Had no plan to appoint 'own' army chief: Imran.

ISLAMABAD -- While claiming that he never thought of picking the next army chief of his choice because appointments against merit ruined institutions, Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) chairman Imran Khan on Wednesday said the country was passing through a defining moment and everybody should play their role for its 'true independence'.

Speaking to the participants of a seminar, titled 'Regime Change Conspiracy and Pakistan's Destabilisation', Mr Khan reiterated that federal minister Khurram Dastgir Khan of the PML-N had 'confessed' the then opposition parties ganged up on him because he was planning to appoint Lt Gen Faiz Hameed as the new army chief to allegedly execute his agenda to rule the country for the next 15 year without interference. However, he claimed, he had no such plans because he believed in meritocracy.

Lashing out at PML-N supreme leader Nawaz Sharif, Mr Khan alleged the former premier tried to pick his favourites for such prestigious positions because he had to protect his ill-gotten wealth and looted money.

'I have never even forced Shaukat Khanum Hospital to appoint a person on my orders. How can I do it as a prime minister?' he questioned.

Ex-PM claims US wants Islamabad to recognise Israel, not talk about Kashmir to strengthen India against China

Khan said he had started his struggle 26 years ago against Nawaz and PPP leader Asif Ali Zardari whose sole purpose, he alleged, was loot and plunder.

Talking about his US-backed regime change conspiracy theory, he alleged the US did not want the betterment of any country but only wanted to safeguard its interests. Providing military bases to the US was not in Pakistan's interest, which was why he had flatly refused to do so, he claimed.

'I am not anti-America, I want to have good relations with the US, but I cannot let them use us like 'tissue papers'. The US wants us to recognise Israel and not talk about Kashmir so that India is strengthened, to curtail China's power,' he maintained.

Mr Khan went on to say that Pakistan had been exploited in the US-led war on terrorism, and questioned what Pakistan got in exchange for becoming a partner with the US in its war, as Washington gave $20 billion in aid to the country that ended up suffering a loss of over $150bn in that war.

Talking about the military operations in the former tribal areas, the PTI chairman said the government committed a blunder...

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