Latest news with #NSA-level


Time of India
26-05-2025
- Politics
- Time of India
NSA Ajit Doval pulls out of Moscow security meet due to seasonal flu: Report
NEW DELHI: India's National Security Adviser (NSA) Ajit Doval will not participate in the 13th International Meeting of High Representatives for Security Issues scheduled in Moscow from May 27 to 29, PTI reported, citing sources on Monday. According to officials, Doval was slated to attend the key multilateral security forum hosted by Russia but had to withdraw due to a seasonal flu. 'He is, however, unable to participate in the meeting due to indisposition with a seasonal flu,' sources said, adding that the NSA looks forward to early bilateral engagements with Russia on strategic and security matters, reported PTI. His absence comes after earlier reports had indicated that Doval was expected to travel to Russia this week for the event. During his last visit to Russia for the BRICS NSA-level meeting in St Petersburg in 2024, Doval met Russian President Vladimir Putin. A statement from the Russian Embassy in India at the time highlighted the significance of the Indo-Russian strategic partnership. 'President Putin noted the successful development of the Special and Privileged Strategic Partnership between India and Russia and stressed the importance of security issues in bilateral relations,' the embassy had said. On the sidelines of the BRICS meeting, Doval also held a bilateral meeting with Sergei Shoigu, Secretary of the Russian Federation's Security Council. The Russian Embassy had described India as one of Moscow's 'main like-minded partners,' emphasizing a 'multi-level trust-based political dialogue' between the two countries. Shoigu had stated that 'New Delhi is one of Moscow's main like-minded partners in the world arena,' and noted that both nations continue to jointly address global security challenges. While Ajit Doval's absence from this week's Moscow meet is seen as a temporary setback, both sides have signaled continued cooperation on security and strategic matters in the near future.


Time of India
01-05-2025
- Politics
- Time of India
Asim Malik appointed Pakistan's National Security Advisor: How it shifts the power balance to the military
Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Pakistan army chief Gen Asim Munir has taken firm control over civilian authority with the first appointment of a serving military general, in this case DG ISI Lt Gen Asim Malik , as Pakistan's national security adviser . Put simply, the Pakistan NSA will follow the DG ISI's military chain of command and report directly to the army appointment has weakened the office of Pakistan PM Shehbaz Sharif , who now stands like a pale shadow of the power his predecessor Imran Khan wielded. NSA's office was vacant since 2022 when Moeed Yusuf, a scholar who was picked for the post by Khan, moved placing the serving DG ISI as NSA, the first message Munir has conveyed externally is that the army is now in control and will be the point of contact for all security and related conversions for all foreign governments. Importantly, NSA-level talks and intelligence community conversations will converge under one military office. So, for instance, the US NSA, DNI and CIA chief will have to deal with problem is that earlier NSA used to report to the Pakistan PM. Now, Malik, while working under the legal and constitutional cover of Sharif's office, will report to Munir. Both officers are known to have worked closely with each other in the bitter fight with Imran who was DG ISI when the Pulwama attack took place, was replaced within eight months of being in office by Khan. He shared a bitter relationship with his successor Lt Gen (retd) Faiz Hameed, seen as a Khan loyalist in the military, and against whom Munir found a willing collaborator in was Malik, who as adjutant general, probed the riots which followed Imran Khan's arrest in which many civilians were tried in military courts. He was the one who launched court martial proceedings on graft charges against Hameed and oversaw the entire other message is that Pakistan's entire security decision-making apparatus is now fully in the army's grip. Between Munir and Malik, they will now ensure that the Pakistan PM's role in framing defence, security and, to an extent, economic policies is made best, Sharif will now run a front office while Munir will take all critical decisions in his role of NSA in Pakistan has evolved over the years into one which keeps the balance between the civilian office and the military power centre. It was through this office that Pakistan's leadership has also engaged India in backchannel talks - whether it was Tariq Aziz in the past or Nasir Khan Janjua, who was in touch with NSA Ajit Doval, in the initial years after PM Narendra Modi came to the appointment of a serving officer as NSA, this balance has shifted decisively in favour of Rawalpindi. This is in line with the overall shift Munir has tried to effect over the past few months, bringing Kashmir back on centre stage and modeling his approach on Zia-ul-Haq who had said the military's responsibility was not only "safeguarding the countries territorial integrity but also its ideological frontiers", a sentiment the Pakistan army chief echoed in his provocative address to overseas rise in the post-Khan era has been quite dramatic. He was to retire on November 27, 2024, while his predecessor had until November 29 in office. As an exception, he was promoted three days before his retirement on November 24, resulting in an unprecedented situation where Pakistan army had two four-star generals at the same time.A product of the Officers Training School, Mangla, Munir is not the elite officer category, a tag associated with those who are from the Long Course in Pakistan Military Academy, Kakul. The OTS was created to address officer shortage in the army and was shut down in 1990. Not many officers from OTS make it to senior ranks, which are dominated by PMA on the other hand, is from the top military elite. A sword of honour from PMA Long Course with a doctorate in US-Pakistan relations, Malik provides Munir with the ideal cover as he seeks to consolidate his rise within the system and now the polity, by increasing risks on Kashmir and ratcheting Islamic extremism in dangerous times.