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111th Infantry Brigade (Pakistan)

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111th Infantry Brigade
Active1956-Present
CountryPakistan
Allegiance Pakistan
Branch Pakistan Army
TypeLight Infantry
Light Artillery
Psychological warfare
RoleQuick response, defence of key installation (garrison brigade of GHQ)
Size6,000 active duty soldiers[citation needed]
Part ofX Corps
HeadquartersRawalpindi
Nickname(s)111 Brigade
AnniversariesDefence Day
EngagementsPakistani Military Coup of 1958
Operation Fair Play
Indo-Pakistani War of 1965
Siachen Conflict
Indo-Pakistani War of 1999
1999 Pakistani coup d'état
Operation Silence
Operation Janbaz
DecorationsPakistan Armed Forces Awards and decorations
Commanders
Current CommanderBrigadier Sarfaraz Ali, Brigade Commander
Notable
commanders
LTG Faiz Ali Chishti
LTG Jamshed Gulzar Kiani
General Yahya Khan
General Akhtar Abdur Rahman
LTG Javed Iqbal

The 111th Infantry Brigade or 111th Brigade or Triple-1 Brigade, is an infantry brigade of the Pakistan Army notable for its frequent involvement and fast response in military coup d'etats since Pakistani independence.[1] As of 11 January 2012 Brigadier Sarfaraz Ali [2] commands the Brigade. He succeeded Brigadier Faheem Rao who had earlier replaced Brigadier Asim Salim Bajwa.

Main task of Brigade

Main task of the brigade is to provide security and protocol duties to the incoming dignitaries. In addition brigade is responsible for the security of the President and the Prime Minister of Pakistan.[3] It presents guard of honor to distinguished guests of Pakistan. Three military bands of Pakistan Army are known for excellence; one belongs to Pakistan Military Academy, Second to Frontiers Constabulary KPK and the third one belongs to this Brigade.

Military operations

The 111th Brigade is the most well known Army brigade in Pakistani social, public, religious, and political circles. Since its creation, the 111th Brigade has been frequently used to overtake and topple civilian governments. The brigade's first involvement in toppling a government was when General Ayub Khan dismissed the government of Pakistani President Major General (retired) Iskander Mirza.

On July 4, 1977, General Zia-ul-Haq conducted a coup d'état against the government of then-Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. The loyalty of the 111 Brigade Commander is crucial to subsequent military regimes. For instance, Zia's mistrust of Commander X Corps, Chishti led him to remove the commander, Brigadier Mohammad Khan, considered close to Chishti and replaced him with Brigadier Rahat Latif without Chishti's knowledge.[4]

The 111th Brigade is also responsible for security of the prime minister's and president's house which makes it much easier for the army high command to execute coups against elected PMs. The brigade was also used by General Parvez Musharraf in thwarting the Sharif regime after Sharif tried to replace him with Ziauddin Butt. Lt. Generals Aziz and Mahmud reacted quickly after the government broadcast Musharraf's retirement on television. Mahmud reportedly ordered the 111-brigade commander, Brigadier Salahuddin Satti, to secure the prime minister's house. The 111 Brigade completed the coup after confining the prime minister and his aides to the PM house. Prime Minister Sharif was arrested and was later exiled to Saudi Arabia.[5]

The brigade's last participation was in Operation Silence, in which the heads of government ordered military police, the Pakistan Army Rangers, and the 111th Brigade to surround the Red Mosque complex.[6] Clashes between Aziz and Ghazi's followers and security forces quickly ensued, and the Islamists opened fire at the security personnel. The 111th Brigade assisted the Army Rangers and the special forces in completing the operation and in capturing high-value targets inside the complex. The brigade's participation in the Red Mosque situation led to a successful special military operation. When the Lawyers' Movement was launched, the Pakistani media speculated that the Zardari government would launch a psychological operation against the movement.[7] However, it was later decided by the Pakistani military leadership not to launch the operation.

In 2010, the 111th Brigade had taken over the control of Islamabad Capital Territory, and provided the intense and tight security to the both Chinese Premier and Pakistan's Prime minister. The brigade was deployed by the order of Prime minister Yousaf Raza Gillani, and it had directly reported to Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani. The Jang News later cited that ISI had learnt that unnamed neighboring country has planned to sabotage the Chinese Premier's state visit to Pakistan.[8]

Composition

The brigade comprises five Infantry battalions drawn from various regiments (6th Punjab Regiment, 11th Baloch Regiment, Scinde Rifles (5th Battalion Frontier Force Regiment), 1st Battalion Azad Kashmir Regiment and 2nd Battalion Northern Light Infantry, two Light Artillery batteries, one Air Defense battery, one paratrooper ((SSG) battalion, and one Armoured Battalion less one squadron(Probyn's Horse).

Operational Responsibility

Brigade is operationally responsible to be corps reserve for Kharian-based corps during war/ national crisis. Since the brigade is composed of selected talented soldiers therefore, it often wins most of the peace time sports and training events.The brigade is winner of sports events of training year 2014 and 2015. [citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Jones, Owen Bennett (2002), "The 1999 Coup", Pakistan: Eye of the Storm, Yale University Press, pp. 39–307, ISBN 0300101473 {{citation}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help); External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ "Commander 111 Brigade changed | PAKISTAN". geo.tv. Retrieved 2013-12-28.
  3. ^ "Triple One Brigade Commander Replaced | PKPolitics - Pakistan Politics". PKPolitics. 2008-05-29. Retrieved 2013-12-28.
  4. ^ Lieutenant General Faiz Ali Chishti cited in Aqil Shah, The Army and Democracy: Military Politics in Pakistan (Harvard University Press, 2014), p. 183. [1]
  5. ^ Shah, The Army and Democracy, pp. 183-184
  6. ^ Bill Roggio (2009-04-15). "Pakistan releases Red Mosque leader who led insurrection in capital". The Long War Journal. Retrieved 2013-12-28.
  7. ^ "Army Sides with Zardari – Plans to Deploy 111 Brigade | PKPolitics - Pakistan Politics". PKPolitics. 2009-03-09. Retrieved 2013-12-28.
  8. ^ Islamabad Capital Territory was in under controlled by the 111th Infantry Brigade