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X Corps (Pakistan)

Pakistan Army's field maneuver strike corps

X Corps (Pakistan)

Summary

Pakistan Army's field maneuver strike corps

FieldValue
unit_nameX Corps
image10 Corps (Pakistan) logo.png
captionLogo of X Corps
dates
country
branch
typeXXX Corps
roleManeuver/Deployment oversight
size~200,000 approximately
(Though this may vary as units are rotated)
garrisonChaklala Cantonment, Punjab, Pakistan
garrison_labelHQ/Garrison
nickname[[File:Pindi Core logo.PNG25px]] The Pindi Corps
Rawalpindi Corps
''Northern Command'''
colorsRed, white and yellow
colors_labelColors Identification
battlesIndo-Pakistani wars and conflicts
anniversaries1974
decorationsMilitary Decorations of Pakistan military
website
commander1Lt-Gen. Amer Ahsan Nawaz
commander1_labelCommander
commander2Brig. Zeeshan
commander2_labelChief of Staff
identification_symbol[[File:Flag of Pakistan's X Corps.png200pxbordercentre]]
identification_symbol_labelWar Flag
identification_symbol_4_label

(Though this may vary as units are rotated) Rawalpindi Corps ''Northern Command'''

Badge of the Corps

With army reserves, paramilitary, and assigned to protect the presidency, the X Corps forms and leads an important formation in Pakistan' security spectrum, which is known as Northern Command.

It is currently commanded by its commander, Lt-Gen. Amer Ahsan Nawaz.

History

Formation and war service

After the 1971 conflict with India, the Pakistani military had to modify its organizational structure to meet parity with Indian Army. This eventually led to the establishing of the X Corps with Lieutenant-General Aftab Ahmad Khan becoming its first commander, with its headquarters in Chaklala Cantonment near Rawalpindi in 1974.

Unlike the I Corps, the X Corps has an area of expertise in winter and mountain warfare, and oversees security operations together with the local law enforcement, mountain divisions guarding the nation's mountain ranges, and paramilitary to ensure the national defenses of the Pakistan. By accumulating all the military elements, the X Corps leads a regional formation to ensure the defenses and national security under a command known as "Northern Command".

The north–south regional formation, with X Corps leading the Northern Command, was formed by the Army GHQ working under then-army chief Gen. Ashfaq Pervez, only to address the Indian Army's Cold Start strategy.

Its badge insignia, as an ode to Lt-Gen. Aftab Ahmad Khan, the insignia of the X Corps features a Rising Sun or Aftab (in Urdu) with 10 rays extruding from it. Due to its deployment in sensitive border areas and mission parameters to prevent Indian Army's adventures in northern fronts, the X Corps has seen more military actions against the Indian Army than any of Pakistan's maneuver corps deployed in other fronts.

Serving on the Line of Control

Since its deployment in 1974, the X Corps has faced the Indian Army across the Line of Control (LoC) and northern frontiers of Pakistan's borders. The X Corps has fought battles in Siachen conflict in 1984 and a border war with India in 1999.

Since 1974, its primary mission has been to prevent and mitigate the threats of Indian Army's advancement in northern frontiers of Pakistan.

Currently, Mujahid Force is mainly responsible for protecting and serving of Line of Control. Mujahid Force constituents of 29 units, Most of them serving in Azad Kashmir premises and some other areas of X Corps region. Currently, Brig. Tahir Ali Syed is serving as Director Mujahid Force and Lt. Gen Shahid Imtiaz is serving as the current Commandant Mujahid Force.

Structure

The X Corps oversees the operational control and command of the Force Command Northern Areas (a mountain warfare division), Mujahid Force, a reservist unit of the Army National Guards, and others battalions of the special forces.

The X Corps structure is composed of five infantry division and one brigade of each of infantry brigade, armored, artillery, signal, and an engineering brigade.

Additional reinforcement to provide support to X Corps comes from the other mountain divisions of the XI Corps, batteries of Army Air Defence Command, the Air Force's Northern Air Command and Navy's Northern Command that also includes the Pakistan Marines several battalions; it forms the joint military formation, known as Northern Command, which the X Corps leads to enforce national defenses of Pakistan on the northern front.

Under the statue of Northern Command, the X Corps provides military support to civil armed forces and provincial governments in the northern fronts while protecting the territory and national interests of the Pakistan within the country.

Structure of X CorpsCorpsCorps HQCorps CommanderAssigned UnitsFormation BadgeUnit HQ
X CorpsRawalpindi, PunjabLt Gen Amer Ahsan Nawaz
12th Infantry DivisionMurree, Punjab
19th Reserve Infantry DivisionMangla, Azad Kashmir
23rd Infantry DivisionJhelum, Punjab
Force Command Northern AreasGilgit
34th Light Infantry DivisionChilas
111th Infantry BrigadeRawalpindi, Punjab
8th Independent Armoured BrigadeKhairan, Punjab
Independent Artillery BrigadeN/A
Independent Signal BrigadeN/A
Independent Engineering BrigadeN/A

List of commanders

#NameStart of tenureEnd of tenure
1Lt Gen Aftab Ahmad KhanMarch 1973March 1976
2Lt Gen Faiz Ali ChishtiMarch 1976March 1980
3Lt Gen Jahan Dad KhanMarch 1980April 1984
4Lt Gen Zahid Ali Akbar KhanApril 1984May 1987
5Lt Gen Imran Ullah KhanMay 1987June 1991
6Lt Gen Ghulam Muhammad MalikJune 1991October 1995
7Lt Gen Ali Kuli Khan KhattakOctober 1995May 1997
8Lt Gen Saleem HaiderMay 1997October 1998
9Lt Gen Mahmud AhmedOctober 1998October 1999
10Lt Gen Jamshed Gulzar KianiNovember 1999October 2001
11Lt Gen Syed Arif HassanOctober 2001October 2003
12Lt Gen Ashfaq Parvez KayaniOctober 2003August 2004
13Lt Gen Salahuddin SattiOctober 2004November 2006
14Lt Gen Tariq MajidNovember 2006October 2007
15Lt Gen Mohsin KamalOctober 2007October 2008
16Lt Gen Tahir MahmudOctober 2008May 2010
17Lt Gen Khalid Nawaz KhanMay 2010August 2013
18Lt Gen Qamar Javed BajwaAugust 2013October 2015
19Lt Gen Malik Zafar IqbalOctober 2015December 2016
20Lt Gen Nadeem RazaDecember 2016September 2018
22Lt Gen Bilal AkbarSeptember 2018September 2019
23Lt Gen Azhar AbbasSeptember 2019September 2021
24Lt Gen Sahir Shamshad MirzaSeptember 2021November 2022
25Lt Gen Shahid ImtiazNovember 2022September 2025
26Lt Gen Amer Ahsan NawazSeptember 2025Incumbent

References

References

  1. "Rawalpindi Corps Commander visits troops at LoC".
  2. (10 April 2020). "The Battle for Pakistan: The Bitter US Friendship and a Tough Neighbourhood". Rowman & Littlefield.
  3. (24 August 2018). "ISPR announces reshuffle in Army command". The Express Tribune.
  4. (25 April 2014). "Fighting to the End: The Pakistan Army's Way of War". Oxford University Press.
  5. [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/pakistan/x-corps.htm X Corps]
  6. (August 2013). "Pakistan Intelligence, Security Activities and Operations Handbook - Strategic Information and Developments". Lulu.com.
  7. (28 October 2022). "Routledge Handbook of the International Relations of South Asia". Taylor & Francis.
  8. (1 July 2012). "Pakistan Army: Modernisation, Arms Procurement and Capacity Building". Vij Books India Pvt Ltd.
Wikipedia Source

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