Opinion | Trump's Favourite Field Marshal: How Munir Became The President's Best Man

The photograph of Pakistan’s Army chief being received by Iran’s Foreign Minister in Tehran this week has its real backdrop not in the Iranian capital – the real context lies in the White House Oval Office. A uniformed Pakistani general serving as America’s most trusted diplomatic courier in one of the world’s most dangerous standoffs is striking. But once you understand how Donald Trump runs American foreign policy, it is entirely predictable. Trump does not send career diplomats when things get serious. He sends people he has personally decided to trust. Right now, that man is Asim Munir.

To understand why, you have to understand not just the President but the remarkable structural symmetry between the two states he and Munir respectively represent.

Two Systems, One Illogic

Pakistan and the United States are not obvious analogues. One is a nuclear-armed developing state with a GDP per capita below $1,500, perpetually on IMF life support, where the military has historically governed from behind civilian facades. The other is the world’s largest economy, a constitutional republic with 2.5 centuries of institutional continuity. And yet, under their current leaderships, both countries are governed by a strikingly similar operating logic: institutions are weak or weakened, personalities dominate, and outcomes depend less on process than on who knows whom and what they have to offer each other.

In Pakistan, this is a structural condition. The military has always been the institution that actually decides. Civilian governments come and go; the army remains. Munir has simply made this arrangement more explicit than most predecessors.

In Trump’s Washington, institutional erosion is more recent but directionally similar. Pakistani officials quickly diagnosed it: access to this White House runs through Trump family businesses as much as through the State Department. Career diplomats and inter-agency processes still formally exist, but they are increasingly decorative. What matters is the personal relationship with the President, and what you can offer him and his circle.

The Art of the Offer

Islamabad understood that in a personalised system, the entry point is commerce and flattery, not diplomatic convention. The courtship was methodical. The first move was counterterrorism. Pakistani intelligence helped the US capture a key Islamic State-Khorasan operative responsible for the Abbey Gate bombing, the kind of concrete, nameable result Trump could announce and claim as his own.

Then came the commercial offers. A crypto venture in which the Trump family holds substantial interests sent executives to Islamabad, where Pakistan signed an MoU on stablecoin adoption. Munir personally welcomed the delegation, signalling an alignment between Pakistan’s military and Trump-linked business entities. Pakistan simultaneously pitched claims to trillions of dollars in rare-earth minerals, and a US firm subsequently signed an MoU with a military-owned Pakistani company to develop rare-earth resources. Neither offering rests on fully verified foundations, but in a system where personal enthusiasm substitutes for institutional due diligence, the offer is the relationship.

Recognising Each Other

Into this environment walked Munir, and Trump responded to him in a register he reserves for a very specific kind of leader. Both men operate in systems where formal rules are negotiable, loyalty is personal rather than institutional, and the consolidation of authority in a single figure is treated not as a problem but as a solution.

PM Modi is also a strongman by any reasonable definition, but one – according to Trump’s view – ‘burdened’ by institutions that retain real force: courts that rule against the government, a federal structure with genuine provincial weight, a meritorious bureaucracy with its own inertia. For Trump, accustomed to leaders who can simply decide, mediation registers as friction. Munir has none of these ‘pitfalls’.

The White House lunch was unprecedented, the first time a US president hosted Pakistan’s Army chief alone, without civilian officials present. Trump called Munir his “favourite field marshal”, a knowing nod to the recently bestowed title that made Munir only the second Pakistani ever to hold it. The civilian-military distinction that organises conventional democratic diplomacy simply does not structure Trump’s thinking.

What Was Discussed In The Oval Office

The Oval Office meeting between Trump and Munir was notable for what surrounded it as much as what was reported from it. No American officials were present for portions of the discussion

White House Oval Office

The Oval Office is the official workspace of the President of the United States, located in the West Wing of the White House. It was built in 1909 during the William Howard Taft administration, replacing the president’s prior office in the main residence. The room’s distinctive oval shape, inspired by early American architectural designs, symbolizes continuity and has been the setting for many historic decisions and addresses.

Pakistan

Pakistan is a modern nation-state established in 1947 as a homeland for Muslims of British India, with a rich history rooted in the ancient Indus Valley Civilization. Its cultural landscape is a tapestry of diverse ethnic groups, languages, and traditions, shaped by influences from the Gandhara kingdom, Islamic empires, and the British Raj. Key historical sites include the archaeological ruins of Mohenjo-daro, the Mughal-era Badshahi Mosque in Lahore, and the mountainous Silk Road outposts in Gilgit-Baltistan.

United States

The United States is a federal republic founded in 1776 after declaring independence from Great Britain, with its modern government established by the Constitution in 1789. Its history is marked by westward expansion, industrialization, and its emergence as a global superpower in the 20th century. Culturally, it is a diverse nation often described as a “melting pot,” whose significant global influence spans politics, technology, entertainment, and popular culture.

Washington

Washington, D.C., the capital of the United States, was founded in 1790 as a planned city to serve as the nation’s permanent seat of government. It is home to iconic landmarks like the White House, U.S. Capitol, and numerous monuments, many of which commemorate key figures and events in American history.

Islamabad

Islamabad is the purpose-built capital city of Pakistan, established in the 1960s to replace Karachi. It was meticulously planned by Greek architect Constantinos Apostolou Doxiadis and is known for its modern layout, wide boulevards, and scenic location at the foothills of the Margalla Hills. The city houses important national monuments, including the Faisal Mosque—one of the largest mosques in the world—and serves as the political and administrative heart of the country.

Abbey Gate

Abbey Gate is the main entrance to the medieval Bury St Edmunds Abbey in Suffolk, England. Built between the 12th and 14th centuries, it served as a fortified gateway and a symbol of the abbey’s immense power and wealth before the monastery’s dissolution in 1539. Today, it stands as a well-preserved historical monument and a prominent landmark in the town.

PM Modi

“PM Modi” refers to Shri Narendra Modi, the current Prime Minister of India, not a physical place or cultural site. He has served as Prime Minister since 2014, following a long political career including over a decade as Chief Minister of Gujarat. His tenure has been marked by significant economic and social policy initiatives, making him a central figure in contemporary Indian history and politics.

Oval Office

The Oval Office is the official workspace of the President of the United States, located in the West Wing of the White House. It was first constructed in 1909 during the Taft administration and was later rebuilt in its current location in 1934 under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who also introduced its distinctive oval shape.