Pakistan army chief issues warning in rare statement
General's statement seen as less of a threat and more a sign of shifting power balance in nation

Pakistan's army chief has warned against efforts to undermine the military in a rare public statement that analysts interpreted as a response to unprecedented pressure from the government, media and judiciary.
General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani's cryptic message triggered some concern within Pakistan because of the army's history of seizing power in military coups. But experts saw the statement as less of a threat and more of a sign of the shifting power balance in Pakistani politics.
"Armed forces draw their strength from the bedrock of the public support," Kayani told officers at army headquarters in the city of Rawalpindi on Monday. "Therefore, any effort which wittingly or unwittingly draws a wedge between the people and the armed forces of Pakistan undermines the larger national interest."
The army is still considered the strongest institution in the country, but the generals have slowly ceded power to Pakistan's civilian leaders and judges in recent years. The shift has occurred as the army has been bogged down in a bloody war against a domestic Taliban insurgency.
Several recent actions by the Supreme Court have brought home the end of the army's once inviolable status. In a landmark ruling, the judges recommended last month that the government launch legal proceedings against a former army chief and head of intelligence for allegedly bankrolling politicians in the 1990 election.
The court has also pressured the military for allegedly snatching scores of people off the street in southwest Baluchistan province, where the government faces a separatist insurgency, and holding them without charges.