Pakistani Army Chief Asim Munir is staging a silent coup by getting the Constitution amended. Amid consolidation of power, Munir, a Quran-e-Hafiz, is taking the Pakistani military to 7th century Arabia by using terms like fitna and khawarij from early Islamic history. The indoctrination is such that the Pakistani military is making its battles a fight for Islam.

Despite being used as a mercenary force to fight foreign wars, Pakistan’s army retained the vestiges of a professional force. Under Army chief Asim Munir, those traces are disappearing as the Pakistani military is being transformed into a force fighting not for the country or the people, but for Islam. The transformation of the Pakistani military into a religious force comes even as Munir consolidates power through a constitutional backdoor.
Pakistan’s defence establishment is using fictitious terms like Fitna Al Khwarij and Fitna al Hindustan, branding rebels in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan—bordering Afghanistan—”Indian proxies”. Both the terms, fitna and khwarij, have Islamic connotations, dating back to 7th century Arabia. The Director General of Inter-Services Public Relations (DG ISPR), which manages the Pakistani military’s communications, has regularly been using the terms Fitna Al Khawarij and Fitna al Hindustan.
By using early Islamic terms, Munir is trying to showcase the Pakistani military as the defender of Islamic order against heretical rebels. This also gels with Pakistan’s self-projection as the champion of the Muslim Ummah, which ultimately helps it borrow from countries like Saudi Arabia to run its debt-tattered economy.