Ser Name at C&SC Image 1. General Sir Andrew Skeen, KCB, CMG

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Ser Name at C&SC Image 1. General Sir Andrew Skeen, KCB, CMG Ser Name At C&SC Image 1. General Sir Andrew Skeen, KCB, Directing Staff: 21-1-1912 to 15- CMG 9-1914 Senior Instructor: Jan 1912 to Sep 1914 2. Field Marshal Sir Archibald Directing Staff: 9-9-1912 to 18- Armar Montgomery 12-1913 3. Field Marshal B.L. Viscount Directing Staff: 6-6-1934 to 28- Montgomery of Alamein, DSO 6-1937 Senior Instructor: (Jnr Div) 1934 (Snr Div) 1935-37 Ser Name At C&SC Image 4. General Sir Alan F Hartley, GC Directing Staff: 21-12-1924 to Sir, CB, DSO 31-12-1926 5. Field Marshal Sir Claude Directing Staff: 1-2-1930 to 31- Auchinleck, GCIE, CSI, DSO,OBE 8-1932 Senior Instructor: (Snr Div) 1930-32 6. General Sir Brodie Haig, KCB, Directing Staff: 26-10-1922 to MC 20-2-1923 Commandant: 28-4-1937 to 15- 3-1940 Ser Name At C&SC Image 7. General Sir Douglas Gracey, Directing Staff: 7-2-1940 to 9-5- KCB, KCIE, CB, MC 1941 2nd C in C Pakistan Army Assistant Commandant: Feb (11 Feb 1948 – 16 Jan 1951) 1940 to May 1941 8. General Sir Bernard Charles Directing Staff: 18-12-1931 to Tolver Paget, GCB, DSO, MC 05-06-1934 Senior Instructor: (Snr Div) Sep 1932 to Jun 1934 9. General Frank Walter Messervy Directing Staff: 1-9-1932 to 17- First C in C Pakistan Army 10-1935 (15 Aug 1947 – 10 Feb 1948) Ser Name At C&SC Image 10. General Joyanto Nath Chaudhuri, Directing Staff: 26-1-1943 to 12- OBE 6-1944 11. Field Marshal Hormusji Framji Directing Staff: 25-11-1944 to Jamshedji Manekshaw, MC 10-11-1945 12. General Hamid Khan Directing Staff: 6-11-1945 to 3- 7-1947 Ser Name At C&SC Image 13. General Gopal Gurunath Bewoor Directing Staff: 1-6-1947 to 13- 6-1947 14. General Agha Muhammad Yahya Directing Staff: 3-7-1947 to 5- Khan, HJ 12-1948 15. General Muhammad Iqbal Khan Directing Staff: 6-8-1965 to 8-9- 1965 24-9-1968 to 5-11-1969 Ser Name At C&SC Image 16. General Muhammad Zia Ul Haq Directing Staff: 25-4-1964 to 9- 9-1965 17. General Sawar Khan, RPA Directing Staff: 9-6-1965 to 6-9- 1965 18. General Abdul Waheed Directing Staff: 30-11-1974 to 30-7-1977 Ser Name At C&SC Image 19. General Jehangir Karamat Directing Staff: 12-10-1976 to 25-7-1979 20. General Pervez Musharraf Directing Staff: 13-5-1979 to 15- 7-1981 21. General Muhammad Yusaf Khan Directing Staff: 13-4-1985 to 25- 6-1987 Senior Instructor: 1986 Ser Name At C&SC Image 22. General Ahsan Saleem Hyat Directing Staff: 23-1-1985 to 23- 3-1988 Chief Instructor: May 1992 to Jul 1994 23. General Tariq Majorid Directing Staff: 12-8-1989 to 18- 7-1991 24. General Khalid Shameem Wynne Directing Staff: 1-12-1990 to 19- 9-1993 Ser Name At C&SC Image 25. General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani Directing Staff: 2-9-1988 to 30- 5-1990 24. General Rashad Mahmood Directing Staff: 20-10-1994 to 22-7-1997 25. General Raheel Sharif Directing Staff: 13-10-1995 to 25-7-1998 Ser Name At C&SC Image 26. General Qamar Javad Bajwa Directing Staff: 02-08-1998 to 12-01-2001 27. General Nadeem Raza Directing Staff: 24-7-2003 to 24- 6-2005 .
Recommended publications
  • GOVT-PUNJAB Waitinglist Nphs.Pdf
    WAITING LIST SUMMARY DATE & TIME 20-04-2021 02:21:11 PM BALLOT CATEGORY GOVT-PUNJAB TOTAL WAITING APPLICANTS 8711 WAITING LIST OF APPLICANTS S No. Receipt ID Applicant Name Father Name CNIC 1 27649520 SHABAN ALI MUHAMMAD ABBAS ADIL 3520106922295 2 27649658 Waseem Abbas Qalab Abbas 3520113383737 3 27650644 Usman Hiader Sajid Abbasi 3650156358657 4 27651140 Adil Baig Ghulam Sarwar 3520240247205 5 27652673 Nadeem Akhtar Muhammad Mumtaz 4220101849351 6 27653461 Imtiaz Hussain Zaidi Shasmshad Hussain Zaidi 3110116479593 7 27654564 Bilal Hussain Malik tasadduq Hussain 3640261377911 8 27658485 Zahid Nazir Nazir Ahmed 3540173750321 9 27659188 Muhammad Bashir Hussain Muhammad Siddique 3520219305241 10 27659190 IFTIKHAR KHAN SHER KHAN 3520226475101 ------------------- ------------------- ------------------- ------------------- Director Housing-XII (LDAC NPA) Director Finance Director IT (I&O) Chief Town Planner Note: This Ballot is conducted by PITB on request of DG LDA. PITB is not responsible for any data Anomalies. Ballot Type: GOVT-PUNJAB Date&time : Tuesday, Apr 20, 2021 02:21 PM Page 1 of 545 WAITING LIST OF APPLICANTS S No. Receipt ID Applicant Name Father Name CNIC 11 27659898 Maqbool Ahmad Muhammad Anar Khan 3440105267405 12 27660478 Imran Yasin Muhammad Yasin 3540219620181 13 27661528 MIAN AZIZ UR REHMAN MUHAMMAD ANWAR 3520225181377 14 27664375 HINA SHAHZAD MUHAMMAD SHAHZAD ARIF 3520240001944 15 27664446 SAIRA JABEEN RAZA ALI 3110205697908 16 27664597 Maded Ali Muhammad Boota 3530223352053 17 27664664 Muhammad Imran MUHAMMAD ANWAR 3520223937489
    [Show full text]
  • Dialogue and Denuclearisation Still in Search of Direction
    150 The First and Only ISO 9001:2015 Certified Defence and Security Magazine in India MARCH 2018 The Only Magazine Available On The Intranets Of IAF & BSF VOLUME 9 ISSUE 06 DIALOGUE AND DENUCLEARISATION STILL IN SEARCH OF DIRECTION editor’s note DSA IS AS MUCH YOURS, AS IT IS OURS! he world, being so of political developments across Political plates are shifting in the interconnected and the world that they resonate for two countries, and India must be globalised, as it is, longer, over a wider impact area, seen to be heard. And, it must there isn’t much that and ask more serious questions also be perceived to be doing happens anywhere than they answer. This is the something active. Vacating space Twhich doesn’t impact elsewhere greatest challenge facing 21st isn’t an option any more. Though, and everywhere. It isn’t simply the century society. reactions needn’t be along weather that makes the world so predictable lines of yore. interdependent, but everything India doesn’t live in isolation and else that is manmade. From is as connected globally as any Nepal and Maldives are technology, to manmade political other country. Political events in developments that come as events; each has a bearing on neighbouring countries, or far- challenges, and at the same time, the other, across the world. And away lands, are as important as provide opportunities for India the speed at which the impact they’ve ever been. Each posits to assume a role bigger than it happens is in itself staggering. So, questions, and, demands answers has hitherto played.
    [Show full text]
  • February 11, 2017
    Page 4 February 11, 2017 (1) Loya Jirga... in terms of the often-difficult U.S. rela- Kaine promised pursuing in Congress tion between US aid to Pakistan and its fruit market and can earn on average youngest son would go to school in Pa- tionship with Pakistan, long seen as a plans of State and Defense Departments actions against terrorist networks. 300 afghanis (around 4.5 U.S. dollars) a kistan, but now all were out of school. been done and the second is parliamen- haven for insurgents from the Taliban, to equip Afghan forces. (Pajhwok) Senator Richard Blumenthal called day. That money is “too little to proper- The children go a religious school only. tary and district council election, a pro- the Haqqani network and other militant (8) IEC States ... for more pressure on Pakistan. “Are ly support” the seven-member family, (Pajhwok) cess under work,” he said. Islamist groups. we doing enough to bring pressure to especially if someone gets ill. However, he said two committees had “Our complex relationship with Paki- spring. The commission is taking prepa- bear on the Pakistani government to Some 750 internally displaced families (26)Kabul Addicts ... been created to work with the interna- stan is best assessed through a holistic rations and the outline for holding elec- be more aggressive and active because have been living in the kind of make- the dogs carry diseases. tional community to resolve insecurity review,” Nicholson said. Addressing tions is almost final,” Sayyad said. my understanding is that the materials shift camps as Ghubar, head of the The chairman of the Kabul drug rehabil- problem during elections.
    [Show full text]
  • Pakistan: Death Plot Against Human Rights Lawyer, Asma Jahangir
    UA: 164/12 Index: ASA 33/008/2012 Pakistan Date: 7 June 2012 URGENT ACTION DEATH PLOT AGAINST HUMAN RIGHTS LAWYER Leading human rights lawyer and activist Asma Jahangir fears for her life, having just learned of a plot by Pakistan’s security forces to kill her. Killings of human rights defenders have increased over the last year, many of which implicate Pakistan’s Inter- Service Intelligence agency (ISI). On 4 June, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) alerted Amnesty International to information it had received of a plot by Pakistan’s security forces to kill HRCP founder and human rights lawyer Asma Jahangir. As Pakistan’s leading human rights defender, Asma Jahangir has been threatened many times before. However news of the plot to kill her is altogether different. The information available does not appear to have been intentionally circulated as means of intimidation, but leaked from within Pakistan’s security apparatus. Because of this, Asma Jahangir believes the information is highly credible and has therefore not moved from her home. Please write immediately in English, Urdu, or your own language, calling on the Pakistan authorities to: Immediately provide effective security to Asma Jahangir. Promptly conduct a full investigation into alleged plot to kill her, including all individuals and institutions suspected of being involved, including the Inter-Services Intelligence agency. Bring to justice all suspected perpetrators of attacks on human rights defenders, in trials that meet international fair trial standards and
    [Show full text]
  • Group Identity and Civil-Military Relations in India and Pakistan By
    Group identity and civil-military relations in India and Pakistan by Brent Scott Williams B.S., United States Military Academy, 2003 M.A., Kansas State University, 2010 M.M.A., Command and General Staff College, 2015 AN ABSTRACT OF A DISSERTATION submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Security Studies College of Arts and Sciences KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY Manhattan, Kansas 2019 Abstract This dissertation asks why a military gives up power or never takes power when conditions favor a coup d’état in the cases of Pakistan and India. In most cases, civil-military relations literature focuses on civilian control in a democracy or the breakdown of that control. The focus of this research is the opposite: either the returning of civilian control or maintaining civilian control. Moreover, the approach taken in this dissertation is different because it assumes group identity, and the military’s inherent connection to society, determines the civil-military relationship. This dissertation provides a qualitative examination of two states, Pakistan and India, which have significant similarities, and attempts to discern if a group theory of civil-military relations helps to explain the actions of the militaries in both states. Both Pakistan and India inherited their military from the former British Raj. The British divided the British-Indian military into two militaries when Pakistan and India gained Independence. These events provide a solid foundation for a comparative study because both Pakistan’s and India’s militaries came from the same source. Second, the domestic events faced by both states are similar and range from famines to significant defeats in wars, ongoing insurgencies, and various other events.
    [Show full text]
  • Final Merit List of 16 Years Education System Phase 5 (2018)
    Final Merit List of 16 Years Education System Phase 5 (2018) Full Name Father Name CNIC Gender Degree Title Department Campus CGPA Student Selection Status Junaid Saleem Muhammad Saleem 6110176669439 Male M.Com (16 Year) Commerce Islamabad 2.79 Not Selected KAMRAN RIZWAN RIZWAN ULLAH 3740537023115 Male M.Com (16 Year) Commerce Islamabad 3.42 Selected Student Noman Ahmed Saeed Ahmed 4210155227507 Male BS (Hons) Commerce Islamabad 3.08 Not Selected Second Merit List Selected Imama Nasri Muhammad Aslam Nasri 3820188246910 Female M.Com (16 Year) Commerce Islamabad 3.33 Student Ghulam Muhammad Ejaz Ahmed 7110188882123 Male BS (Hons) International Relations Main campus 3.12 Not Selected Iftikhar Ahmed Khan Muhammad Shabbir Khan 4220183091735 Male BS (Hons) Computer Science Islamabad 3.08 Not Selected Arslan Ali Ch Shoukat Ali 3720194435619 Male BS (Hons) Computer Science Islamabad 3.02 Selected Student Second Merit List Selected Abdul Basit Qureshi Javed Iqbal 4220162871209 Male BS (Hons) Environmental Sciences Main campus 3.04 Student Zain ul Abidin Muhammad Rafi 3740503514433 Male M.Com (16 Year) Commerce Islamabad 2.18 Not Selected Nadeem Akram Muhammad Akram 6110119010269 Male LLB 5.0 Law Islamabad 2.53 Not Selected Umair khan Abdul Qayyum khan 4220170397469 Male BBA Business Administration Main campus 3.58 Not Selected ujala batool muhammad arif 4200069925050 Female BS (Hons) Microbiology Main campus 3.81 Not Selected Moheen Muhammad Saeed 1310138330267 Male BS (Hons) Economics Main campus 3.06 Not Selected Ambar Ali Said Wazir Shah 1510104736347
    [Show full text]
  • The Professionalisation of the Indonesian Military
    The Professionalisation of the Indonesian Military Robertus Anugerah Purwoko Putro A thesis submitted to the University of New South Wales In fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Humanities and Social Sciences July 2012 STATEMENTS Originality Statement I hereby declare that this submission is my own work and to the best of my knowledge it contains no materials previously published or written by another person, or substantial proportions of material which have been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma at UNSW or any other educational institution, except where due acknowledgement is made in the thesis. Any contribution made to the research by others, with whom I have worked at UNSW or elsewhere, is explicitly acknowledged in the thesis. I also declare that the intellectual content of this thesis is the product of my own work, except to the extent that assistance from others in the project's design and conception or in style, presentation and linguistic expression is acknowledged. Copyright Statement I hereby grant to the University of New South Wales or its agents the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all property rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation. Authenticity Statement I certify that the Library deposit digital copy is a direct equivalent of the final officially approved version of my thesis.
    [Show full text]
  • Is John Brennan Shaping Pakistan’S New
    IS JOHN BRENNAN SHAPING PAKISTAN’S NEW COUNTERTERRORISM PROGRAM? There are now multiple reports (one of the earliest is here) that while the world was concentrating on a number of pressing developments in the Ukraine and elsewhere last week, John Brennan slipped into Pakistan to pay a quiet visit. The visit seems to me to cap a series of developments that have taken place over the last few months to put into place a counterterrorism program in Pakistan that seems modeled on the US plan. Almost exactly a month ago, I had wondered whether Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was making a play for US counterterrorism funds that would become available as the US withdraws its troops from Afghanistan. Pakistan Today has a summary of the series of meetings that has brought us to this point: After a nearly three-year long freeze Pak-US relations are on the mend once again. Secretary of State John Kerry’s visit to Islamabad paved way for Nawaz Sharif’s meeting with President Obama. In December, Pentagon Chief Chuck Hagel was in Pakistan where he also met the new COAS Gen Sharif. The prime minister’s meeting with President Obama in October was followed by a flurry of visits by civilian and military leaders from both sides. Important federal ministers including Sartaj Aziz, Ahsan Iqbal, Khwaja Asif and Shahid Khqan Abbasi have made several trips to Washington to discuss energy, trade and security related issues. During the last four weeks CENTOM Commander General Lloyd J Austin visited Islamabad to hold talks with COAS Gen Sharif and CJCSC Rashad Mahmood.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter – April 2008
    Newsletter – April 2008 Syed Yousaf Raza Gillani sworn in as Hon. Dr Fahmida Mirza takes her seat th 24 Prime Minister of Pakistan as Pakistan’s first woman Speaker On 24 March Syed Yousaf A former doctor made history Raza Gillani was elected in Pakistan on 19 March by as the Leader of the becoming the first woman to House by the National be elected Speaker in the Assembly of Pakistan and National Assembly of the next day he was Pakistan. Fahmida Mirza won sworn in as the 24th 249 votes in the 342-seat Lower House of parliament. Prime Minister of Pakistan. “I am honoured and humbled; this chair carries a big Born on 9 June 1952 in responsibility. I am feeling that responsibility today and Karachi, Gillani hails from will, God willing, come up to expectations.” Multan in southern Punjab and belongs to a As Speaker, she is second in the line of succession to prominent political family. His grandfather and the President and occupies fourth position in the Warrant grand-uncles joined the All India Muslim League of Precedence, after the President, the Prime Minister and were signatories of the historical Pakistan and the Chairman of Senate. Resolution passed on 23 March 1940. Mr Gillani’s father, Alamdar Hussain Gillani served as a Elected three times to parliament, she is one of the few Provincial Minister in the 1950s. women to have been voted in on a general seat rather than one reserved for women. Mr Yousaf Raza Gillani joined politics at the national level in 1978 when he became a member Fahmida Mirza 51, hails from Badin in Sindh and has of the Muslim League’s central leadership.
    [Show full text]
  • Who Is Who in Pakistan & Who Is Who in the World Study Material
    1 Who is Who in Pakistan Lists of Government Officials (former & current) Governor Generals of Pakistan: Sr. # Name Assumed Office Left Office 1 Muhammad Ali Jinnah 15 August 1947 11 September 1948 (died in office) 2 Sir Khawaja Nazimuddin September 1948 October 1951 3 Sir Ghulam Muhammad October 1951 August 1955 4 Iskander Mirza August 1955 (Acting) March 1956 October 1955 (full-time) First Cabinet of Pakistan: Pakistan came into being on August 14, 1947. Its first Governor General was Muhammad Ali Jinnah and First Prime Minister was Liaqat Ali Khan. Following is the list of the first cabinet of Pakistan. Sr. Name of Minister Ministry 1. Liaqat Ali Khan Prime Minister, Foreign Minister, Defence Minister, Minister for Commonwealth relations 2. Malik Ghulam Muhammad Finance Minister 3. Ibrahim Ismail Chundrigar Minister of trade , Industries & Construction 4. *Raja Ghuzanfar Ali Minister for Food, Agriculture, and Health 5. Sardar Abdul Rab Nishtar Transport, Communication Minister 6. Fazal-ul-Rehman Minister Interior, Education, and Information 7. Jogendra Nath Mandal Minister for Law & Labour *Raja Ghuzanfar’s portfolio was changed to Minister of Evacuee and Refugee Rehabilitation and the ministry for food and agriculture was given to Abdul Satar Pirzada • The first Chief Minister of Punjab was Nawab Iftikhar. • The first Chief Minister of NWFP was Abdul Qayum Khan. • The First Chief Minister of Sindh was Muhamad Ayub Khuro. • The First Chief Minister of Balochistan was Ataullah Mengal (1 May 1972), Balochistan acquired the status of the province in 1970. List of Former Prime Ministers of Pakistan 1. Liaquat Ali Khan (1896 – 1951) In Office: 14 August 1947 – 16 October 1951 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Contesting Candidates NA-1 Peshawar-I
    Form-V: List of Contesting Candidates NA-1 Peshawar-I Serial No Name of contestng candidate in Address of contesting candidate Symbol Urdu Alphbeticl order Allotted 1 Sahibzada PO Ashrafia Colony, Mohala Afghan Cow Colony, Peshawar Akram Khan 2 H # 3/2, Mohala Raza Shah Shaheed Road, Lantern Bilour House, Peshawar Alhaj Ghulam Ahmad Bilour 3 Shangar PO Bara, Tehsil Bara, Khyber Agency, Kite Presented at Moh. Gul Abad, Bazid Khel, PO Bashir Ahmad Afridi Badh Ber, Distt Peshawar 4 Shaheen Muslim Town, Peshawar Suitcase Pir Abdur Rehman 5 Karim Pura, H # 282-B/20, St 2, Sheikhabad 2, Chiragh Peshawar (Lamp) Jan Alam Khan Paracha 6 H # 1960, Mohala Usman Street Warsak Road, Book Peshawar Haji Shah Nawaz 7 Fazal Haq Baba Yakatoot, PO Chowk Yadgar, H Ladder !"#$%&'() # 1413, Peshawar Hazrat Muhammad alias Babo Maavia 8 Outside Lahore Gate PO Karim Pura, Peshawar BUS *!+,.-/01!234 Khalid Tanveer Rohela Advocate 9 Inside Yakatoot, PO Chowk Yadgar, H # 1371, Key 5 67'8 Peshawar Syed Muhammad Sibtain Taj Agha 10 H # 070, Mohala Afghan Colony, Peshawar Scale 9 Shabir Ahmad Khan 11 Chamkani, Gulbahar Colony 2, Peshawar Umbrella :;< Tariq Saeed 12 Rehman Housing Society, Warsak Road, Fist 8= Kababiyan, Peshawar Amir Syed Monday, April 22, 2013 6:00:18 PM Contesting candidates Page 1 of 176 13 Outside Lahori Gate, Gulbahar Road, H # 245, Tap >?@A= Mohala Sheikh Abad 1, Peshawar Aamir Shehzad Hashmi 14 2 Zaman Park Zaman, Lahore Bat B Imran Khan 15 Shadman Colony # 3, Panal House, PO Warsad Tiger CDE' Road, Peshawar Muhammad Afzal Khan Panyala 16 House # 70/B, Street 2,Gulbahar#1,PO Arrow FGH!I' Gulbahar, Peshawar Muhammad Zulfiqar Afghani 17 Inside Asiya Gate, Moh.
    [Show full text]
  • US Foreign Policy in Pakistan
    Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont CMC Senior Theses CMC Student Scholarship 2015 U.S. Foreign Policy in Pakistan: Bringing Pakistan Into Line with American Counterterrorism Interests Henry E. Appel Claremont McKenna College Recommended Citation Appel, Henry E., "U.S. Foreign Policy in Pakistan: Bringing Pakistan Into Line with American Counterterrorism Interests" (2015). CMC Senior Theses. Paper 1117. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1117 This Open Access Senior Thesis is brought to you by Scholarship@Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in this collection by an authorized administrator. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CLAREMONT MCKENNA COLLEGE U.S. FOREIGN POLICY IN PAKISTAN: BRINGING PAKISTAN INTO LINE WITH AMERICAN COUNTERTERRORISM INTERESTS SUBMITTED TO PROFESSOR JENNIFER TAW AND DEAN NICHOLAS WARNER BY HENRY E. APPEL FOR SENIOR THESIS FALL 2014/SPRING 2015 APRIL 27, 2014 TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements..........................................................................................................5 Abstract............................................................................................................................6 1 – Introduction...............................................................................................................7 Organization..........................................................................................................8 2 – Realism, The Filter Effect and the U.S. Foreign Policy in Pakistan...................12
    [Show full text]