
Provocation To Promotion: Asim Munir's Hollow Ascent
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Asim Munir's promotion is a desperate attempt by the military establishment to mask operational debacles, consolidate power amid domestic turmoil
The recent conferral of the Field Marshal's baton on General Asim Munir in Pakistan is a coronation without a conquest. The move, for all its pomp, reveals more about Pakistan's internal anxieties and strategic failures than any real military achievement.
Rather than reflecting battlefield success or visionary leadership, Munir's promotion is a desperate attempt by the military establishment to mask operational debacles, consolidate power amid domestic turmoil, and double down on a longstanding policy of hostility towards India.
A FIELD MARSHAL FORGED IN CRISIS, NOT VICTORY
Typically, the title of Field Marshal is bestowed upon generals who have steered their nations to historic victories or displayed exceptional strategic brilliance. Munir's ascent, however, comes at a moment when Pakistan's military credibility has been severely battered — owing to India's Operation Sindoor. Far from being a celebration of any triumph, his promotion is designed to shore up sagging morale within the ranks and distract the public into further disillusionment.
Pakistan today faces crises on multiple fronts — not only from external embarrassment but also from deep internal turmoil. The economy is under severe strain, insurgencies continue to simmer in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and the army's once-unquestioned authority is now challenged by the public. The jailing of former Prime Minister Imran Khan and the unrest that followed have only heightened the sense of instability. In this context, Munir's elevation is not a reward for merit but a manoeuvre to consolidate his personal authority and reinstate the military's grip on Pakistan's narrative.
His speeches, steeped in the controversial 'two-nation theory", have gone far beyond dog-whistles. Munir, a self-styled 'Hafiz-e-Quran", has used his religious credentials to bolster his authority and justify a hardline, divisive agenda. He has aggressively asserted an irreconcilable divide between Hindus and Muslims, and described Pakistan as the 'second state established on the Kalimah" after Medina. He has invoked religious slogans, declaring the army's motto as 'imaan, taqwa aur jihad fi Sabilillah" — a call to religious war that is both divisive and incendiary. Such rhetoric, reminiscent of hardline military rulers of the past like Zia-ul-Haq, is deployed not only to prey on communal fault lines but also to provide ideological cover for terrorist proxies.
This climate of incitement set the stage for the Pahalgam massacre, the most chilling recent example of Pakistan's cross-border terror strategy. The attack, executed by The Resistance Front (TRF) — a Lashkar-e-Toiba offshoot — was, according to Indian authorities and analysts, planned and directed with the support of Pakistan's security establishment. The deliberate targeting of Hindu tourists, the use of both Pakistani and local terrorists, and the TRF's open claim of responsibility all point to a calculated effort to inflame communal tensions and provoke a regional crisis. For Munir, manufacturing a crisis with India serves as a convenient rallying point to unite a fractured nation and distract from Pakistan's mounting domestic failures.
THE REALITY BEHIND THE RANKS
Beneath the surface of medals and titles, Pakistan's military leadership stands on shakier ground than its official narrative would have one believe. India's Operation Sindoor, launched in the aftermath of the Pahalgam terror attack, proved to be a swift and precise campaign that destroyed multiple terrorist camps and struck deep into Pakistani territory. Pakistan's attempts at retaliation, using drones and missiles, were decisively intercepted or neutralised by Indian defences. The confrontation concluded not with a Pakistani victory, but with Islamabad compelled to seek a ceasefire on India's terms.
This episode has marked a significant shift in the regional dynamic. For decades, Pakistan has wielded its nuclear arsenal as a shield of impunity, banking on the threat of escalation to deter any decisive Indian response to cross-border terrorism. Operation Sindoor, however, demonstrated a new resolve in New Delhi. India is no longer cowed down by nuclear blackmail, and is confident in responding with calibrated military action that exposes the vulnerabilities of Pakistan's conventional defences. This pushback has sent a clear message: India will not allow the nuclear shadow to be used as cover for terrorism.
Despite these setbacks, Pakistan's military — under Munir's direction — launched a propaganda blitz, staging victory parades and flooding the media with triumphalist narratives. The elevation of Munir to Field Marshal is the crowning moment of this campaign: a symbolic gesture aimed at projecting strength, even as the facts on the ground tell a story of strategic failure and diminished credibility.
Munir's self-promotion draws uncomfortable parallels with Pakistan's first Field Marshal, Ayub Khan, who conferred the title upon himself after the disastrous 1965 war with India. Much like Ayub, Munir's rise seems aimed not at celebrating any strategic success, but at reshaping the narrative surrounding military setbacks. However, there is a notable difference: while Ayub stepped back from direct military command, Munir retains both symbolic and operational control, further tightening the military's grip over Pakistan's political landscape.
The international community must realise that Munir's promotion is not a parochial affair. It is yet another reminder that Pakistan's military remains wedded to a doctrine of hostility and adventurism, rather than any constructive engagement. Munir's religiously-charged rhetoric, his willingness to provoke conflict, and his complicity in cross-border terrorism represent a disturbing trend.
India's measured yet resolute response to recent provocations has revealed the vulnerabilities of Pakistan's military and signalled that attacks on Indian civilians will not go unanswered. Rather than prompting reform or introspection in Rawalpindi, Munir's elevation suggests that Pakistan's generals are determined to cling to the old playbook of denial and deflection.
General Asim Munir's rise to Field Marshal is not a celebration of military excellence, but a symptom of a military and political system unable to confront its own failures. As long as provocation is rewarded and accountability evaded, the cycle of provocation and reprisal will persist.
Kamal Madishetty is a PhD Candidate in international politics at the Jawaharlal Nehru University. He tweets at @KamalMadishetty. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect News18's views.
Location :
New Delhi, India, India
First Published:
May 26, 2025, 17:02 IST
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