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Defence Minister Khawaja Asif said Tuesday Pakistan will quit the Saudi-led Islamic coalition if it were to be used against any Muslim country including Iran.

“Pakistan does not wish to be a part of any sectarian alliance,” Asif told the Senate. “Our efforts have been and will be geared towards eradicating militancy,” he added.

He said Army chief retired General Raheel Sharif has not applied for a no-objection certificate (NOC) from the government prior to accepting a position as chief of the 39-nation Islamic military coalition.

The defence minister said that Pakistani troops have been deployed in Saudi Arabia, but Pakistan will not take side in disputes among Muslim countries.

Raheel Sharif was selected last year by Riyadh as the commander of the Saudi-led alliance of Muslim-majority countries aimed at counter-terrorism. But this prompted concerns among politicians and within the army command that Pakistan was becoming too involved in an organisation that excluded Iran and Iraq, where the government is dominated by Shiites.

A retired army general claimed that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had agreed to Saudi Arabia’s request of appointing former army chief Raheel Sharif as the commander of the Muslim coalition hours before the news was made public.

“Before his meeting with Raheel Sharif, the Saudi defence minister had requested PM Nawaz that the then army chief should be made the commander of the 39-nation Muslim coalition,” said Major General (retired) Ejaz Awan in a talk show.

“He (Nawaz Sharif) told Raheel Sharif that the kingdom ‘wants you to lead the Saudi-led alliance after retirement. I have made the commitment, I have said yes to them. You don’t say no,’’’ he added.

Awan said it was the prime minister himself who decided that Raheel Sharif will be sent to Saudi Arabia to lead the Riyadh-based Islamic coalition against terrorism.

A statement carried by Saudi state news agency SPA in December 2015 said the new coalition would have 34 members, though more have joined since then. It also said the coalition would be based in Riyadh to "coordinate and support military operations" against terrorism.

The states it listed as joining the new coalition included Egypt, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Malaysia, Pakistan and several African nations.

It did not include Iran and its allies Syria and Iraq, leading to speculation that it could become a potential Sunni bloc against Iran, a rival of Sunni Saudi Arabia for influence across the Arab world. Tehran and Riyadh are ranged on opposite sides in proxy conflicts in Syria and Yemen.

Raheel Sharif retired last November, the first Pakistani army chief in more than 20 years not to seek an extension to his term like some previous military leaders.