Amid media reports that Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari may be forced to step down and Chief of Army Staff Field Marshal Asim Munir aspired to assume the presidency, the Pakistani Army has refuted the claims. Military spokesperson Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry has rubbished rumours of Munir becoming the president, Dawn reported on Wednesday. Chaudhry told The Economist that “talk of his boss becoming president is ‘nonsense’”.
This was not the first time such claims sparked debate.
Earlier in July, Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said such claims were “mere speculations”. “Field Marshal Asim Munir has never expressed any desire to become the president, nor is there any such plan in the offing,” said Sharif. Sharif said Zardari, Munir, and he shared a relationship built on mutual respect and a common goal — the progress and prosperity of Pakistan.
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The clarification comes after Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, in a statement on X on Thursday, denounced the “malicious campaign” targeting Zardari, Sharif and Munir. “We are fully aware of who is behind the malicious campaign,” said Naqvi, who is considered close to the top military leadership. “I have categorically stated there has been no discussion, nor does any such idea exist, about the president being asked to resign or the COAS aspiring to assume the presidency,” he added.
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Naqvi alleged the involvement of hostile foreign elements in the campaign and said: “To those involved in this narrative, do whatever you wish in collaboration with hostile foreign agencies. As for us, we will do whatever is necessary to make Pakistan strong again, InshAllah.”
Munir was elevated to the post of army chief in 2022 for a three-year tenure, but last year the government increased the term to five years. The government can also extend it by another term.