The General Headquarters (abbreviated Army GHQ: 230 [2][3][4]) is the direct reporting and the command post of the Pakistan Army, located in the Chaklala at the vicinity of Rawalpindi, adjacent to the Joint Staff Headquarters (JS HQ).[5]
Since 2017, the Pakistan Army has been slowly moving its headquarters to nation's capital, Islamabad to be able to merge with the air force and the navy.[12]
Gates
Gates
Purpose
Road
Gate No 1
General
Gate No 2
Exclusively reserved for service/ex-service personnels
Gate No 3
Exclusively reserved for families/families of martyrs
Gate No 4
Exclusively reserved for politicians/bureaucrats
Gate No 5
Exclusively reserved for foreign dignatries
Gate No 6
Exclusively reserved for patients visiting CMH/Army Museum
Gate No 7
General
Secretariat
The Pakistan Army's GHQ is a command post of the Pakistan Army where the secretariat of the Chief of the Army Staff functions to ensure the ceremonial and operational command of the army.: 47 [10]
There are ten branches of the Pakistan Army that are headed by the lieutenant-generals and multiple administrative corps that are commanded by the director-generals who are ranked at the major-general.: 47 [10] Each of the army's branches and the director-generals of the administrative corps works under the Chief of the General Staff (CGS).[13] The chief of general staff, who usually heads the Army GHQ Staff, reports directly to chief of army staff on daily routine basis.[13]
Branches of the Pakistan Army
There are ten branches of the Pakistan Army that are headed by the lieutenant-generals and multiple administrative corps that are commanded by the director-generals who are ranked at the major-general.: 47 [10]
The Chief of Army Staff Secretariat is not considered as a part of the army branch but functions separately as an office of the chief of army staff.: 47 [10]
In 1970s, the Army's GHQ became a focal point of massive arrests and incidents of military police's baton charge on protestors when politicians Sheikh Mujibur Rahman (in 1970) and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto (in 1977) were taken into custody.: 115 [14]
To prevent the Taliban's repeated infiltration and to address the issue of increase security, the headquarters, together with Joint Staff Headquarters, has been slowly moving to Islamabad to integrate with the navy and air force's headquarters that are located in much safer zones of Islamabad, since 2017.[15]
Cloughley, Brian (2000). A History of the Pakistan Army: Wars and Insurrections. Oxford University Press: Oxford University Press. p. 435. ISBN978-0-19-579374-1. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
Nawaz, Shuja (2008). Crossed Swords: Pakistan, Its Army, and the Wars Within. Karachi, Sind, Pakistan: Oxford University Press. p. 655. ISBN978-0-19-547660-6. Retrieved 30 December 2023.