Ex-DGMO Rajiv Ghai Calls Asim Munir's Promotion "Amusement"

Former Indian DGMO Rajiv Ghai criticized Pakistan's promotion of Asim Munir to Field Marshal as a spectacle. He noted that Pakistan suffered significant losses in Operation Sindoor, including over 100 terrorists killed. Ghai advised Pakistan to focus on combat preparedness rather than narrative building. The four-day conflict ended with a ceasefire after Indian retaliatory strikes.

Key Points: Ex-DGMO on Asim Munir's Promotion: "Some Kind of Amusement"

  • Ex-DGMO Ghai ridicules Munir's promotion as optical maneuver
  • Pakistan suffered heavy casualties in Operation Sindoor
  • India destroyed 9 terror camps, killed 100+ terrorists
  • Conflict ended with ceasefire on May 10
2 min read

"Some Kind of Amusement": Ex-DGMO Rajiv Ghai on Asim Munir's post-operation promotion

Former Indian DGMO Rajiv Ghai dismisses Pakistan's Field Marshal Asim Munir promotion as spectacle, citing heavy losses in Operation Sindoor.

"We have looked at that process with some kind of amusement. - Lt Gen Rajiv Ghai"

Jaipur, May 7

Former Director General of Military Operations Lieutenant General Rajiv Ghai on Thursday characterised the self-promotion of Pakistan's top brass following "Operation Sindoor" as more of a spectacle than a strategic milestone.

Speaking to ANI in Jaipur, the General didn't mince words when asked about Pakistan's Field Marshal Asim Munir elevating his own rank in the wake of the operation.

"What can I say," Lt Gen Ghai remarked with a subtle shrug. "We have looked at that process with some kind of amusement."

While Islamabad has attempted to project the operation as a decisive tactical success, Indian military leadership appears to view the subsequent celebrations, specifically the elevation of General Asim Munir to the rank of Field Marshal, with scepticism.

The Indian Army views these internal Pakistani promotions as "optical manoeuvres" rather than shifts in actual combat capability.

The Pakistani federal cabinet in May 2025 approved the promotion of Chief of Army Staff General Asim Munir to Field Marshal in a move widely viewed as an attempt to mask recent military and strategic failures.

The government cited his leadership during Operation Bunyanum Marsoos and the confrontation with India, labelled Marka-i-Haq, as grounds for the honour, Dawn reported.

Despite the military setbacks, Pakistan's government is projecting the outcome as a "historic victory," praising General Munir's leadership during the conflict.

Ghai also took another jibe at Pakistan, saying it should focus more on strengthening its operational capabilities rather than narrative building, adding that better investment in combat preparedness would improve outcomes.

Ghai said that Pakistan suffered significant losses during Operation Sindoor, which was launched after the Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 people.

He further said that available information, including award lists, indicated heavy casualties on the Pakistani side, including the killing of over 100 terrorists at nine terror camps.

In Operation Sindoor, launched on May 7, 2025, India successfully destroyed nine major terror launchpads in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK), targeting Lashkar-e-Taiba, Jaish-e-Mohammed, and Hizbul Mujahideen facilities. Indian armed forces killed over 100 terrorists in action.

Pakistan responded with drone attacks and shelling, which led to a four-day conflict between the two neighbouring countries. India showed formidable defence and conducted retaliatory strikes, destroying Radar installations in Lahore and Radar facilities near Gurjanwala.

Following significant damage, Pakistan's Director General of Military Operations (DGMO) reached out to the Indian DGMO, and a ceasefire was agreed on May 10, bringing an end to the hostilities.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Rajesh Q
"Some kind of amusement" — perfectly said by Lt Gen Ghai! When your country loses radar stations in Lahore and still calls it a "historic victory," what else can you call it but a circus? Pakistan needs to focus on its people's well-being, not these optical theatrics.
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James A
From an international perspective, this seems like classic authoritarian behaviour — promoting yourself after a conflict that objectively didn't go your way. India's measured response here is actually more strategic. Happy to see mature leadership on this side.
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Priya S
I think we should also ask ourselves — why does Pakistan's army feel the need to do this? Maybe it's their version of keeping morale high. Still, destroying 100+ terrorists and nine camps while they dress up in new uniforms... the numbers speak for themselves. 😅
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Michael C
Amusement is the right word. When you lose radar sites in your second-largest city and still claim victory, you're not fooling anyone except your own public. India should continue focusing on genuine operational readiness — that's what actually wins wars, not photo ops.
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Aditya G
Honestly, Operation Sindoor was a strong message — we showed we can surgically strike terror camps across the border. If Pakistan wants to hand out field marshal titles to cover up losses, let them. Our soldiers don't need medals for doing their duty. Jai Hind!
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