Illustration by Abro
Being an army chief in Pakistan has always meant being more than just a senior general in charge of a military. Almost 33 years out of Pakistan’s 71 have been superintended by military rule. In a lengthy essay in the August 1972 issue of The Left Review, the social scientist Hamza Alavi demonstrates how, at the time of its creation, the only established state institution Pakistan inherited was the army.
Alavi explains that, in August 1947, Pakistan lacked economic resources and political institutions, but inherited an established military from the retreating British colonialists. Pakistan struggled to develop civilian political institutions; its military was the only organised state entity to resolve issues triggered by political conflicts between “underdeveloped civilian bodies”.
Therefore almost every Pakistani military chief has brought something more to the table than what he was expected to. Pakistan’s first military chief was a high-ranking British army man, Gen Frank Messervy. He made his presence felt almost immediately. H.V. Hodson, in his 1969 book The Great Divide, writes that when then governor of the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), George Cunningham, informed Messervy that the chief minister of NWFP, Abdul Qayyum Khan, was preparing tribal Pakhtun men for a clandestine invasion of India-held Kashmir, Messervy approached Muhammad Ali Jinnah and asked him to restrain Qayyum Khan.
Does military influence deter the maturing of political institutions or propel the country to take steps that politicians refuse?
Messervy retired in February 1948, and was replaced by another British military man, Gen Douglas Gracey. Though picked by Jinnah, some historians believe that, like Messervy, he, too, deterred Jinnah from sending troops inside Kashmir. However, Maj Gen Wajahat Hussain, in his 2010 book Memories of a Soldier: 1947, Before, During, After, writes that this was a latter-day concoction and that Gracey actually did much to organise Pakistan’s regular troops on the Kashmir border.
The ‘misperception’ may have been proliferated by Maj Gen Akbar Khan. Hussain writes that Akbar and Gracey were at loggerheads. In his 1975 biography Raiders in Kashmir, Akbar comes across as someone who wasn’t happy about the manner in which Gracey had conducted the Kashmir operation.
Akbar was arrested in early 1951 for planning a coup against Liaquat Ali Khan’s government. According to Hasan Zaheer’s 1998 book The Rawalpindi Conspiracy, Akbar, along with 11 other military officers and at least four members of the Communist Party of Pakistan, were hauled up and charged for planning to overthrow the government.
Gracey was eased out in January 1951 and replaced by Ayub Khan, the first Pakistani military chief of the country who then became commander-in-chief (C-in-C). The new C-in-C was active in ‘advising’ the many prime ministers who came and went till 1958. In late 1958, Ayub Khan installed the country’s first military rule through a coup.
The causes of the coup, Ayub claimed, were growing corruption, political instability and ‘the peddling of Islam for political gains by the politicians.’
Ayub Khan proclaimed himself Field Marshal and got himself ‘elected’ as president. He made Gen Muhammad Musa the new military chief. Ayub’s ‘modernist’ regime was largely popular until Pakistan went to war with India in 1965. Gen Musa remained entirely loyal to the government.
In September 1966, Musa retired and was replaced by Gen Yahya Khan as army chief. As the effects of the war began to impact the economy, Ayub’s regime began to face rising opposition. In March 1969, Yahya nudged Ayub to resign.