Early life, and between the Indo-Pakistani wars (1965–71) Asif Nawaz Janjua was born in a small village, called
Chakri Rajgan, which is located in the
Jhelum District in
Punjab in Pakistan into a
Punjabi Janjua Rajput clan, on 31 January 1937. He was a
military brat and his father, Raja Abdul Ghafoor Khan, had served as an
officer in the
British Indian Army, retiring at the rank of
Major. He was educated at the
St Mary's Cambridge School on
Murree Road in
Rawalpindi. Two
Irish teachers there who taught him the value of life and humanity, Father Francis and May Flanagan, had a significant influence on his upbringing and future career. After his
matriculation, he went to join the
Pakistan Military Academy in 1954, and was one of very few cadets to be selected to attend the
Royal Military Academy at
Sandhurst in the United Kingdom. After completing his initial military training, he
passed out from the academy in 1957 as one of the foreign cadets. Upon returning to Pakistan,
2nd-Lt. Janjua joined the
5th Sherdils Battalion of the
Punjab Regiment on 31 March 1957. In 1965,
Captain Nawaz saw action in the lost
second war with India in 1965 on the
northern front. In 1971, Major Janjua fought in the
third war with India in 1971 after taking over the command of his
5th Battalion and saw
combat in the Chamb sector against the
Indian Army. After the
third war with India in 1971, Major Janjua continued his
military service and graduated from the
Command and Staff College in
Quetta, where he excelled in his studies. In 1976–77,
Col. Janjua attended the
National Defence University where he attained his
MSc in
War Studies.
War and command appointments in the military In 1977,
Brigadier Janjua was appointed as
Chief of Staff of the
II Corps stationed in
Multan under the command of its field commander,
Lt-Gen. M. Shariff. In 1982, he was promoted as
two-star rank army general, and escaped from
martial law appointments by
President Zia-ul-Haq. From 1982 to 1985,
Major-General Janjua was posted in
Peshawar and served as the
GOC of the
7th Infantry Division, posted with the
XI Corps. In 1985,
Maj-Gen. Janjua was appointed as
Commandant of the
Pakistan Military Academy in
Kakul which he served until 1988. In 1988, he was among the last army generals who were approved for the
three-star rank promotion by
Prime Minister Mohammad Junejo, and was appointed as Corps Commander of the Sindh-based
V Corps by then-
Chief of Army Staff Gen.
Mirza Aslam Beg. When General Nawaz took command of his Corps in Karachi it had begun to be embroiled in operations against
MQM militants in the city. He would soon come to oversee law and order operations by his Corps in the disturbed city of Karachi. As V Corps was also responsible for security in all of Sindh, it had been embroiled in anti-dacoity and law and order operations in Sindh since the early 1980s. The province had destabilised in the wake of the anti-
Zia-ul-Haq Movement for the Restoration of Democracy. In April 1991,
Lt-Gen. Janjua was moved to
Rawalpindi when he was appointed at the
Army GHQ as the
Chief of General Staff (CGS), the
second-in-command of the army, under the
army chief Gen.
Mirza Aslam Beg. ==Chief of Army Staff==