COAS calls on prime minister: Pak-India tension, militant groups discussed
ISLAMABAD: Chief of the Army St(aff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa had an important meeting with Prime Minister Imran Khan at the Prime Minister Office (PMO) on Monday and discussed a number of subjects of national significance.
The official release of 24 words didn’t spell out the subjects that came up for discussion but informed
sources told The News that the meeting encompassed issues related to national security, especially developments with regard to Indian aggression and Pakistan’s strategy to deal with it.
Gen Bajwa briefed the prime minister about the deliberations of last week’s Corps Commanders meeting where a resolve was expressed that no group will be allowed to use force since it’s the sole domain of the state.
The security situation of the country was the major subject that came under discussion. The sources pointed out that Prime Minister Imran eulogised the role of the armed forces in dealing with the Indian aggression and thwarting its evil designs.
The prime minister has already made it clear that Pakistan’s armed forces and people are fully prepared and will fight till the end to protect the nation’s independence and sovereignty but they want peace with India and resolution of the disputes through dialogue.
He said Pakistan desired peace and had also sent this message to New Delhi time and again. “We also handed the captured pilot over to India because we do not want war, and also offered cooperation to India after the Pulwama incident.”
The prime minister stated in unequivocal terms that no one should have any misunderstanding in this regard, as these steps were not taken out of fear.
“This is the new Pakistan and we want to focus on alleviating poverty.” Imran said all political parties had agreed as part of the 2015 National Action Plan (NAP) that no armed group would be allowed to operate in Pakistan but the plan could not be fully implemented until recently.
“There are people among these groups who have undertaken welfare work, they shouldn’t worry. I know there are groups whose militant wings have already been abolished but we are part of the international community and we will not allow any militant armed group to function here,” he added.
The sources said the army chief also informed the PM about the state of alertness of the armed forces in the face of Indian threat.
The prime minister reminded that Pakistan wasn’t partner in escalation but will exercise its basic right to defend if transgressed by the enemy.
-
Netflix, Paramount Shares Surge Following Resolution Of Warner Bros Bidding War -
Bling Empire's Most Beloved Couple Parts Ways Months After Announcing Engagement -
China-Canada Trade Breakthrough: Beijing Eases Agriculture Tariffs After Mark Carney Visit -
London To Host OpenAI’s Biggest International AI Research Hub -
Elon Musk Slams Anthropic As ‘hater Of Western Civilization’ Over Pentagon AI Military Snub -
Walmart Chief Warns US Risks Falling Behind China In AI Training -
Wyatt Russell's Surprising Relationship With Kurt Russell Comes To Light -
Elon Musk’s XAI Co-founder Toby Pohlen Steps Down After Three Years Amid IPO Push -
Is Human Mission To Mars Possible In 10 Years? Jared Isaacman Breaks It Down -
‘Stranger Things’ Star Gaten Matarazzo Reveals How Cleidocranial Dysplasia Affected His Career -
Google, OpenAI Employees Call For Military AI Restrictions As Anthropic Rejects Pentagon Offer -
Peter Frampton Details 'life-changing- Battle With Inclusion Body Myositis -
Waymo And Tesla Cars Rely On Remote Human Operators, Not Just AI -
AI And Nuclear War: 95 Percent Of Simulated Scenarios End In Escalation, Study Finds -
David Hockney’s First English Landscape Painting Heads To Sotheby’s Auction; First Sale In Nearly 30 Years -
How Does Sia Manage 'invisible Pain' From Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome