DOES INDIA REQUIRE A GENERAL
NO 1
Gallipoli, during the First World War, when General
Sir Ian Hamilton, commanding the Royal Army, desperately wanted Naval gun fire
support but this was not available as the Admiral commanding the Fleet had
ordered his warships to clean their boilers. The Gallipoli disaster taught the
British the need for ensuring proper coordination between the Services in
battle. The need for this got further underscored with the emergence of the Air
Force as a major partner in battle, whether on land or at sea. There was need
for close professional co-ordination between the three Defence Services.
After
the First World War, the British introduced a Chiefs of Staff Committee (COSC),
comprising the three Service Chiefs in their Defence High Command. This
arrangement was also adopted by other countries. During the Second World War,
the concept of a Supreme Commander in all theatres of war was evolved. Within a
few years after that War, the appointment of Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) was
made at the national level in all countries, except India. Some countries use
different nomenclature for this appointment but the functions assigned are the
same.
Higher
Defence Organization as per records flourished during the reign of Chandragupta
Maurya. Megasthenes, the Greek Ambassador in Chandragupta’s court brought out
in his Book “Indika”, that the Mauryan War Office in the fourth century BC was
a combined headquarters for both the Army and the Navy. The Mauryan War Office functioning
under the Commander-in-Chief had six boards, each of five officers. These were
Infantry, Cavalry, Elephants, Chariots, Admiralty and Commissariat. The War
Office administered a standing Army of 600,000 infantry, 30,000 cavalry, 9,000
elephants and 8,000 chariots plus an unspecified number of warships.
The
Mauryan Empire extended from Kashmir to Karnataka and Kamarup to Kabul. During
the British era, India was perhaps the only country in the world which had a
single Commander-in-Chief for all the three Services.

After
the Kargil War a Task Force under Arun Singh, a former Minister of State in the
Defence Ministry, was set up to examine India’s higher defence organization.
The recommendations of the Task Force on the Management of Defence were
accepted by the Group of Ministers, As
per that the Services Headquarters were integrated with MoD and even re-designated the three
SHQs as Integrated Headquarters, Ministry of Defence(Army/ Navy/Air Force).
However authority in regard to subjects of little consequence, have been
delegated to Service Headquarters for integrated functioning but all issues of
any consequence are dealt with by the civil officials of MoD. In other words
the old arrangement of the civilian bureaucracy exercising authority without
expertise or responsibility has continued. Even the suggestion that civil
servants in Ministry of Defence should be from the Indian Foreign Service rather than Indian Administrative Service has not been accepted. Defence Policy and Foreign Policy being two sides of the same coin, an officer from IFS is far better suited to serve in Ministry of Defence than an IAS officer.
As
far as CDS was concerned, a similar attempt has been made to derail the
recommendation of the Task Force, accepted by the Group of Ministers and
approved by the Cabinet. A large headless Integrated Defence Staff (IDS) has
been provided which serves little purpose. Without a CDS, the required
professional co-ordination and unified approach will lack. Some of the reasons for strong opposition of
the post of CDS are
1. The political leadership’s fear, of the
man on the horse back. It is apprehended that the Defence Services will become
too powerful and subvert civilian control over the military, a military coup
will occur.
2. The opposition of the civilian bureaucracy
to any arrangement in which their dominance and stranglehold over the higher
defence set up is diminished.
3. The feeling among the smaller Services,
particularly the Air Force, of Army dominance in defence policy formulation.
Some fear that a CDS lead to a situation like the one that prevailed before
1947, when the Army was the dominant Service.
4. The inhibitions of serving Service Chiefs
that their position would get undermined if the CDS were to be appointed.
But however the fear
that a CDS will erode the supremacy of the bureaucracy over the military is proved
wrong as the CDS will not be a Supreme Commander. He will only be an
Inter-Service professional coordinator with individual Service Chiefs having
the right of direct access to the Head of the Government. It also needs to be
mentioned that Army Chiefs in different countries have staged military coups
but no CDS has ever done so. India’s Defence Services are fully committed to
upholding democratic values and in a well established democracy like ours with such
diversity, and of continental dimension, the question of a military coup does
not arise. In the absence of a Chief of Defence Staff, his functions are
virtually being performed, less efficiently by other functionaries.
Thus it is high time
we in India introduce this appointment and also in due course have integrated
field commands. This is imperative for efficient, economical and effective
functioning of our higher defence organization in both peace and war. National
interests should not be allowed to be held hostage to vested interests
they seem to be afraid of a military coup because they know they are corrupt to very core of their souls.
ReplyDeleteThe politician have taken enough precautions that there would be no coup. They have so many paramilitary setups reporting the home minister !
ReplyDeleteThe CDS if appointed , will not be given a status wee bit above the Cabinet secretary, but only the level of the cabinet secretary so this will defacto mean demoting the three chiefs, like giving them another scale of HAG ++ . This will have a cascading effect down to the Lt.rank, who all will be consequently equated with one level lower to their existing parity with civil ranks. Thus having a CDS is a situation best avoided
""..... Even the suggestion that civil servants in Ministry of Defence should be from the Indian...( The sentence seems to be incomplete, request recheck !! the subsequent words are of importance to summarize the context)
ReplyDeleteThanx.... Now amended
Delete