High Altitude School 1987 Rattu in Gilgit Baltistan Army High Altitude School Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Army Desert Warfare School 1987 Chor in Sindh Army Desert Warfare School permanent dead link School of Music 1970 Abbottabad in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Army School of Music Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Dog Breeding Training Center and School 1952 Rawalpindi in Punjab Army Dog Breeding Training Centre and School Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Veterinary School 1947 Sargodha in Punjab Army Veterinary School PDF Archived from the original PDF on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Higher education institutions Year of establishment Locations WebsitePakistan Command and Staff College 1905 Quetta in Balochistan Command and Staff College Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 National Defense University 1971 Islamabad National Defense University Archived from the original on 21 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 National University of Sciences and Technology 1991 Multiple campuses National University of Sciences and Technology Archived from the original on 23 October 2020 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Sources Army Schools Archived 3 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine and Skills Schools Archived 21 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine of Pakistan ArmyThe Pakistan Army s training schools are not restricted to the department of the army only but inter services officers and personnel have been trained and educated as part of the interdepartmental cooperation 184 The Pakistan Army takes responsibility of providing the military training and education to Pakistan Marines at their School of Infantry and Tactics and military officers in other branches have attended and qualified psc from the Command and Staff College in Quetta 184 Officers holding the ranks of captains majors lieutenants and lieutenant commanders in marines are usually invited to attend the courses at the Command and Staff College in Quetta to be qualified as psc 9 47 Established in 1971 the National Defense University NDU in Islamabad is the senior and higher education learning institution that provides the advance critical thinking level and research based strategy level education to the senior military officers in the Pakistani military 190 The NDU in Islamabad is a significant institution of higher learning in understanding the institutional norms of military tutelage in Pakistan because it constitutes the highest learning platform where the military leadership comes together for common instruction according to thesis written by Pakistani author Aqil Shah 8 47 Without securing their graduation from their master s program no officer in the Pakistani military can be promoted as general in the army or air force or admiral in the navy or marines as it is a prerequisite for their promotion to become a senior member at the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee 8 9 47 Besides the platform provided at the NDU in Islamabad represents a radical shift from the emphasis on operational and staff functions and the level of ranks are imposed as a qualification to attend the master s program at the NDU usually brigadiers air commodores and commodores are invited to given admission in a broad range of strategic political social and economic factors as these factors affect the country s national security 8 9 47 In this sense the NDU becomes the critical thinking institution as its constitutes active duty senior military officers corps baptism into a shared ideological framework about the military s appropriate role status and behavior in relation to state and society and shared values affect how these officers perceive and respond to civilian governmental decisions policies and political crises 9 10 191 Admissions to the army s military engineering colleges and NDU is not restricted to military officials but the civilians can also attend and graduate from the NDU allowing the civilians to explore the broader aspects of national security 8 9 47 The M60 AVLB the engineering vehicle currently inventory in Pakistan Army Established in 1991 the National University of Sciences and Technology NUST has now absorbed and amalgamated the existing military engineering colleges of engineering signals aeronautical and medicines and is a counterpart institution in science and technology to that of the National Defense University NDU in Islamabad 192 The foreign military officials and students including from the United States have attended the Command and Staff College in Quetta and the National Defense University NDU in Islamabad but the American instructors and observers have penned critical analysis by reporting the curriculum offered by the Command and Staff College in Quetta to be narrow focus and failure to encourage speculative thinking or to give adequate attention to less glamorous subjects such as logistics 293 141 518 193 Civil engineering and construction Edit Main articles Civil engineering and Karakoram Highway Since the 1970s the Pakistan Army s engineering formations have been involved in civil engineering of the important landmarks in the country hydroelectricity power generation dams and national freeways 142 The Pakistan Army builds major civil engineering landmarks in the country including the Karakoram Highway Skardu Airport and the national security sites in Kahuta 142 The Frontier Works Organization of the army has built several infrastructures with the Corps of Engineers all over the country and has built the communications lines in Northern Pakistan through its Special Communications Organization SCO 142 The Corps of Engineers are the major civil engineering contractor and engineering consultant employed by the federal government advising on construction management and on to improving the efficiency of construction measures in times of natural calamities 194 The Pakistan Army s landmark civil engineering projects included the Lyari Expressway in Karachi Makran Coastal Highway in Balochistan and the Khanpur Dam in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 194 Besides their infrastructure projects in Pakistan the Pakistan Army has built several infrastructures projects in other parts of the world as part their deployment in United Nation s peacekeeping missions 194 UN peacekeeping missions Edit Pakistani soldiers deployed as MONUSCO s female engagement team Main article United Nations peacekeeping missions involving Pakistan In the wake of the new world power equilibrium a more complex security environment has emerged It is characterized by growing national power politics UN Operation in Congo ONUC 1960 1964 UN Security Force in New Guinea West Irian UNSF 1962 1963 14 Punjab Regiment UN Yemen Observer Mission Yemen UNYOM 1963 1964 UN Transition Assistance Group in Namibia UNTAG 1989 1990 UN Iraq Kuwait Observer Mission UNIKOM 1991 2003 UN Mission in Haiti UNMIH 1993 1996 UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia UNTAC 1992 1993 UN Operations in Somalia UNOSOM 1992 1995 UN Protection Forces in Bosnia UNPROFOR 1992 1995 UN Observer Mission for Rwanda UNAMIR 1993 1996 UN Verification Mission in Angola UNAVEM III 1995 1997 UN Transitional Administration for Eastern Slavonia UNTAES 1996 1997 UN Mission of Observers in Prevlaka UNMOP 1996 2002 UN Assistance Mission in Sierra Leone UNAMSIL 2001 2005 UN Transitional Administration in East Timor UNTAET 1999 to date UN Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo UNMIK 1999 to date Current deployment in UN Peacekeeping missions Start of operation Name of operation Location Conflict Contribution1999 United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo MONUSCO Democratic Republic of Congo Second Congo War 3 556 troops 195 2003 United Nations Mission in Liberia UNMIL Liberia Second Liberian Civil War 2 741 troops 195 2004 United Nations Operation in Burundi ONUB Burundi Burundi Civil War 1 185 troops 195 2004 United Nations Operation in Cote d Ivoire UNOCI Cote d Ivoire Civil war in Cote d Ivoire 1 145 troops 195 2005 United Nations Mission in the Sudan UNMIS Sudan Second Sudanese Civil War 1 542 Troops 195 Staff observers 191 observers 195 The total number of Pakistani troops serving in peacekeeping missions is 7 533 as of August 2015 which is one of the biggest number among rest of participants 196 Involvement in Pakistani society EditSee also International response to the 2005 Kashmir earthquake and 2009 refugee crisis in Pakistan The Pakistan Army soldiers distributing the military rations to the affectees of the national calamities The Army often involves in the civil society to relief activities and national building to the local population of affected areas The RVF Corps moving animals and livestock to a safer location after the flood warning issues by the NDMA in 2017 The Pakistan Army has played an integral part in the civil society of Pakistan almost since its inception 197 In 1996 General Jehangir Karamat described Pakistan armed forces relations with the society In my opinion if we have to repeat of past events then we must understand that Military leaders can pressure only up to a point Beyond that their own position starts getting undermined because the military is after all is a mirror image of the civil society from which it is drawn General Jehangir Karamat on civil society military relations 197 In times of national calamities and natural disasters including the devastating earthquake in 2005 or the great floods in 2010 the army engineering corps medical logistical personnel and other armed forces services have played a major role in area rehabilitation and reconstruction of cities and towns while distributing the relief goods and military rations to the affected civilians 198 Since 1948 the army has been involved in providing power generation to affected areas building dams and construction of towns and cities and conducting rescue operations for evacuations of general public and animals from endangerment 198 To coordinate and manage the proper relief operations reconstructions and rehabilitation the federal government appoints the active duty officers as an external billets appointments to lead federal agencies such as ERRA and the NDMA 199 Besides relief activities in the country the Pakistan Army has also engaged in other parts of the world such as coordinating and leading the relief efforts in Indonesia Bangladesh and Sri Lanka after these countries were affected by the underwater earthquake that resulted in tsunami in 2004 200 Stephen P Cohen in his article Pakistan Army Society and Security writes There are armies which guard their nation s borders there are armies which are concerned with protecting their own position in society and there are armies which defend a cause or an idea The Pakistan Army does all three Stephen P Cohen 201 Corporate and business activities EditSee also Askari Bank Fauji Foundation Heavy Industries Taxila Defence Housing Authority and Army Welfare Trust According to international news agencies and investigations by international financial regulators the department of the army controls manages and runs a large number of business enterprises and conglomerates their total revenue was estimated to be US 20 billion in 2007 08 202 One of the largest real estate conglomerates that is run by the army is known as the Defense Housing Authority DHA as well as the Army Welfare Trust AWT and out 46 housing schemes directly built by the armed forces none of the schemes is for ordinary soldiers civilian officers or personnel employed by the army 203 The Fauji Foundation lit Military Foundation has shares in the Pakistan Stock Exchange PSX and is involved in manufacturing and selling processed meat stud and dairy farms meant for the military s own use while there are enterprises that perform functions in the local civilian economy such as bakeries security and banking services 202 The army factories managed by the Fauji Foundation produce such goods such as sugar Fauji Fertilizer brass castings and it sells its products to civilian consumers albeit at prices higher than those charged from military personnel citation needed The Pakistani military has the largest shares in the PSX and has financial stakes in commercial banking airlines steel businesses cement telecoms petroleum and energy education sports health care and even chains of grocery shops and bakeries 204 Awards and Honors EditMain article Awards and decorations of the Pakistan Armed Forces Wartime Gallantry Awards Edit Nishan e Haider Order of the Lion Hilal e Jurat Crescent of Courage Sitara e Jurat Star of Courage Tamgha e Jurat Medal of Courage Imtiazi Sanad Mentioned in Despatches 205 Order of Wear Nishan e Haider Order of the Lion Nishan e Imtiaz Civilian Nishan e Imtiaz Military Hilal e Jurat Crescent of Courage Hilal e Shujaat Crescent of Bravery Hilal e Imtiaz Civilian Hilal e Imtiaz Military Sitara e Jurat Star of Courage Sitara e Shujaat Star of Bravery Sitara e Imtiaz Military President s Award forPride of Performance Sitara e Basalat Star of Good Conduct Sitara e Eisaar Star of Sacrifice Tamgha e Jurat Medal of Courage Tamgha e Shujaat Medal of Bravery Tamgha e Imtiaz Military Tamgha e Basalat Medal of Good Conduct Tamgha e Eisaar Medal of Sacrifice Imtiazi Sanad Mentioned in Despatches Tamgha e Diffa General Service Medal Sitara e Harb 1965 War War Star 1965 Sitara e Harb 1971 War War Star 1971 Tamgha e Jang 1965 War War Medal 1965 Tamgha e Jang 1971 War War Medal 1971 Tamgha e Baqa Nuclear Test Medal Tamgha e Istaqlal Pakistan Escalation with India Medal Tamgha e Azm Medal of Conviction Tamgha e Khidmat Class I Medal of Service Class I Tamgha e Khidmat Class II Medal of Service Class I Tamgha e Khidmat Class III Medal of Service Class I 10 Years Service Medal 20 Years Service Medal 30 Years Service Medal 35 Years Service Medal 40 Years Service Medal Pakistan Tamgha Pakistan Medal Tamgha e Sad Saala Jashan e Wiladat e Quaid e Azam Tamgha e Jamhuria Republic Commemoration Medal Hijri Tamgha Hijri Medal Jamhuriat Tamgha Democracy Medal Qarardad e Pakistan Tamgha Resolution Day Golden Jubilee Medal Tamgha e Salgirah Pakistan Independence DayGolden Jubilee Medal Command amp Staff College QuettaInstructor s Medal Command amp Staff College QuettaStudent MedalNishan e Haider Edit Main article Nishan e Haider Nishan e Haider lit Order of Lion Nine out of ten Army personnel have been posthumously honored In military awards hierarchy the Nishan e Haidar lit Order of Lion Urdu نشان حیدر is the highest and most prestigious honor awarded posthumously for bravery and actions of valor in event of war 220 206 The honor is a namesake of Ali and the recipients receiving this honorary title as a sign of respect Shaheed meaning martyr 4 207 Since 1947 2019 there has been ten Pakistani military officers and personnel who have honored with this prestigious medal out of which nine have been officers and soldiers in the Pakistan Army bestowed to those who engaged in wars with India 208 Order Recipients Rank Regiment Corps of the recipient Year of conflict War and Gallantry Ribbon1 Raja Muhammad Sarwar Captain Punjab Regiment Indo Pakistani war of 1947 2 Saif Ali Janjua Naik Corporal Azad Kashmir Regiment Indo Pakistani war of 1947 3 Tufail Mohammad Major Punjab Regiment 1958 India East Pakistan border skirmishes 4 Raja Aziz Bhatti Major Punjab Regiment Indo Pakistani war of 1965 5 Shabbir Sharif Major Frontier Force Regiment Indo Pakistani war of 1971 6 Muhammad Hussain Janjua Sepoy Pvt Armoured Corps Indo Pakistani war of 1971 7 Muhammad Akram Major Frontier Force Regiment Indo Pakistani war of 1971 8 Muhammad Mahfuz Lance Naik Lance Corporal Punjab Regiment Indo Pakistani war of 1971 9 Karnal Sher Captain Sindh Regiment Indo Pakistani war of 1999 10 Lalak Jan Havildar Sgt Northern Light Infantry Regiment Indo Pakistani war of 1999 Recipient of the foreign awards Edit The Pakistan Army has been conferred with the foreign awards for its services provided to the foreign nations including the honoring of two army pilots from the Aviation Corps who conducted a difficult operation in extracting the Slovenian mountaineer Tomaz Humar who got stranded on the western end of the 8 125 metre high 26 657 ft Nanga Parbat and the Slovenian President presented Lt Col Rashiduhlla Beg and Lt Col Khalid Amir with the Golden Order for Services in the country s capital Ljubljana for risking their lives during the rescue mission a Pakistan Army statement said 209 In addition there are numbers of the army general officers have been honored multiple times with the United States s Legion of Merit for cooperation and strengthening bilateral ties with the United States 1980s 2015 261 210 In 2010 the Pakistan Army was awarded with a gold medal at the Exercise Cambrian Patrol held in Wales in the United Kingdom 211 212 Sports EditSee also Pakistan Army basketball team and Pakistan Army F C The Army offers programs in many sports including boxing field hockey cricket swimming table tennis karate basketball soccer and other sports 213 The Army basketball program regularly provides the Pakistan national basketball team with players 214 See also EditNational Guard Pakistan Civil Armed Forces Comparative military ranks Islamic Military Counter Terrorism Coalition List of serving generals of the Pakistan Army Military history of Pakistan Pakistan Army Retribution video game Pakistan Military Academy Special Service Group SSG Structure of the Pakistan ArmyReferences Edit a b International Institute for Strategic Studies 25 February 2021 The Military Balance 2021 London Routledge p 290 ISBN 9781032012278 Archived from the original on 21 January 2022 Retrieved 5 July 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Khan Hameed 1 June 2003 Command and Structure of Pakistan Army www pakdef org PakDef Military Consortium Archived from the original on 7 January 2019 Retrieved 16 January 2019 a b Infrastructures Development www pakistanarmy gov pk Archived from the original on 17 January 2019 Retrieved 17 January 2019 Motto of the Pakistan Army Archived from the original on 15 January 2021 Lt General Sahir Shamshad Mirza Appointed New Chief of Joint Staff Pak Army News18 26 November 2019 Archived from the original on 28 November 2019 Retrieved 4 December 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cloughley Brian 2016 A History of the Pakistan Army Wars and Insurrections 1st ed London UK Skyhorse Publishing Inc ISBN 9781631440397 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 16 August 2017 2020 Pakistan Military Strength www globalfirepower com Archived from the original on 19 November 2020 Retrieved 30 April 2020 Article 245 1 Article 245 4 Archived 21 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Chapter 2 Armed Forces in Part XII Miscellaneous of Constitution of Pakistan Harper Stephen 2017 The Bosnian War Goes to East Identity and Internationalism in Alpha Bravo Charlie google books Screening Bosnia Geopolitics Gender and Nationalism in Film and Television Images of the 1992 95 War 1st ed Indiana U S Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 155 ISBN 9781623567071 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 16 August 2017 a b c d Fair C Christine 2014 Recruitment in Pakistan Army google books Fighting to the End The Pakistan Army s Way of War Karachi Sindh Pakistan Oxford University Press p 310 ISBN 9780199892716 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 18 November 2020 History of Pakistan Army Archived from the original on 14 January 2013 Retrieved 18 January 2013 ISPR Archived from the original on 15 March 2015 Retrieved 1 May 2015 Article 245 1 amp Article 245 3 Archived 21 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Chapter 2 Armed Forces in Part XII Miscellaneous of Constitution of Pakistan Javid Hassan 23 November 2014 COVER STORY The Army amp Democracy Military Politics in Pakistan DAWN COM Dawn Newspapers Dawn Newspapers Archived from the original on 16 August 2017 Retrieved 16 August 2017 Aqil Shah 1973 The army and democracy military politics in Pakistan ISBN 9780674728936 Aziz Mazhar 2007 Military Control in Pakistan The Parallel State Routledge ISBN 9781134074099 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 16 August 2017 Ayaz Gul 23 November 2022 Outgoing Pakistan Army Chief Admits Involvement in Politics SOUTH amp CENTRAL ASIA Alam Dr Shah 2012 Pakistan Army Modernisation Arms Procurement and Capacity Building Vij Books India Pvt Ltd ISBN 9789381411797 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 16 August 2017 Article 243 2 Archived 21 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Chapter 2 Armed Forces in Part XII Miscellaneous of Constitution of Pakistan Butt Tariq 16 November 2016 Nawaz to appoint third army chief thenews com pk The News International News International Archived from the original on 16 August 2017 Retrieved 16 August 2017 General Mian Usama takes charge as Pakistan s 16th army chief DAWN 29 November 2016 Archived from the original on 29 November 2016 Retrieved 29 November 2016 Gen Bajwa assumes command as Pakistan s 16th army chief The Express Tribune 29 November 2016 Archived from the original on 29 November 2016 Retrieved 29 November 2016 Chapter 2 Armed Forces of Part XII Miscellaneous Pakistani org Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Retrieved 15 May 2012 Chandar Retd Col Y Udaya 2018 Partition of the British Indian Armed Forces google books Independent India s All the Seven Wars Chennai Ind Notion Press ISBN 9781948473224 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2019 a b Roy Kaushik 2013 Decolonization google books The Army in British India From Colonial Warfare to Total War 1857 1947 1st ed London Uk A amp C Black p 220 ISBN 9781441177308 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 18 September 2017 Khanna K K 2015 Art of Generalship 1st ed Delhi India Vij Books India Pvt Ltd p 295 ISBN 9789382652939 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 18 September 2017 Schofield Victoria 2003 Chapter 3 The Accession Kashmir in Conflict India Pakistan and the Unending War Internet Archive 2nd ed London Eng UK I B Tauris pp 250 ISBN 9781860648984 Retrieved 1 January 2019 after large numbers of tribesmen a b c d Mahapatra Debidatta Aurobinda 2017 India Pakistan and Kashmir google books Conflict Management in Kashmir State People Relations and Peace 1st ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108423892 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2019 Hodson H V 1969 The Great Divide Britain India Pakistan London Hutchinson ISBN 9780090971503 archived from the original on 9 November 2018 retrieved 2 January 2019 a b Hiro Dilip 2015 Overviews and Conclusions google book The Longest August The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan 1st ed Washington DC US PublicAffairs p 475 ISBN 9781568587349 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2019 a b Malik Hafeez 2016 Problems of Initial Adaptation google books Soviet Pakistan Relations and Post Soviet Dynamics 1947 92 1st ed Pennsylvania US Springer p 400 ISBN 9781349105731 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2019 a b c d Major Nasir Uddin Juddhey Juddhey Swadhinata pp55 a b c d e f Higgins David R 2016 Pakistan google books M48 Patton vs Centurion Indo Pakistani War 1965 1st ed Bloomsbury Ind US Bloomsbury Publishing p 100 ISBN 9781472810939 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 2 January 2019 Khan Mohammad Ayub 1967 Friends Not Masters A Political Autobiography 1st ed Oxford University Press p 275 ISBN 9780192111784 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2019 Sydney Morning Herald Wednesday 14 December 1949 a b paksoldiers com 4 December 2013 a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.