Structure_of_the_Pakistan_Army

Structure of the Pakistan Army

Structure of the Pakistan Army

Pakistan Army structure


The structure of the Pakistan Army is based on two distinct themes: operational and administrative. Operationally the Pakistan Army is divided into nine corps and three corps-level formations with areas of responsibility (AOR) ranging from the mountainous regions of the north to the desert and coastal regions of the south. Administratively it is divided in several regiments (details below). The General Headquarters (GHQ) of the Army is located in Rawalpindi in Punjab province. It is planned to be moved to the capital city of Islamabad nearby.

Army headquarters and staff

From left, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Navy Adm. Mike Mullen and Rear Adm. Scott Van Buskirk, commander of Carrier Strike Group 9, speak with Chief of Army Staff Gen. Ashfaq Kayani and Maj. Gen. Ahmad Shuja Pasha, director general of military operations, on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) while under way in the northern part of the Arabian Sea on Aug. 27, 2008.

The Chief of the Army Staff (COAS), formerly called the Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C of the Pakistan Army), is challenged with the responsibility of commanding the Pakistan Army. The COAS operates from army headquarters in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad. The Principal Staff Officers (PSO's) assisting him in his duties at the lieutenant general level include:

More information Post, Name ...

The Military Operations and Intelligence Directorates function under the Chief of General Staff (CGS). A major reorganization in GHQ was done in September 2008 under General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, when two new PSO positions were introduced: the Inspector General Arms and the Inspector General Communications and IT, thus raising the number of PSO's to eight.[1]

The headquarters function also includes the Judge Advocate General (JAG), and the Controller of Civilian Personnel, the Chief of the Corps of Engineers (E-in-C) who is also head of Military Engineering Service (MES), all of them also report to the Chief of the Army Staff.

Operational structure

Hierarchy

More information Order, Organization ...
  Indicates staff and higher command positions and offices
  Indicates common command positions

Corps

There are nine corps (each including an independent signals brigade) and three corps-level formations (Air Defence Aviation and Strategic Forces).

More information Logo/War flag, Corps ...

Regional formations

In Pakistani military terminology, the regional commands are the temporary military formations that are structure based upon the conventional corps, and troop rotations are constant and varies based on the Pakistani war strategists' calculations.:309[2] The regional commands are led by the three-star rank general officer whose staff includes numbers of general officers.:309[2]

In past, the Eastern Command was organized at a corps-level conventional formation in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), consisting of the 9th Infantry Division, 14th Infantry Division, and 16th Infantry Division. These divisions are still active duty with their respected Regiments. To further support the Eastern Command, the 36th Adhoc Division and 39th Adhoc Division were commissioned to support the paramilitary units and police; and subsequently decommissioned after Eastern Command was de-activated.

To address the challenges and issues faced by the Cold Start strategy of Indian Army, the army formed regional commands to protect the North—South regions by establishing the first the Southern Command in 1999 and later the Northern Command in 2008.:310 Other active regional formations includes the Army Strategic Forces Command and the Army Air Defence Command that serves as a platform of missile defense.:311

Regional formational commands

Administrative structure

The Pakistan Army is organised in two main ways, which are Arms and Services.

Regiments


  • Artillery
    • 3 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 4 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 5 MLRS Regiment
    • 7 Field Regiment Artillery
    • 15 SP Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 16 (SP) Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 17 Locating Regiment Artillery
    • 28 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 30 (SP) Heavy Regiment Artillery
    • 32 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 35 SP (Heavy) Regiment
    • 38 Field Regiment Artillery
    • 39 (SP) Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 44 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 45 Field Regiment Artillery
    • 46 Field Regiment Artillery
    • 48 Field Regiment Artillery
    • 51 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 54 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 61 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 63 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 64 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 65 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 72 (SP) Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 79 Field Regiment Artillery
    • 93 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 115 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 118 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 140 (SP) Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 150 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 154 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 156 Locating Regiment Artillery
    • 159 Locating Regiment
    • 162 Field Regiment Artillery
    • 165 Field Regiment Artillery
    • 170 Field Regiment Artillery
    • 172 MBRL Regiment
    • 174 Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 176 Missile Regiment Artillery
    • 184 (SP) Medium Regiment Artillery
    • 189 Missile Regiment Artillery
    • 197 Missile Regiment Artillery
    • 198 Missile Regiment Artillery
    • 830 Mujahid Field Regiment Artillery
    • 831 Mujahid Field Regiment Artillery
  • Air Defence:
    • 74 Light Air Defence (SAM)
    • 88 Light Air Defence
    • 52 medium Airdefence ESHORAD
    • 58 medium Airdefence

Regiment

    • 97 RCG Air Defence Regiment
    • 98 RCG Air Defence Regiment
    • 102 Light Air Defence (SAM) Regiment
    • 103 Light Air Defence (GM) Regiment
    • 104 RCG Air Defence Regiment
    • 126 Light Air Defence (Gun Missile) Regiment
    • 127 Medium Air Defence Regiment
    • 134 Radar Control Guns Regiment
    • 146 Light Air Defence Regiment
    • 148 Light Air Defence (SP) Regiment
    • 153 Light Air Defence (SP) Regiment
    • 154 Light Air Defence (SP) Regiment
    • 160 RCG Air Defence Regiment
  • Aviation Corps (AVN)
  • Signals Corps (SIGS)
    • 2 Signal Battalion
    • 5 Signal Battalion
    • 7 Signal Battalion
    • 8 Signal Battalion
    • 9 Signal Battalion
    • 11 Signal Battalion
    • 12 Signal Battalion
    • 13 Signal Battalion
    • 15 Signal Battalion
    • 17 Signal Battalion
    • 19 Signal Battalion
    • 23 Signal Battalion
    • 24 Signal Battalion
    • 26 Signal Battalion
    • 32 Signal Battalion
    • 44 Signal Battalion
    • 45 Signal Battalion 
    • 49 Signal Battalion
    • 51 Signal Battalion
    • 52 Signal Battalion
    • 69 Signal Battalion
    • 76 Signal Battalion
    • 77 Signal Battalion
    • 80 Signal Battalion
    • 82 RC Signal Battalion
    • 84 Signal Battalion
    • 86 Signal Battalion
    • 92 EW Signal Battalion
    • 93 Signal Battalion
    • 1 Engineer Battalion
    • 2 Engineer Battalion (ICHDEIN)(Makran Sappers)
    • 3 Engineer Battalion(Behtreen)
    • 4 Engineer Battalion (Jurrat o Istaklaal)
    • 5 Engineer Battalion (Laraka Panja)
    • 6 Engineer Battalion (The Mighty Six)
    • 7 Engineer Battalion
    • 8 Engineer Battalion (Chawinda Sappers)
    • 10 Engineer Battalion
    • 11 Engineer Battalion
    • 12 Engineer Battalion
    • 13 Enginner Battalion
    • 14 Engineer Battalion
    • 16 Engineer Battalion
    • 18 Engineer Battalion
    • 19 Engineer Battalion
    • 20 Engineer Battalion
    • 21 Engineer Battalion
    • 22 Engineer Battalion
    • 23 Engineer Battalion
    • 24 Engineer Battalion
    • 25 Engineer Battalion
    • 26 Engineer Battalion
    • 100 Engineer Battalion
    • 103 Engineer Battalion
    • 104 Engineer Battalion
    • 105 Engineer Battalion
    • 106 Engineer Battalion
    • 107 Engineer Battalion
    • 108 Engineer Battalion
    • 109 Engineer Battalion
    • 173 Engineer Battalion
    • 174 Engineer Battalion
    • 314 Assault Engineers Battalion
    • 474 Engineer Battalion
    • 479 Engineer Battalion
    • 662 Engineer Battalion
    • 141 Engineer RMB (Road maintenance battalion)
    • 142 Engineer RMB (Road maintenance Battalion)

Administrative Services

Notes

  1. Formed in 1958 in Abbottabad, now based in Mangla; Fought in the 1965 and 1971 wars, as well as sent replacements to Kashmir for LOC.
  2. Formed in 1968 in Lahore, transferred to Multan in 1969.
  3. Formed in 1965 in Multan, transferred to Lahore in 1969.
  4. Formed in 1975. 16, 18 IDs are all mechanized. Has a lot of independent Brigades as well, since it has all of Sindh to cover.
  5. Raised in 1975 by Lt. Gen. Aftab Ahmad Khan
  6. Formed in 1975. Presently engaged in fighting in the former Federally Administered Tribal Areas
  7. Formed in 1985.
  8. Formed in 1987. Each division has 4 brigades and an armoured division is in the process of raising.
  9. Formed in 1988.
  10. Formed in 1990.
  11. Formed in 1977.
  12. The Azad Kashmir Regiment was raised in 1947, became part of the army in 1971.
  13. The Punjab Regiment formed in 1956 from the 1st, 14th, 15th and 16th Punjab Regiments; can be traced back to the 3rd Battalion of Coast Sepoys raised in 1759.
  14. The Sindh Regiment was raised in 1980 from battalions of the Punjab Regiment and Baloch Regiment.
  15. The Baloch Regiment formed in 1956 from the 8th Punjab Regiment, The 10th Baloch Regiment, and The Bahawalpur Regiment; can be traced back to the 3rd Madras Battalion raised in 1798.
  16. The Frontier Force Regiment is the successor to the Frontier Brigade raised in 1846.
  17. The Northern Light Infantry was formed in 1977 from various paramilitary units of scouts, became part of the army in 1999 after the Kargil War.
  18. The Special Service Group was formed in 1959 around a cadre from the Baloch Regiment.
  19. The President's Bodyguard formed at independence from members of the Governor General's Bodyguard, itself successor to the Governor's Troop of Moghals raised in 1773.
  20. Guides Cavalry is the successor to the Corps of Guides raised in 1846.
  21. 5th Horse is the successor to the 1st Sikh Irregular Cavalry (Wales's Horse), and the 2nd Sikh Irregular Cavalry, both raised in 1857.
  22. 6th Lancers is the successor to The Rohilkhand Horse raised in 1857, and the 4th Sikh Irregular Cavalry raised in 1858.
  23. 11th Cavalry (Frontier Force) is the successor to 1st Regiment of Punjab Cavalry and 3rd Regiment of Punjab Cavalry, both raised in 1849.
  24. 13th Lancers is the successor to the 1st Native Troop raised in 1804, and the 2nd Native Troop raised in 1816. It is also the senior most armour regiment of the Indian Sub-Continent.
  25. 19th Lancers is the successor to the 2nd Mahratta Horse (Tiwana Horse) raised in 1858, and Fane's Horse raised in 1860.
  26. 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force) is the famous unit which stopped Indian armour thrust in Chawinda in 1965.
  27. 29th Cavalry Regiment, nicknamed as 'Royal Bengal Tigers' was the armored regiment stationed in former East Pakistan. Entire regiment was lost in 1971 war and was raised later with nickname 'Tigers'. Currently the regiment forms part of 6th Armored Division and is stationed at Kharian.
  28. Raised 1 November 2014.

References

  1. Iftikhar A. Khan. "Kayani shakes up army command" Dawn, 30 September 2008
  2. Nawaz, Shuja (10 April 2020). The Battle for Pakistan: The Bitter US Friendship and a Tough Neighbourhood. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-5381-4205-9. Retrieved 19 November 2023.

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