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Time of India
20-05-2025
- Politics
- Time of India
Bilawal Bhutto being used as a pawn against India? New, unexpected claims stir post-Pahalgam pot even as war fog settles
India-Pakistan war: Even as the fog of the post-Pahalgam war slowly settles on both sides of the border, a series of new, unexpected allegations have emerged to keep the India-Pakistan cauldron bubbling. Shafi Burfat , the Chairman of Jeay Sindh Muttahida Mahaz ( JSMM ), has issued a sharply critical statement saying that Pakistan's military elite is exploiting Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, Chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), to advance its geopolitical motives, news agency ANI reported on May 20. The 'Punjabi army and establishment' is using Bhutto to spearhead an anti-India campaign on the world stage, Burfat alleged. In a message shared on X, Burfat said Bilawal is being lured with aspirations of power, including the possibility of attaining the Prime Minister's office, in exchange for leading international diplomatic efforts against India. Play Video Pause Skip Backward Skip Forward Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration 0:00 Loaded : 0% 0:00 Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 1x Playback Rate Chapters Chapters Descriptions descriptions off , selected Captions captions settings , opens captions settings dialog captions off , selected Audio Track Picture-in-Picture Fullscreen This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Text Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Caption Area Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Drop shadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Prince William & Kate Met Princess Diana's Secret Daughter. Plays Star Undo Despite these offers, Burfat cautioned that such cooperation is short-lived, claiming that Bilawal is likely to meet the same tragic end as his grandfather, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, and his mother, Benazir Bhutto—both of whom died under suspicious and controversial conditions. He characterised this as a recurring betrayal rooted in a long-standing pattern by the Punjab-dominated military elite. Live Events Burfat further accused the PPP of consistently failing to uphold the true interests of Sindh or its people. According to him, the party functions primarily as a proxy for Punjab, prioritising the agenda of feudal elites rather than fighting for Sindhi autonomy or rights. He dismissed Bilawal as 'naive, power-obsessed, and lacking seriousness,' accusing him of echoing misleading propaganda about India in alignment with the Pakistani establishment. Additionally, Burfat highlighted the deep-rooted historical, spiritual, and cultural links that connect Sindh to India, outright rejecting the portrayal of India as a foe. He referred to India as a 'spiritual and cultural sister' of Sindh, emphasising that throughout history, Sindhis have regarded India as a friendly and cooperative neighbor. Going a step further, the JSMM leader charged Pakistan's military with serving as a destabilising force in the region, manipulated by foreign states such as China and Turkey for targeting India. He cited alleged instances of Pakistani involvement in violence, including acts in regions like Pahalgam , and strongly condemned what he described as the military's engagement in terrorism. Burfat also made it clear that Bilawal's actions on the global platform do not mirror the beliefs or desires of the Sindhi population. He urged world leaders, particularly those in India, to acknowledge this disparity and to understand that Sindhis do not endorse the anti-India rhetoric being disseminated by Pakistan's military and political elite. In his concluding remarks, Burfat reiterated a grim caution to Bilawal, asserting that the military establishment is using him as a pawn, just as it did with other members of the Bhutto family, who were ultimately eliminated. He condemned what he termed a 'vicious and deceptive tradition' upheld by Pakistan's ruling forces. "We Sindhis view India as our ally and neighbour. If the Punjabi-controlled establishment perceives India as a foe, that is their perspective—not ours," the news agency quoted Burfat as saying.


The Print
15-05-2025
- Politics
- The Print
Asim Munir is the first Punjabi general to attack India. It's sociologically important
The Punjabi advantage becomes that much more accentuated given that Gen Munir has a number of other firsts to his credit, and not all military. They add to his status in an Army dominated by his linguistic kin. Given Pakistan's military engagement with India during the recently conducted Operation Sindoor, Gen Munir has also become the first Pakistani COAS to have taken his country into conflict with all of its neighbours. GHQ Rawalpindi had earlier launched ground and aerial operations against Afghanistan and Iran. Attacks on India complete the circle. This is an extraordinary undertaking for someone who is just about halfway through his tenure. Gen Munir clearly came with an agenda and is making the most of his opportunity, uncaring about the larger consequences that are likely to come Pakistan's way, and its neighbours' way. General Asim Munir is the first Punjabi Army Chief to lead Pakistan into a conflict with India, but there's more to it. For an overwhelmingly Punjab-dominated Army in a largely Punjabi-speaking country, his command carries an extra gravitas, especially given the historical animosity with India. As does the fact that a large number of Punjabis in Pakistan are migrants from India, with memories of lands lost, estates vanished, lives uprooted, and haloed lifestyles recounted through misty mythologies of memory. Gen Asim Munir is also likely the first Punjabi-speaking Syed to head the Pakistan Army, sociologically deeply significant. Also read: What is Asim Munir thinking? Munir's many firsts Gen Munir attended a Rawalpindi seminary, possibly making him the first COAS to be madrasa educated. The number of firsts continued to grow as he progressed professionally, but all that after he got a commission from the Officers Training School (OTS) at Mangala in 1986, while Gen Zia ul Haq was still leading the country. He has won the coveted Sword of Honour and is the first COAS to have done so at OTS. Gen Munir was commissioned in 23 Frontier Force Regiment, which he subsequently commanded. During his posting to Saudi Arabia as a Lieutenant Colonel, he memorised the Quran. Which earned him the prefix of Hafiz. He is the first Pakistan Army Chief to have managed that achievement. It was clearly a sign of things to come, particularly for a higher-born Syed whose family was uprooted from Jalandhar in 1947. He served in Pakistan's Siachen Brigade as a Lt Col. He eventually worked his way up to GOC Force Command Northern Areas, deployed against India across Siachen and Kargil as well. The sight of India dominating the heights in Siachen and the Kargil sector Line of Control must have brutally revived those refugee memories from Jalandhar. Gen Munir moved down from the heights to occupy the office of Director General Military Intelligence and then Director General Inter-Services Intelligence. He is the first COAS to have occupied both appointments. Certainly, no one else has deeper insight into political, social and other permanent policies as practised by GHQ Rawalpindi. For a Saudi-qualified Hafiz, with a head full of memories, inherited from those who travelled across a hastily carved Punjab border, Gen Munir had the shortest tenure as DG-ISI. He reportedly fell out of favour with Imran Khan when he told the PM that his to-be wife had her hand in the till. Khan's days as PM were numbered; he was being watched by GHQ Rawalpindi. Dodgy elections and dodgier political manipulation meant that once blue-eyed Khan was out and the coalition Sharif government was in. The coalition gave an extension of service to Gen Asim Munir to make him Chief of Army Staff, and then amended the Pakistan Army Act to give him a five-year tenure. He's the first Army Chief to have been legislatively accorded a doubled tenure. He will remain in office till November 2027, giving him plenty of time to see his vision implemented. Also read: Pahalgam massacre has blown Pakistan's cover. Asim Munir turned the clock back Guided by memory Even as he wears military awards bestowed by Bahrain and Turkey, Gen Asim Munir clearly has a regional agenda. An agenda that has been shaped by Pakistan's politico-military history, and also the sectarian memories carried over the years by its leadership. And none more obvious than General Hafiz Syed Asim Munir Ahmad Shah, Chief of Army Staff, Pakistan. In his case, these memories, accumulated over centuries as the waters of Sutlej and Beas seasonally tore into valuable arable land, even as migrants from Afghanistan continued to flow into the Doaba, occupying dwindling agricultural lands. And all the while, Hindus and Sikhs seemed to grow bolder, in a distinctly Muslim pluralistic district of Jalandhar, from where such memories of resentment travelled into newly born Pakistan, stopping first in Toba Tek Singh and then settling in Rawalpindi. Gen Munir was born in 1968 in Rawalpindi, when the state and the army remained oblivious to the alarming downturn of events in East Pakistan. Pakistan was preening, given the perceived stalemate of the 1965 war with India, its romance with Washington once again on the upswing as the US wooed China. Syed Sarwar Munir, a principal of a technical school, saw his son Asim arrive in an uprooted Punjabi-speaking household, which, fueled by memory, easily found identifiable enemies to the east and west, Afghan, Hindu and Sikh. Jalandhar has given Pakistan another Chief of Army Staff, Gen Zia ul-Haq, the progenitor of politico-military jihad across both the Afghan and Indian borders. And like his fellow Doabi successor two generations later, Gen Zia also had a devout mosque going father. Gen Zia was born in Jalandhar and opted for the Pakistan Army after the Partition of India, whereas Gen Munir carries his origins only in memory form, not on his birth certificate. But the power of these memories are so intense that Gen Munir doesn't hesitate while telling Pakistani university students, 'When it comes to the safety and security of every single Pakistani, the whole of Afghanistan can be damned.' Afghanistan was the only country that opposed Pakistan's admission to the United Nations after independence, he said, adding that the problem is that 'our people do not read history'. History, as Gen Munir's example shows, creates its own vault of memories. He has repeatedly enunciated the storehouse of his inherited memories, sparing none, in the east or west. In the same carefully orchestrated interaction with students from public and private universities in Pakistan, Gen Munir revisited the idea of Pakistan based on the two-nation theory. Reminding them, 'If we want to adopt Western civilisation, then why did we get rid of Hindu civilisation?' he said. These statements providing a clear insight into his frame of mind were made in public platforms more than a year before he said those gratin, oft-repeated sectarian remarks, which preceded the ghastly Pahalgam attack of 22 April 2025. With half his tenure still to come, much can be expected from Gen Munir. Unlike some of his predecessors who rejected warlike words and even invited Indian journalists to Pakistan military formations, Gen Munir has been hawkish on the neighbourhood, and brutally dismissive about the calibre of politicians. Given Pakistan's political processes and precedents, anything is possible between the government that selected him as Army Chief and his ambitions. For now, Gen Munir remains unfazed as he chases down his memories. He's clearly carrying plenty of baggage, so the ceasefire may well be a pause, unless enforced politically. Manvendra Singh is a BJP leader, Editor-in-Chief of Defence & Security Alert and Chairman, Soldier Welfare Advisory Committee, Rajasthan. He is writing a book on the IPKF. He tweets @ManvendraJasol. Views are personal. (Edited by Theres Sudeep)