This smoothness has not characterised previous appointments. In a number of cases, candidates were picked from way down the hierarchy, superseding several senior officers. The most celebrated case is that of Zia, who was eighth on the seniority list when he was chosen to head the army by none other than the then prime minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto. Zia was to later overthrow Bhutto and hang him in a criminal case. Even Waheed became army chief by bypassing four generals when General Asif Nawaz died following a heart attack in January 1993. His appointment was not without acrimony because the then president Ghulam Ishaq Khan took the decision without consulting his prime minister, Nawaz Sharif.
This time around, Sharif had been opposing Waheed's extension. Though the outgoing chief is credited with keeping the army aloof from politics and is respected for his non-interference in political issues, Sharif bore a long-standing grudge against him. In 1993, Sharif was at odds with Ghulam Ishaq Khan, who had dismissed his government, and challenged the decision in the Supreme Court, which overruled the president's order and restored Sharif to power. This, however, did not end the constitutional impasse, which finally led to Waheed asking Sharif to resign. Elections were held and Benazir's Pakistan People's Party came to power.
Born on February 20, 1941, Karamat is admired within the army and outside for his professionalism in the post-Cold War era and in post-1988 Pakistan which has been grappling with a fledgling democracy. A graduate of the Command and Staff College and the National Defence College, he was commissioned in the Armoured Corps in October 1961 and has commanded the Multan Corps, an independent armoured brigade and an infantry division, besides holding staff and instructional appointments. He has also won top military honours.