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Chief of Army Staff | General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.

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Services Chiefs exchange Eid greetings with Prime Minister - GEO.tv

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Services Chiefs exchange Eid greetings with Prime Minister ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister, Yusuf Raza Gilani exchanged Eid greetings with Services Chiefs.

Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee General Khalid ShamimWyne, Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, Chief of Air Staff Air Commodore Rao Qamar and Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Noman Bashir visited Prime Minister House to extend Eid greetings to the Prime Minister.
 
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Kayani to visit UK this month

Muhammad Saleh Zaafir

Monday, September 05, 2011


ISLAMABAD: The military ties between Pakistan and the United Kingdom would be thoroughly reviewed when Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani will be visiting the British capital in the last week of this month.

The British authorities have been playing extremely important role in ongoing war in Afghanistan and providing admirable assistance in removing difficulties arising in the course of conflict. The interaction between the commanders of the two forces could greatly help in improving the bilateral military relations but the possibility cannot be ruled out that the visit would act decisively in breaking the ice in Pak-US defence relationship.

The military leaders of Pakistan and the US had held a flurry of meetings few weeks ago aimed at easing tensions in bilateral ties, with the FO saying that Islamabad is trying to convert “strategic convergence” into gains for both countries. The ties continued to be affected by severe strains, as reflected in the US decision to suspend military aid worth US$800 million to Pakistan.
 
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Rawalpindi - September 7, 2011:
Chief of Army Staff (COAS), General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani visited Chitral and surrounding areas today.
His visit was in the backdrop of recent incidents wherein large number of Afghan terrorists attacked few posts of Chitral Scouts. The aggressors were pushed back successfully without resort to excessive force, to avoid civilian casualties on Afghan side.
COAS interacted with the troops and commended their bravery, steadfastness and restraint. He also met the tribal elders and appreciated their cooperation.
Earlier on arrival at Chitral COAS was received by Corps Commander Lieutenant General Asif Yasin Mali




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When was the last time a politician, an IG or DPO visit 'some' place?

Gari Baksh Larkana..... the damn thing is as regular and often as the Monday morning blues.
 
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When was the last time a politician, an IG or DPO visit 'some' place?

Gari Baksh Larkana..... the damn thing is as regular and often as the Monday morning blues.

This thread for is "official engagements of the COAS" only. Please stay on topic. Thank you.

Keep this thread for the news related to official engagements of the COAS,

For any kind of other / intelligent COAS related news, you can open a new thread and start expressing your views, the intelligent ones and criticize as much as you like.

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September 08, 2011

Pakistan's Military Pays High Price in War on Terrorism

Ayaz Gul | Islamabad

The United States and its NATO allies have been fighting terrorism in Afghanistan since the terror attacks on New York and Washington in 2001, losing almost 3,000 fighters in the process. But there is another front in the battle against the Taliban and al Qaida -- along the Afghanistan-Pakistan frontier. And despite tensions with Washington over how to conduct the battle, Pakistani officials say their military forces have suffered more casualties than the U.S. and its allies.



Wounded warriors

Captain Kalimullah Khan’s unit was preparing to set up a hilltop outpost in northwestern Pakistan, near the Afghan border, when he stepped on a landmine planted by the Taliban.

The Pakistani soldier knew he had lost a leg. His other leg was so badly damaged it was later amputated.

“Actually, we had to build a blocking position somewhere on the hilltops," he recalls. "While establishing that blocking position I met with this injury and after that I was fully conscious till the time I was given anesthesia in hospital.”

Khan has been at the Armed Forces Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine in Rawalpindi since January.

Major General Waheed Akbar is the institute's director. He says the facility has its own psychological treatment centers, its own speech therapy units and even a workshop that makes artificial limbs.

“And we have treated thousands of patients, thousands of patients, who are disabled," he says. "Presently there is probably a shortage of specialists and technicians, but gradually we are training them and I think in another two, three years we will have plenty of staff.”

Life after war

Naik Azam suffered a gunshot wound in a Taliban ambush and is paralyzed from the waist down.

"God willing, one day these miscreants will retreat and ultimately our military and the government will emerge victorious in this war," he says.

Pakistani officials say the military has suffered more than 13,000 casualties in the U.S.-led fight against terrorism since 2001, including 3,000 dead.

Captain Bilal Sunawar is one of those who died. His sister Lubna Sunawar, says he volunteered for deployment even though his critically-ill mother was in the hospital.

"He was a brave and courageous officer and he proved that," she says, proudly.

Determination

Captain Sunawar's father, Chaudhry Muhammad Sunawar, is a former army officer. He says the Pakistani military's determination to defeat the Taliban is unshaken. He says the extremists are using Islam to terrorize the population and weaken the state.

“They don’t know anything about Islam and they are indulging in such like butchery, killing innocent people by carrying out bomb blasts and otherwise fighting with the Pakistani army,” he says.

Even wounded, these soldiers are ready to continue to fight to rid their homeland of extremism and militancy.

“I am very spirited from the very first day. Now I am more spirited even. [If] I am able to walk there again; I will not hesitate to go there again,” he says.

As these wounded soldiers struggle to rebuild their shattered lives, military commanders hope better combat tactics being adopted now will help reduce the human cost in Pakistan’s fight against terrorism.
 
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Dear Mr Fatman.

Please shed some light if possible on

1. Where will Kiyani live post retirement
2. Kiyani's brother
3. Babar Awan --Kiyani relationship.

Regards
 
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Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani presiding over the 142nd Corps Commander’s Conference held at General Headquarters Rawalpindi today. (08-09-2011) – Photo ISPR
 
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Dear Mr Fatman.

Please shed some light if possible on

1. Where will Kiyani live post retirement
2. Kiyani's brother
3. Babar Awan --Kiyani relationship.

Regards

Kiyani will live in DHA pindi post retirement.

which brother, the maj. or the brig.

babar awan is a nobody when it comes to the army, he only holds leverage on zardari and hence ppp
 
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Date Posted: 09-Sep-2011


Al-Qaeda arrest 'points to warming US-Pakistan relations'

Farhan Bokhari JDW Correspondent - Islamabad

Additional reporting by

James Hardy Asia-Pacific Editor - London



Key Points
US and Pakistani officials have said that the arrest of a senior Al-Qaeda operative is a sign that security co-operation has resumed between the two countries

Pakistan cut security ties with the US following its unilateral raid to kill Osama bin Laden in the northern Pakistani city of Abbottabad in May




Pakistan and the United States have quietly resumed intelligence-sharing co-operation and are actively discussing ways to rebuild the military co-operation that was curtailed in May after US special forces killed Osama bin Laden in the northern Pakistani city of Abbottabad, high-ranking Pakistani and Western defence and security officials have told this corrospondent .

Tangible evidence on the resumption of intelligence and possible military co-operation came on 5 May when Pakistan Army and US officials revealed the arrest of Sheikh Younis al-Mauritani, a high-level Al-Qaeda militant, outside the western Pakistani city of Quetta. Significantly, both sides confirmed that the arrest had been carried out in a joint operation by US and Pakistani intelligence services.

Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) agency, which is run by the country's army, took the lead for the Pakistani side. "The ISI and the CIA jointly carried out this arrest," a Pakistani security official told this corrospondent . "The collaboration was done in a highly professional manner and there were virtually no glitches in meeting the objectives of this operation."

A senior Western defence official based in Islamabad said: "The arrest of al-Mauritani is a trendsetter for similar operations to be carried out jointly in times to come. Pakistan and the United States have bridged their deep differences and collaboration is now the buzz word."

Army Chief of Staff General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani responded to the Bin Laden raid - which occurred without Pakistan's knowledge - by ordering at least 120 US military trainers to leave the country.

At the time, US officials said they had not told their Pakistani counterparts about the raid due to concerns that news of it would be leaked to Islamic militants, including Al-Qaeda activists. Elements within the ISI and Pakistan Army are suspected of being sympathetic to some Islamic militant groups, which they consider to be assets for use in Afghanistan and the Indian-controlled area of Kashmir.

However, the Pakistani security official said the US questions over suspected gaps in Pakistan's security apparatus had been satisfied. "The Americans have been told that if they were to share sensitive information at the top levels of our intelligence and armed forces networks, that will never be compromised," he said.

"Under the new understanding, the US and Pakistan have quietly agreed to work together once again. The Americans recognise that they can't meet their objectives in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region without our support."

ANALYSIS

The arrest of Sheikh Younis al-Mauritani and the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks reinforce the importance to the US of security co-operation with countries like Pakistan that are home to Islamist groups and others intent on launching terrorist attacks against Western nations.

The anniversary of the attacks on the US mainland also serves to highlight the major change in security priorities for Washington over the past 10 years - and the convoluted relationship it has had with Islamabad since the mid-1960s.

Pakistani mistrust of US intentions has existed since the 1965 war with India, when the US failed to fulfil its obligations under the 1959 Agreement of Co-operation by not supporting Islamabad against its southern neighbour.

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 gave the two countries a reason to rebuild ties, however, and by the late 1980s the US had promised over USD7 billion to Pakistan in military and economic aid. The USSR's withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1988 coincided with developments in Islamabad's nuclear programme and led Washington's ardour to cool.

Pakistan's 1998 nuclear test further hardened US policy and US Foreign Military Sales to Pakistan were completely cut in 1999 when General Pervez Musharraf overthrew the elected government of Nawaz Sharif.

Post-9/11, Washington brought Pakistan in from the cold and embraced it as a major ally in the 'War on Terror'. It is undeniable that Gen Musharraf's support for the US war effort in Afghanistan has earned Pakistan substantial military aid - materiel worth USD10 billion since 2001 - and the lifting of economic sanctions.

However, US pressure on Pakistan to clamp down on Islamist groups has led to the deaths of thousands of Pakistani troops and civilians, while the CIA's not-so-covert campaign of targeted killings using armed unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) has undermined Islamabad's authority even as it quietly supports the air strikes.

Pakistan remains suspicious of US intentions and regularly contrasts the relationship with China's 'all-weather friendship'. The Bin Laden raid and its fallout brought this into sharp relief, although Pakistan's attempts to cosy up to its eastern ally were treated with a certain amount of detachment by Beijing.

Its suggestion that China build a naval base on its Arabian Sea coast was quietly ignored by Beijing, which has so far resisted Islamabad's slightly clumsy attempts to play it off against Washington.

The drawdown of US forces in Afghanistan and their eventual combat withdrawal in 2014 will probably alleviate US-Pakistan tensions. However, the reduction in US interests in Afghanistan also risks restarting the cycle of neglect and self-interested intervention that has characterised US policy towards Pakistan since ties were first established.
 
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NATO commander meets Pakistan army chief



Islamabad, Sep 9 (IANS) The commander of the NATO International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan has met Pakistan’s army chief and discussed with him ways to improve regional security, the US embassy here said Friday.

Gen. John R. Allen met Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani during his visit to Pakistan Thursday and Friday. He also met US embassy staff and received updates on the US security assistance mission to Pakistan, Xinhua reported quoting an embassy spokesman.

This was Allen’s first visit to Pakistan as the ISAF commander.

Allen visited the 11th Corps headquarters in Peshawar and discussed security near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, the spokesman said.

Sources said Pakistan took up with the NATO commander the issue of attacks on its border check-posts by Taliban from Afghanistan.

Nearly 300 militants attacked seven check-posts in the border district of Chitral in August and killed at least 27 Pakistani security men. Pakistan lodged a formal protest with the Afghan envoy.

Taliban also kidnapped a group of Pakistani boys from Bajaur tribal region while they were on a picnic during Eid. Pakistani Taliban leader Maulvi Dadullah showed some of the kidnapped boys to a group of Afghan journalists in Kunar earlier this week.
 
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Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani pinning the badge to a Chitral Scouts Jawan during his visit at Chitral today. (07-09-2011) – Photo ISPR

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Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani meeting with Chitral Scouts troops during his visit at Chitral today. (07-09-2011) – Photo ISPR

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Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani meeting with notables during his visit at Chitral today. (07-09-2011) – Photo ISPR
 
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