Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army | |
---|---|
پاک فوج کے کمانڈر انچیف | |
Ministry of Defence Army Secretariat-I at MoD[1] | |
Abbreviation | C-in-C |
Residence | Rawalpindi Cantonment |
Seat | General Headquarters Rawalpindi Cantonment in Punjab, Pakistan |
Nominator | Governor General of Pakistan, Prime Minister or President of Pakistan |
Appointer | Governor General of Pakistan, Prime Minister or President of Pakistan |
Term length | Not fixed |
Formation | 15 August 1947 |
First holder | Gen. Frank Messervy |
Final holder | Lt. Gen. Gul Hassan Khan |
Abolished | 3 March 1972 |
Succession | Chief of Army Staff |
Unofficial names | Army chief |
Deputy | Chief of Staff of the Pakistan Army |
The Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army (abbreviation: C-in-C of the Pakistan Army) was the professional head of the Pakistan Army from 1947 to 1972.[2] The C-in-C was directly responsible for commanding the army. It was an administrative position and the appointment holder had main operational command authority over the army.[3]
Direct appointments to the command of the Pakistan Army came from the British Army Council until 1951, when the first native Pakistani commander-in-chief (General Ayub Khan) was nominated and appointed by the Government of Pakistan.[4][5]
The C-in-C designation was changed to 'Chief of Army Staff' in 1972; General Tikka Khan was the first person to hold the new title. Six generals have served as C-in-C, the first two of them were native British and the post's name was derived from the post of Commander-in-Chief of the British Indian Army.[6][7][8][9][10]