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Karamat Rahman Niazi
Pakistani admiral (died 2021)
Pakistani admiral (died 2021)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| honorific-prefix | Admiral |
| name | Karamat Rahman Niazi |
| honorific-suffix | Sitara-e-Jurat |
| HI(M) | |
| image | File:Admiral Karamat Rahman Niazi.jpg |
| office | 3rd Chief of Naval Staff |
| term_start | 22 March 1979 |
| term_end | 23 March 1983 |
| predecessor | Mohammad Shariff |
| successor | Tariq Kamal Khan |
| birth_date | 30 April 1930 |
| birth_place | Hoshiarpur, Punjab Province (British India) |
| death_date | |
| branch | |
| serviceyears | 1948–1983 |
| rank | Admiral |
| unit | Naval Operations Branch |
| (S/No. PN. 214) | |
| commands | Vice-Chief of Naval Staff |
| Commander Pakistan Fleet | |
| Submarine Command | |
| battles | Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 |
| Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 |
| honorific-prefix = Admiral | honorific-suffix = Sitara-e-Jurat HI(M) (S/No. PN. 214) Commander Pakistan Fleet Submarine Command Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 Karamat Rahman Niazi (usually shortened to K.R. Niazi) (30 April 1930 — 5 April 2021) was a senior officer of the Pakistan Navy who served as the eighth Chief of Naval Staff (CNS) from 1979 to 1983 of the Pakistan Navy.
He was renowned for being the Commanding officer of the submarine ''PNS Ghazi''' during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965, for which he was decorated. In 1979, he took over the command of the Pakistan Navy as its Chief of Naval Staff and worked in close coordination with President Zia-ul-Haq on the matters of national security throughout the 1980s.
Biography
Naval career and between wars

Karamat Rahman Niazi was born on 30 April 1930 in Hoshiarpur, Punjab, British India, to a Pathan noble family who belonged to the Niazi tribe. After graduating from a local high school, he commissioned in the Pakistan Navy as a midshipman in 1948 in Operations Branch and initially did his training at the Britannia Royal Naval College in Dartmouth in the United Kingdom. Upon returning, he was promoted to Sub lieutenant and his career in the Navy progressed extremely well, eventually being promoted to Lieutenant commander in 1962.
In 1963, Lieutenant-Commander Niazi was directed to the United States to complete a training on the submarine operations, and qualified for his training from the , alongside then-Lieutenant Ahmad Tasnim. Upon commissioning of PNS Ghazi in the Navy in 1963, Niazi was promoted as commander and was the first commanding officer of the nation's first submarine, Ghazi.
On 2 September in 1965, Ghazi was deployed to Bombay coast under Niazi's command, initially covertly patrolling the Rann of Kutch coastal areas. However, his mission was to remain off the Bombay coast and engage only major warships of the Indian Navy which were close to the Karachi coast. After the naval shelling by the Pakistan Navy of Dwarka, India, Ghazi again returned to patrol off the Rann of Kutch area and identified two warships, but did not engage them.
On 17 September 1965, Commander Niazi ordered the firing of three Mk. 14 torpedoes at the INS Brahmaputra when it was identified by its navigator officers.{{Cite web | author-link = | access-date =2 November 2010 | archive-date =3 March 2016 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20160303193455/http://www.defencejournal.com/2000/jan/agosta.htm | url-status =dead
At Navy NHQ, Niazi submitted his mission report, but did not submit an inquiry report of three mysterious explosions that were heard during the course of the mission. Niazi and Lieutenant-Commander Tasnim were publicly decorated with Sitara-e-Jurat by President Ayub Khan for their actions.
Niazi commanded Ghazi until 1967 before being promoted to captain and taking a staff assignment at Navy NHQ.
In 1971, he was promoted to commodore and temporarily held the rank of rear-admiral to assume the Submarine Command during the third war with India. In 1972, Commodore Niazi assumed the command of the Pakistan Fleet before being selected to attend the National Defence University in Islamabad to complete a master's degree in strategic studies, also in 1972.
Upon graduating in 1976, his promotion in the Navy was extremely quick due to the dismissal of senior flag ranking officers. He was immediately promoted to two-star rear-admiral, becoming the senior fleet commander as the head of the Pakistan Fleet. In 1977, he was promoted as vice-admiral and appointed Vice Chief of Naval Staff (VCNS), where he was instrumental in incorporating new ideas on anti-submarine warfare methods.
Chief of Naval Staff
Vice-Admiral Niazi was promoted as four-star rank admiral and assumed command of the Navy from Admiral Mohammad Shariff as its eighth Chief of Naval Staff on 22 March 1979. Admiral Niazi was honored with Nishan-i-Imtiaz (Military), which is awarded to all the services chiefs upon taking over their respective commands by the President.
As Chief of Naval Staff, he played a crucial role in stabilizing the Zia regime and was appointed martial law administrator under President General Zia-ul-Haq. Admiral Niazi worked in close coordination with Zia on the national security issues, including those involving internal security.
After the Soviet Union intervened in neighboring Afghanistan, Admiral Niazi gave authorization to the Navy's depot command in Karachi to store arms and weapons bought by the United States under a covert operation to secretly arm the Afghan mujahideen fighting the Soviet Union. His interests in the country's economy was also noted when aiding in preparation of federal budgets. During the same time, he maintained close ties with the People's Republic of China and held discussion on upgrading the existing naval infrastructure in the country. His tenure lasted only three years, and he retired on 22 March 1983, handing over command of the Navy to Admiral Tariq Kamal Khan.
Post-retirement
After his retirement, Admiral K.R. Niazi lived a very quiet life and lived on military pension. He did not seek public office, but became a member of Tablighi Jamaat in his later life serving on missionary activities throughout his life.
On 23 January 2008, Admiral Niazi was among the retired senior military officers from the Ex-Servicemen Association who called for President Parvez Musharraf's resignation in order to pave the way for a complete restoration of democracy and law and order in the country. In 2009 and 2014, it was reported that Admiral Niazi had been secretly monitored by the FIA for his alleged and controversial activities in the country, though no charges were ever leveled against him.
Awards and decorations
| Tamgha-e-Jang 1971 War | Tamgha-e-Sad Saala Jashan-e-Wiladat-e-Quaid-e-Azam | Tamgha-e-Qayam-e-Jamhuria | Hijri Tamgha |
|---|
References
Notes
References
- Muhammad Azam Khan. (6 May 2021). "Adieu to a prescient Sailor". The Nation.
- link. (22 March 1979{{dead link). (December 2018)
- (May 2001). "Remembering Our Warriors - Vice Admiral Tasneem". Defence Journal, 2001.
- (June 2003). "1965 War: Naval operations". PakDef Military Consortium.
- (24 December 2015). "Last voyage of PNS Ghazi 1971".
- (1999). "The Sinking of INS Khukri: Survivor's Stories". Roli Books Private Limited.
- Niaiz, Amir Abdullah Khan. (1998). "The Betrayal of East-Pakistan". Manohar, 1998.
- [http://www.defence.pk/forums/naval-forces/34672-pakistan-navy-submarines-silent-force-reckon.html "Pakistan Navy Submarines: A Silent Force to Reckon with!"] {{Webarchive. link. (30 December 2011 ''Pakistan Defence website'', 20 September 2009)
- (1995). "Truth Never Retires: An Autobiography of Admiral Iftikhar Ahmed Sirohey". Jang Publishers.
- (1979). "The Gazette of Pakistan". The Gazette of Pakistan.
- (1979). "Asia & Pacific Annual Review". World of Information.
- Institute for Defense Studies and Analyses. (1980). "Strategic analysis: The Naval dictatorship". Institute for Defense Studies and Analyses., 1980.
- Wirsing, Robert. (1991). "Pakistan's security under Zia, 1977-1988§ The war in Afghanistan: The interventionist imperative". Library of Congress.
- Hilali, A.Z.. (2005). "U.S.-Pakistan relations: The Russian war in Afghanistan". Ashgate Publishing Limited.
- Economical History of Eastern Europe and Pakistan. (1988). "Pakistan Economic review, Volume 19". Economic & Industrial Publications., 1988.
- (April 1981). "News Review on Science and Technology".
- (1 January 1983). "Asian Recorder". K. K. Thomas at Recorder Press.
- (30 November 2009). "From FATA to South Punjab: The Looming Leap of Islamic Radicalism in Pakistan— Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses". Institute of Defence Studies and Analysis.
- Staff Report. (23 January 2008). "Retired generals, officers of other ranks urge Musharraf to step down".
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