Live
- A Guide to Temperature and Humidity Standards in Data Center Server Rooms
- Gadwal collector briefs on details of voters
- Jupally Krishna Rao takes part in Alampur rallu
- Bharath Prasad files 3rd Nomination
- Baisakh Month: A Time of Auspicious Beginnings and Sacred Festivals
- Oust BJD govt for overall development, says Shah
- Unveiling the Hidden Gems: Surprising Health Benefits of Garlic Peels
- Overcoming Sleep Struggles: A Comprehensive Guide to a Restful Night
- RTC bus hit the auto
- MLA Kuchukula Rajesh Reddy participated in the Birappa festival
Just In
In an unusual piece of advice to senior officers, Pakistan army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa has told them that the army had \"no business\" in running the government and asked them to read a book on how India has succeeded in keeping the military out of politics.
Islamabad: In an unusual piece of advice to senior officers, Pakistan army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa has told them that the army had "no business" in running the government and asked them to read a book on how India has succeeded in keeping the military out of politics.
"The army has no business trying to run the government. The army must remain within its constitutionally defined role," The Nation newspaper quoted Bajwa as saying.
He also asked his officers to read a book titled 'Army and Nation' written by Steven I Wilkinson, a professor of Political Science and International Relations at Yale University, about Indian Army's relationship with the civilian government after independence.
Bajwa's comments during a gathering of senior army officers at Rawalpindi Garrison in the General Headquarters in December indicate a shift in Pakistan army's stance on its relationship with the civilian government and could be good news for Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's government.
Bajwa, who took over from Raheel Sharif with whom the Prime Minister had a uneasy relationship, communicated to his officers in unequivocal terms that there should be cooperation and not competition between army and civilian leadership of the country.
The civil-military equation in Pakistan has always been a thorny issue.
From 1947 onward, Pakistan has been ruled by military dictatorships for half its history. The last period of direct military government ended in 2008, but the military has retained considerable power and influence behind the scenes.
Bajwa also alluded that an impression of a competition between the civilians and the military is counter-productive for the country.
Wilkinson's book provides details of changes made in the structure and recruitment pattern of India army to suit the fledgling democracy in the new country.
The almost 300-page book makes for an interesting reading as it details why the democratic process in India has been a success.
Wilkinson argues that India took a number of steps after partition to correct the civil-military imbalance.
Army or the civilian government have so far not commented about General Bajwa's remarks.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com