
On May 20, 2025, Pakistan promoted its army chief Asim Munir to Field Marshal—the country’s highest military rank.
This comes just days after India forced a ceasefire during Operation Sindoor, following heavy Pakistani losses. For most, promotions come after success. For Pakistan, it seems defeat is the new victory.

So, what does this mean for India? A stronger enemy? Not quite. It shows a weaker neighbour, scrambling to save face while handing out ceremonial medals.
A promotion, or a cover-up?
The Pakistani government, led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, claims Munir was promoted for his “exemplary courage” and “strategic leadership” during the recent conflict. But the facts say otherwise.
On behalf of the entire nation, I extend my heartfelt felicitations to General Syed Asim Munir, NI (M) on his well-deserved promotion to the rank of Field Marshal. His exemplary leadership during Operation Bunyan-um-Marsoos crushed enemy’s nefarious designs and brought great…
— Shehbaz Sharif (@CMShehbaz) May 20, 2025
Indian forces destroyed major Pakistani drone bases and terror camps. Pakistani missiles—bought from China and Turkey—failed. Their much-hyped “Yiha drones” and “PL-15” missiles were intercepted.
Satellite images now show damaged airstrips and destroyed terror zones in Pakistan. So what was Munir really being rewarded for? Surviving a military embarrassment?
“Field marshal ranks are given after victories, not defeats,” noted security expert Tilak Devasher.
Also Read Asim Munir: Pakistan’s Osama Bin Laden? A Leader of Fear, Division, and Corruption
Munir: From Madrasa to Military Power
Asim Munir’s journey is unlike any Pakistani army chief before him. He’s the first madrasa-educated general to head the military. Fluent in Punjabi and deeply religious in tone, Munir often frames war through theology, not strategy.
Six days before the Pahalgam terror attack, he called Kashmir Pakistan’s “jugular vein” and urged citizens to remind their children that they are “different from Hindus.” That’s not military talk—it’s ideology. And it fuels the two-nation theory Pakistan can’t seem to move on from.
History Repeats: Ayub Khan 2.0?
Munir is only the second Pakistani to ever become a Field Marshal. The first? Ayub Khan, who seized power in 1958 through a military coup. He gave himself the title to tighten control, then ruled Pakistan with an iron fist. Press censorship, military rule, and dictatorship followed.
Is Pakistan heading down the same path again? Promoting Munir now—after defeat, amid public anger, and before elections—looks less like honour and more like a power grab.
As retired Indian officer Major Manik M Jolly told India Today,
“This isn’t about honour. This is Munir cementing control. Musharraf 2.0 is loading.”
India’s View: Let Them Decorate Their Defeats
Let’s be clear—India didn’t flinch. We responded with strength, precision, and control. While Pakistan ran to the UN crying ceasefire, India held its ground. Operation Sindoor showed the world: we will respond, and we will finish what they start.
Munir’s elevation only proves how deep the Pakistani army’s grip on the government is. It’s also a warning: Islamabad still believes anti-India hate can cover up its internal failures.
Pakistan can hand out stars, medals, and long titles. But in the eyes of the world—and especially India—Asim Munir’s promotion is not a celebration. It’s a smokescreen.
He may wear five stars now, but they shine over a nation sinking into old habits—military rule, religious propaganda, and blame games.
Let’s hope the world sees it for what it is. India certainly does.
Also Read Op Sindoor: How India’s Air Power Forced Pakistan’s DGMO to Beg for Ceasefire