HomeWorldPakistan puts price tag on its soldiers: Asim Munir wanted $10,000 per troop for Gaza mission, Israel offered $100

Pakistan puts price tag on its soldiers: Asim Munir wanted $10,000 per troop for Gaza mission, Israel offered $100

Instead of being seen as a responsible player in the Middle East, Pakistan now risks being viewed as a mercenary state that monetises its military under the guise of diplomacy.

November 06, 2025 / 19:50 IST
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Pakistan Army soldiers stand guard at the Red Zone area, ahead of the arrival of Chinese Premier Li Qiang for a four-day bilateral visit and a heads-of-government gathering of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), in Islamabad, Pakistan October 14, 2024. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro
Pakistan Army soldiers stand guard at the Red Zone area, ahead of the arrival of Chinese Premier Li Qiang for a four-day bilateral visit and a heads-of-government gathering of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), in Islamabad, Pakistan October 14, 2024. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro

Pakistan’s army has once again landed in controversy, this time for reportedly putting a price tag on its soldiers. Veteran Pakistani journalist Asma Shirazi has claimed that army chief General Asim Munir demanded $10,000 per soldier from Israel for deploying Pakistani troops to Gaza as part of a proposed peacekeeping force.

If true, the revelation exposes the Pakistani military’s long-standing reputation as a “renter army” that fights for money, not principle. It also makes a mockery of Islamabad’s self-proclaimed image as the “defender of Muslim causes,” showing that even in a crisis like Gaza, Pakistan’s military sees opportunity not in peace, but in profit.

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Pakistan’s troops in Gaza: A ‘peacekeeping’ mission with a price tag

US President Donald Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan had proposed the creation of an International Stabilisation Force (ISF) -- a temporary, multinational deployment meant to train Palestinian police and help rebuild the war-torn region. The force, Trump said, would have “no American boots on the ground” and would instead rely on Arab and international partners.