
By S.M. Inam
The remarks delivered by Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir during his visit to the Bahawalpur Garrison, where he observed the large-scale exercise Steadfast Resolve, went well beyond the optics of a routine military inspection. They amounted to a carefully calibrated statement about how Pakistan’s armed forces now understood war, deterrence and preparedness at a moment when the nature of conflict itself was undergoing rapid and unsettling change. In a region marked by volatility and mistrust, the army chief’s words signaled an effort to situate Pakistan’s defence posture firmly within the realities of 21st-century warfare.
According to the military’s media wing, the exercise placed particular emphasis on drones, advanced surveillance platforms, electronic warfare capabilities and modern command-and-control systems. This focus was not incidental. It reflected an institutional recognition that contemporary conflict was no longer defined solely by massed troops, armor or artillery. Instead, it increasingly revolved around information dominance, speed of decision-making and the seamless integration of data across land, air, sea, cyber and space domains. When the Field Marshal spoke of technological superiority and innovation as decisive factors, he was articulating a shift that many armed forces around the world have been forced to confront, sometimes painfully.
His praise for the morale and professionalism of the troops was accompanied by a clear warning against complacency. Sovereignty and territorial integrity, he said, demanded constant readiness at every level. This insistence on perpetual preparedness carried a dual message. On one hand, it reassured a domestic audience that the military remained vigilant and adaptive. On the other, it served as a reminder to potential adversaries that Pakistan was closely tracking the evolving character of war and adjusting its capabilities accordingly.
Seen in a broader context, the Bahawalpur visit functioned as a public articulation of Pakistan’s evolving defence doctrine. It was directed outward, as a form of deterrent signalling, but also inward, reinforcing confidence within the ranks and among citizens that the armed forces were not frozen in outdated assumptions. The Field Marshal’s emphasis on artificial intelligence, cyber operations, electronic warfare and network-centric systems was less rhetorical flourish than a sober reading of global military trends. From Ukraine to the Middle East, recent conflicts have underscored how technology can magnify both strength and vulnerability. A force that fails to adapt risks not just defeat, but strategic irrelevance.
Exercises such as Steadfast Resolve have come to symbolize this transition. Their purpose extends beyond tactical rehearsal. They are designed to test jointness, interoperability and the ability to employ modern systems under realistic conditions. In doing so, they also perform a signaling function, conveying that Pakistan retains the capacity to respond across the full spectrum of conflict. The repeated assertion that the armed forces are prepared for threats of every kind, whether conventional, sub-conventional or hybrid, points to a comprehensive conception of national defence that no longer draws rigid lines between peace and war.
Supporters of this evolving posture have pointed to recent history as evidence that these lessons are already being absorbed. Last year’s limited but consequential confrontation with India is often cited in this regard. In that episode, coordinated actions across air, land and cyber domains, combined with calibrated restraint, were widely interpreted as signs of a maturing military approach. Precision, control and escalation management appeared to take precedence over spectacle, suggesting an awareness of how quickly miscalculation could spiral into catastrophe in a nuclearized region.
Yet the broader point made during the Bahawalpur visit extended beyond any single clash or crisis. Contemporary wars, as the army chief implicitly acknowledged, are fought not only along borders but across economies, information spaces and public opinion. Hybrid warfare, disinformation campaigns and cyber intrusions have become tools for shaping narratives and eroding trust long before a shot is fired. Pakistan’s stated focus on countering such threats reflects an understanding that security in the modern age is as much cognitive as it is kinetic.
This emphasis also carries important political implications. In a region prone to arms races and confrontational rhetoric, Pakistan continues to frame its military preparedness as a guarantor of peace rather than a provocation. The claim that no adversary can now look upon the country with hostile intent is presented not as bravado, but as the outcome of sustained reform, technological investment and professional leadership. In this telling, a strong defence underwrites diplomacy, creating space for engagement rather than foreclosing it.
At the same time, such assertions invite scrutiny. Military modernization is costly, and technological sophistication alone cannot substitute for broader regional stability or internal cohesion. The challenge for Pakistan, as for many states, is to ensure that investment in defence capabilities is matched by parallel efforts to strengthen institutions, governance and economic resilience. A military that is technologically advanced but embedded in a fragile state remains constrained in its effectiveness.
(The writer is a former government officer and a senior analyst on national and international affairs, can be reached at inam@metro-morning.com)

