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  1. 𝓦𝓱𝓸 𝓦𝓮 𝓐𝓻𝓮. Command and Staff College is a premier military institution of Pakistan Army. The College is charged with the responsibility to train and groom the future leadership of the Army and those from the friendly countries.

  2. The Command and Staff College (Urdu: اادارہَِ سالاری و عمال عسکری) is the Pakistan Army's staff college for mid-career army officers. As the Army Staff College it was initially established in 1905 at Deolali (near Bombay) and later shifted to Quetta in 1907, Baluchistan, British India, now in Pakistan.

    • Grey and Maroon
    • Army Staff College
    • Maj. Gen. Naseem Anwer
    • 400
  3. The Pakistan Army Command and Staff College is a prestigious Pakistani military educational institution where officers receive staff training and education. It was temporarily established in 1905 at Deolali and later shifted to Quetta in 1907,[1] Baluchistan, British India, now in Pakistan.

  4. The origin of the National Defence University is historically associated with major general, the then lieutenant general, Sahabzada Yaqub Khan and Command and Staff College who introduced Army War Course on 1 May 1963 to Command and Staff College after he was asked in 1962 to establish a separate and a single purpose war course to ...

    • 28 May 1970; 53 years ago
    • Urban
    • 2,000
  5. The Command and Staff College is the Pakistan Army's staff college for mid-career army officers. As the Army Staff College it was initially established in 1905 at Deolali and later shifted to Quetta in 1907, Baluchistan, British India, now in Pakistan.

  6. The curriculum has been divided into three main groups of studies, i.e, Professional Studies, Developmental Studies and Research Studies. The College strives to produce a dynamic staff officer who, with experience, should be able to assume higher command responsibilities.

  7. 18 de set. de 2018 · and junior mid-level officers (captains and majors)—who served at the Pakistan Army Command and Staff College in the city of Quetta between 1977 and 2014. The study is based on the experiences and observations of American military officers—including Smith himself—who attended the facility as students over that 37-year period.