Pakistan dismisses head of powerful spy agency after only eight months on the job

Lieutenant General Asim MunirIn a surprising move the Pakistani military has dismissed the head of the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency just eight months after appointing him to that position. The decision was announced on Sunday in a brief statement by the Inter-Services Public Relations, the public-relations wing of the Pakistan Armed Forces. The statement said that Lieutenant General Asim Munir had stepped down from his post as director of ISI and would take over as commander of the Gujranwala Corps in Punjab, Pakistan’s second-largest province. The statement did not explain the reasons for the reshuffle; the latter came as a surprise, as ISI directors typically serve for at least three years in that post. General Munir’s tenure began in October of this year.

General Munir has been replaced by Lieutenant General Faiz Hameed, who until this latest appointment was head of the ISI’s counterintelligence directorate. Last October, when General Munir was promoted to ISI director, Hameed was promoted to the rank of three-star general. In April he was promoted again, this time from major general to lieutenant general, and was appointed Adjutant General at the General Headquarters of the Pakistan Armed Forces. His meteoric rise in the ISI has won him several devotees and he is seen as an influential intelligence planner in the ranks of the powerful spy agency. He rose to prominence outside of the ISI in late 2017, when he personally mediated to broker a deal between the government of then-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and leaders of the so-called Ahmadiyya community. Followers of the Ahmadiyya movement, a messianic Muslim sect with a substantial following in the Punjab, had taken to the streets to complain of discrimination and harassment by the authorities. According to media reports at the time, Hameed threatened to use the Pakistani Army against the Ahmadiyya protesters if they did not scale down their public protests. Such reports cause some in Pakistan to view Hameed as a military hardliner and a firm believer in the view of the military as the guarantor of political normalcy in Pakistan.

Meanwhile in an unrelated development Indian officials said on Sunday that Islamabad had alerted Delhi of a possible attack by al-Qaeda in a region of Indian-administered Kashmir. Media reports said that Indian officials had been warned by the ISI that al-Qaeda forces planned to carry out “a major terror strike” in the Pulwama region of southern Kashmir. Security observers noted the move as a rare instance of intelligence cooperation between the two rival nuclear-armed nations. As a result, India said it had deployed nearly 500 additional companies of police officers in the southern Kashmir region.

Author: Ian Allen | Date: 17 June 2019 | Permalink

5 Responses to Pakistan dismisses head of powerful spy agency after only eight months on the job

  1. NYALL MEREDITH says:

    Slight error – Pakistan’s Punjab Province does not have a majority Sikh population. At most there are about 20,000 Sikh’s in all of Pakistan and Punjab has a total population of about 110 million.

  2. intelNews says:

    @Nyall: Thanks a lot for the correction, which has been fixed. [IA]

  3. Qaisar Gandapur says:

    General Munir, has in no way been dismissed as you put it ! He was posted to another very important position – Comd of the strike Corp.
    Using the word dismissal sounds odd.

  4. Rami says:

    Qaisar, would you not agree that Munir’s reassignment is at the very least surprising?

  5. munir105 says:

    Sheer ignorance to state that Ahmadis had been protesting in Pakistan. The hallmark of that community is that is totally forbidden for community members to publicly protest. They have never ever ‘come out on to the streets’, It is almost certailnly the Labbaik Ya Rasullah group that was protesting AGAINST the Ahmadiyya community. Very important to get your facts straight!

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