Sanjha Morcha

Army’s sailing expedition begins final leg from Goa

PANAJI: After surviving Cyclone Gaja and several other challenges, Indian Army’s first-ever Indian Peninsula Wind Sailing Expedition entered its final leg after reaching the Goa coast .

The voyage aboard 44-feet-long German-built SV Frama was kicked off on October 21 from Haldia Port near Kolkata, and will end on November 30. From Goa, it will head for Porbandar in Gujarat, the final destination.

The penultimate leg of the journey was flagged off from Goa by Brigadier A K Sharma the commander of the Goa-based Signals Training Centre on Thursday. The final two legs will take the sailors to Mumbai and from there to Porbandar in Gujarat.The expedition of officers from the Electronics and Mechanical Engineers wing of the Army which set off from the Haldia in West Bengal on October 18. Major Alok Kumar Yadav who is leading the expedition, said they hope to inspire the spirit of adventure among younger enthusiasts in the Indian Army, besides being the first team to achieve the feat. “It is the first time someone is attempting the feat on a sailboat. We began the expedition at Haldia which is 21 degree North latitude and hope to complete the journey at Porbandar which is also 21 degree north latitude,” Maj Yadav said.


Imran invites Sidhu for Kartarpur Sahib corridor ceremony

CHANDIGARH: Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan has invited Punjab local bodies minister Navjot Singh Sidhu for the foundation-laying ceremony of the Kartarpur Sahib corridor.

Confirming the development, Sidhu said: “I received invitation from Pakistan PM Imran Khan and the Pakistan high commission in India has also contacted me to know my itinerary.”

The minister said he would seek permission from chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh and the Government of India to visit the neighbouring country.

Imran will lay the foundation stone for the corridor on the Pakistani side on November 28, while on November 26, President Ram Nath Kovind and Amarinder will do the groundbreaking ceremony on the Indian side.

The move comes a day after India and Pakistan agreed to construct the corridor on their respective sides so that the Sikh devotees from India could pay obeisance at Gurdwara Darbar Sahib in Kartarpur.

Earlier this year, Sidhu landed in a controversy after his Islamabad visit on a personal invitation to attend Imran’s swearing-in as PM on August 18 when he hugged Pakistan Army chief General Qamar Bajwa.

Later, justifying his visit , Sidhu said he went there as a messenger of peace and hugged the Pak army chief in an emotional response to the information provided by him that their country is working on a corridor to Kartarpur Sahib.

 

Islamabad, November 23

Pakistan’s Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry on Friday said Punjab minister Navjot Singh Sidhu would visit the country to attend the ground-breaking ceremony of the Kartarpur corridor, according to a media report on Friday.

Prime Minister Imran Khan will do the ground-breaking ceremony of the facilities at the crossing on the Pakistan side on November 28.  Chaudhry confirmed that the former Indian cricketer would visit the country. This will be Sidhu’s second visit to Pakistan this year.

Sidhu told Roznama Express that he has gladly accepted the invitation, sent by Khan for the November 28 event. He said the Pakistani premier was his friend and he would visit the country whenever he was invited by him.  “I don’t have words to express my joy,” he said.

A long-pending demand of the Sikh community to build a religious corridor linking India’s border district of Gurdaspur with a historic gurudwara in Pakistan may finally be fulfilled with the two countries announcing that stretches would be developed in their respective areas. — PTIWrites to Sushma

Chandigarh: Local Bodies Minister Navjot Singh Sidhu has written to Minister for External Affairs Sushma Swaraj, saying, “I wish that the Government of India writes formally to Pakistan on visa and other related issues for easy travel of pilgrims once the corridor (Kartarpur) is complete.” TNS

Sidhu writes to Swaraj: ‘Take up visa issue with Pak’

CHANDIGARH: Punjab local bodies minister Navjot Singh Sidhu has requested foreign affairs minister Sushma Swaraj to write formally to Pakistan on visa and other related issues for easy passage for pilgrims, once the proposed Kartarpur corridor is completed.

In a letter to Swaraj, Sidhu said the positive steps taken by both the governments of India and Pakistan to construct the Kartarpur corridor were a source of great relief and happiness for followers of Guru Nanak’s timeless teachings; and for the people of Punjab.

“As we move down this road, and write a new chapter of faith and love for the region, I pray and hope that this enterprise will yield undeniable and implicit change and thaw in the relations that it will build bridges, burn animosity and will act like a soothing balm for the two neighbouring countries,” he said. In the letter, Sidhu has also taken credit.

“During my visit to Pakistan, I was made aware of Pakistan’s intent to open the corridor on the 550th Parkash Utsav celebrations of Guru Nanak. Pakistan foreign affairs minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has said that Pakistan Prime Minister, Imran Khan, is set to lay the foundation stone for the corridor on their side on November 28 this year,” he said. He said as a Sikh he was committed to the cause of Punjab and its people.

This has been a long standing demand of the Sikh community across the globe and a step in this direction has brought a new ray of hope among pilgrims who anxiously await to pay obeisance at the historic Gurdwara Sahib across the border, he said.

“A few months ago, I had met you to express my concern that the Government of India must take up this initiative by formally writing to your Pakistan counterparts as this would be a great service to the community,” he said in the letter.

Kapil Dev showcases his book on gurdwaras

Kapil Dev showcases his book on gurdwaras

Cricketer Kapil Dev (right) with his book. Tribune Photo

Tribune News Service
Sultanpur Lodhi, November 23

Cricketer Kapil Dev, while attending the state government event to mark Parkash Utsav of Guru Nanak here today, presented his book on Sikhism to Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh, former PMDr Manmohan Singh and Governor VP Badnore.

Bound in bright red, the book bears a gold inscription marking the title “We the Sikhs around the world”.

The book has been authored by Dev with the help of a Dubai-based friend. It is regarding 100 gurdwaras across the world. It bears photographs and text about these gurdwaras and is based on a concept envisioned by the cricketer himself.

He added, “When you travel across the world and meet people, you realise the importance of Sikhism and the huge impact it has. People have worked so hard to preserve this legacy. So with the help of a friend from Dubai, I began this project to talk about gurdwaras across the world that are doing great work.

 

 


Accused in Shujaat Bukhari killing among 6 militants killed in Anantnag

Accused in Shujaat Bukhari killing among 6 militants killed in Anantnag

he gunfight raged in Setkipora Bijbehara.

Majid Jahangir
Tribune News Service
Srinagar, November 23

Six militants were killed in a gunfight in south Kashmir’s Anantnag district on Friday morning, police said.

The gunfight raged in Setkipora Bijbehara when security forces launched a cordon and search operation in the area after an input about the militants’ presence around midnight.

“As the CASO was under way the militants hiding inside the area fired indiscriminately at the forces triggering a gunfight. In the gunfight six militants were killed,” a police officer said.

One of the militants was identified as Azad Malik of the LeT. He was an accused in the Shujaat Bukhari killing case. All other five slain militants are locals and have been identified as Unais Shafi, Shahid Bashir, Basit Istiyaq, Aqib Najar and Firdous Najar.


20 years on, dismissed colonel gets allowance

20 years on, dismissed colonel gets allowance

Vijay Mohan

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, November 13

Almost two decades after a colonel was dismissed by a Summary General Court Martial (SGCM) on corruption charge, he has been granted compassionate allowance with the Armed Forces Tribunal (AFT) observing that orders passed by the Department of Ex-servicemen Welfare (DESW) to deny him the allowance were without jurisdiction and possibly done with malicious intent.

The petitioner was dismissed from service in February 1999 for criminal breach of trust in respect to government property, intent to defraud and committing an act prejudicial to good order and military discipline.

After two petitions to Army Headquarters and the Ministry of Defence seeking grant of pensionary benefits in 2001 remained unanswered, another petition submitted to the Chief of Army Staff was rejected in 2013 on the grounds that since the charges against him were serious and involved moral turpitude, the order of punishment could not be interfered with.

Thereafter, he made various representations for compassionate allowance, but without success. In 2016, he was informed that his petition sent to the Army HQ in 2015 was examined by the competent authority in the MoD and the same has not been accepted. In 2016, he was able to obtain copies of office notings that shed fresh light on the case and after his renewed demands were rejected, he approached the AFT.

The AFT’s Chandigarh Bench comprising Justice MA Chauhan and Vice Admiral AG Thapliyal observed that following advice from the Judge Advocate General, the Adjutant General at the Army HQ, the only competent authority to take a decision on such matters, had approved grant of 50 per cent pensionary benefits. “The consultant had no jurisdiction and authority to undo what was down by the Adjutant General.”


China recruits high school students to develop weapons systems

BEIJING:The Chinese government has for the first time recruited 31 high school students to join an experimental artificial intelligence (AI)-driven programme to develop intelligent weapons systems at the elite Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT).

REUTERS FILE■ Chinese solders at an honour guard in Beijing

The students, including four girls, will be the first batch to take the four-year course titled “experimental programme for intelligent weapons systems”.

The recruits will begin training as the world’s youngest AI scientists at BIT, which is among China’s leading weapons research institutes, South China Morning Post reported. More than 5,000 students had applied for the 31 seats. The programme was launched at the headquarters of Norinco, one of China’s biggest defence contractors, on October 28. News about the new batch was published on BIT’s website but subsequently deleted. An online snapshot of the BIT post provided details about the programme and what it aims to achieve. Quoting a statement from the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, BIT said the new batch was an effort to implement the idea of establishing science and technology as the core combat capability and “providing important support for building a first-class national defence science and technology industrial system”.

 


SC asks Centre to submit details of pricing of 36 Rafale fighter jets

SC asks Centre to submit details of pricing of 36 Rafale fighter jets

File photo of a Rafale aircraft.

Satya Prakash
Tribune News Service
New Delhi, October 31

The Supreme Court on Wednesday asked the Centre to submit in a sealed cover in 10 days strategic, confidential and pricing details of 36 Rafale fighter jets being purchased from France, even as Attorney General KK Venugopal opposed it.

A Bench headed by Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi, however, said details  considered “strategic and confidential” be placed before the court (only) and might not be shared with the petitioners’ advocates. “The court would also like to be apprised of the details with regard to the pricing/cost, particularly the advantage thereof, if any, which again will be submitted in a sealed cover,” it said. Details that could legitimately come in the public domain with regard to induction of the Indian offset partner, if any, be also furnished to the petitioners, it said.

The Bench — which also included Justices UU Lalit and KM Joseph — said details, including the steps in the decision-making process for the procurement of jets, which could “legitimately” be brought into public domain be made available to the petitioners. The SC’s latest direction is a departure from its earlier order on October 10 when it had asked the Centre to present before it only the details of steps taken in the decision-making process leading to the award of the order for purchase of Rafale jet from France. It had then said the details sought “would not cover the issue of pricing or the question of technical suitability of the equipment for purposes of the requirement of the IAF”.  India signed a pact with France for the purchase of 36 Rafale aircraft in a fly-away condition as part of the upgrading process of the IAF. Rafale is a twin-engine Medium Multi Role Combat Aircraft made by Dassault Aviation.

The directions came on pleas by advocate Vineet Dandha, advocate ML Sharma and the third one by advocate Prashant Bhushan and former Union ministers Arun Shourie and Yashwant Sinha, who have sought a court-monitored CBI probe into the deal. The SC noted in none of the PILs, the “suitability” of jets and its “utility” to the IAF had been questioned.

 

Departure from stand

  • SC had earlier sought only details of decision-making process leading to deal
  • Attorney General opposes it; says details sensitive, not even shared with Parliament
  • CJI’s Bench says strategic and confidential details to be shared only with SC
  • SC asks Centre to share confidential note given to it with advocates for petitioners
  • Details regarding induction of Indian offset partner to be given to petitioners
  • Petitioners to respond to the details; hearing on Nov 14

Better prepared: Navy Chief Admiral Lanba: We have come a long way since the 2008 carnage

Better prepared: Navy Chief

Admiral Sunil Lanba, Navy Chief

New Delhi, November 25

India is better prepared and better organised since a group of sea-borne terrorists struck at the heart of Mumbai 10 years back, thanks to a string of security measures, including a layered maritime surveillance, Navy Chief Admiral Sunil Lanba has said.

“We have come a long way since then,” he said on the 10th anniversary of the 26/11 attacks.

The Navy Chief said there had been a paradigm shift in coastal security as vulnerabilities and risks were fixed and a layered maritime surveillance and security architecture was put in place, making the coastline almost impregnable.

“The country is now better prepared and better organised,” Admiral Lanba said when asked about the possibility of terrorists taking the sea route again to mount a similar attack on India.

He said the Indian Navy was now a potent multi-dimensional force, safeguarding India’s interests in the seas and that it was fully prepared to deal with any security challenge facing the country in the maritime domain.

On November 26, 2008, 10 Pakistani terrorists sneaked into Mumbai through the sea, arriving by boat from Karachi, and went on the rampage, carrying out coordinated attacks on the main Chhatrapati Shivaji railway terminus, the iconic Taj Mahal hotel, the Trident hotel, and a Jewish centre — all in the heart of the financial capital’s downtown area.

Over 166 people, including 28 foreigners from 10 nations, were killed in the nearly 60-hour assault that sent shock-waves across the country and even brought India and Pakistan to the brink of war.

The terrorist strike was seen as an attack on the country’s sovereignty, and it exposed faultlines in the coastal security network and Intelligence gathering, while also uncovering the lack of coordination among various agencies.

Admiral Lanba, who is also chairman of Chiefs of Staff Committee, said critical gaps and vulnerabilities in the country’s coastal infrastructure have been addressed, and that a robust surveillance network comprising 42 radar stations linked to a control centre headquartered in Gurgaon has been put in place.

The radar stations were also fitted with high-resolution cameras with a range of 10 nautical miles. Another batch of 38 radar stations is being set up to keep a hawk-eye vigil on activities along India’s 7,500-km coastline.

The Navy Chief said tracking the movement of thousands of fishing boats round-the-clock was a major challenge but now a mechanism has been put into place to track them. He, however, emphasised on the need to improve Intelligence gathering to further tighten the existing security apparatus.

He listed colour-coding of fishing boats, their online registration and issuance of biometric cards to the fishermen as some of the important steps as part of enhancing coastal security. — PTI

The new security regimen

  • Data about ships, dhows, mechanised trawlers, fishing boats and all other vessels operating near India’s coasts analysed round-the-clock
  • Information Management and Analysis Centre (IMAC) in Gurugram acts as a nodal agency for national command control and Intelligence sharing among Coast Guard, Navy
  • SOP formulated for coastal and offshore security among various institutions to streamline the efforts of multiple stakeholders
  • 1,500 landing points for fishing boats being monitored, besides making installation of AIS (Automatic Identification System) transponders mandatory for vessels of 300 tonnes and above

 


Indian Army Chief to Visit Vietnam Amid Stoic Silence Over Pending Arms Deal

Chief of the Indian Army General Bipin Rawat is leading a military delegation to Vietnam from 22 to 25 November 2018 to interact with the top brass of the Vietnamese Army.

General Rawat’s visit marks yet another high-level exchange between the two countries to step up defence cooperation, especially since the institution of the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in 2016.

Earlier this year, the two countries conducted their first-ever joint military exercise that included their navies and armies.

The visit comes shortly after President Ram Nath Kovind wrapped up an official tour of the Southeast Asian country.

“I reiterated India’s commitment to provide training support for Vietnam Armed Forces… India guarantees to deepen [Vietnam and India’s] national defence and security cooperation,” President Kovind said at a joint conference in Hanoi with Vietnamese President Nguyen Phu Trong on Tuesday.

President Trong also said that Vietnam highly values India’s stance on the South China Sea dispute in recent years, and hopes India will continue to support Vietnam’s position.

India and Vietnam also reviewed the utilisation of the $100 million defense credit the former had extended to the latter in late 2014 to build high-speed patrol vessels for the Vietnam Border Defence Force. But, the two leaders did not mention another $500 million defence credit offered by India in 2016 during Narendra Modi’s visit. It was expected that the $500 million defence credit would boost military deals between the two countries.

The Indian government has been pursuing the sale of the BrahMos missile system, Akash air defence missile system and naval equipment to Vietnam for the last few years but nothing has materialised to date.

India’s state-owned Bharat Electronics Limited had opened its first-ever representative office in Vietnam in June this year.
“Decision making can sometimes be frustratingly long drawn but the interest is sustained. Sometimes it is the question of the cost being negotiated, but interest on Indian missiles is definitely growing and we are addressing it. We want to able to export it to friendly nations,” Nirmala Sitharaman, India’s Minister of Defence had said in April this year while replying to a query posed by Jamshyd N. Godrej, CMD of Godrej & Boyce about the status of the BrahMos deal with Vietnam.

Nevertheless, the Indian Army Chief’s visit to Hanoi will once again bring the long-pending deals into the limelight as he is scheduled to interact with General NgoXuan Lich, Defence Minister and Senior Lieutenant General Pham Hong Huong, Deputy Chief of the General Staff.

General Bipin Rawat will also visit the HQ of an infantry division near Hanoi and HQ of the 7th Military Region in Ho Chi Minh.


Integrated Battle Groups Are India’s Response to Pakistan

Last month, India’s biennial Army Commanders Conference convened to deliberate upon four major in-house studies. One of these studies on the “Re-organisation and Rightsizing of the Indian Army,” made a decision to proceed with forming all arms integrated battle groups (IBG). This decision has the potential to completely upset the conventional strategic balance that has prevailed between India & Pakistan for the last four decades. This is so, as the operationalization of integrated battle groups will mark the concrete acceptance by India of the doctrine of Cold Start, whereby India can wage a proactive war against Pakistan even in a nuclear environment.

To appreciate the importance of this development, it is necessary to trace the doctrinal evolution of the Indian Army. Post–independence, Nehruvian thinking based on liberal internationalism led to limited defense spending and the adoption of a posture of defensive defense at the strategic level. From 1947–1971, the Indian Army was a predominantly “infantry-centric” force which was quite comfortable continuing with its British doctrinal inheritance of defense-in-depth prior to launching a counterattack. However, following the Indo-Pak war of 1971, India started undergoing a doctrinal evolution as it shifted from deterrence by denial to deterrence by punishment. India’s lightning campaign in this conflict resulted in the liberation of Bangladesh and the dismemberment of Pakistan in two. By 1979, India had stood up its Mechanized Infantry Regiment. From 1981–1988, a succession of similarly minded Army Chiefs (Generals KV Krishna Rao, Arun Shridhar Vaidya & Krishnaswamy Sundarji) accorded greater prominence to armored and mechanized forces and finally tilted Army doctrine away from infantry forces.

This change was institutionalized by reorganizing the Army into strike and holding corps . The holding corps were to be employed in a defensive role and contain any Pakistani penetrations. The three “strike corps,” each centered around an armored division with mechanized infantry and extensive artillery support became the sword arm of the Indian Army. Sundarji envisioned that India would launch joint air-land offensives in the wide plains and deserts, penetrate deep into Pakistan and destroy Pakistan’s own two strike corps through “deep sledgehammer blows” in a high-intensity battle of attrition. The idea was to make the next Indo-Pakistani war the last war they would ever fight.

Pakistan then chose to blunt India’s conventional edge by attaining a nuclear weapons capability and refusing to adhere to a policy of no first use. Under the protective overhang of its nuclear weapons Pakistan then utilized Islamist jihadi terrorism as an asymmetric tool of warfare as it sought to bleed India with a thousand cuts . The emergence of insurgency in Punjab from 1984 onwards and in Kashmir from 1989 onwards resulted in the assumption of the counterinsurgency role by the Indian Army. By 1998, nearly half of all of the Indian Army’s infantry battalions were engaged in counterinsurgency missions. The 1990s, a time when India was convulsing due to systemic economic changes and was no longer benefiting from generous Soviet arms sales, were marked by declining Indian defense expenditure. Doctrinal innovation was the need of the hour so as to be able to conduct limited war in a nuclear environment while also dealing with the army’s enhanced counterinsurgency role.

In the latter sphere, India made some excellent innovations by raising a dedicated counter-insurgency force—the Rashtriya Rifles. In the former sphere though, India displayed little imagination or inclination to adapt to its new environment as it continued to harbor notions of fighting a high intensity conventional war. Its doctrinal overreach meant however, that it was not particularly suited to even this task, as the army remained a powerful land force but one with short legs and little staying power.

Its counterinsurgency doctrinal innovations notwithstanding, India’s conventional deterrent had been rendered ineffective in the face of Pakistani subconventional proxy warfare. This became evident in 2001, which is when Pakistan sponsored a terrorist attack on the Indian Parliament. In response, India launched Operation Parakram, wherein India undertook a full-scale mobilization of its armed forces. This Indian attempt at coercive diplomacy however, was an unmitigated failure. Among the many reasons for its failure was the inordinately long time that the three Indian strike corps took to mobilize and deploy from their garrisons deep in India. In the three weeks that it took for the Indian formations to get in place, the Pakistani Army had already countermobilized and fortified itself. Also, international powers were able to mount ever increasing pressure urging Indian restraint. In 2004, the Indian Army chief during Parakram, General S. Padmanabhan acknowledged that doctrinal baggage had crippled India’s options. He stated that, “You could certainly question why we are so dependent on our strike formations and why my holding Corps don’t have the capability to do the same tasks from a cold start… Perhaps, in time, it will be our military doctrine.”

Slowly, the Cold Start doctrine started taking shape. Its aim, in Walter C. Ladiwg ’s words, was to establish the capacity to launch a retaliatory conventional strike against Pakistan that would inflict significant harm on the Pakistan Army before the international community could intercede, and at the same time, pursue narrow enough aims to deny Islamabad a justification to escalate the clash to the nuclear level . Rapid mobilization, deployment and the ability to mass firepower rather than forces is critical to acquiring such a capability and necessitates rethinking about existing force structures. The Cold Start doctrine has two major elements . First, is a conversion of some of the Holding Corps to Pivot Corps so that Indian formations could launch offensive operations immediately and thus deny Pakistan the advantage of an early mobilization. The second element required the creation of ‘“integrated battle groups,” which would launch shallow thrusts and capture territory along the length of the International Boundary. These territorial gains could then be gainfully employed in post–conflict negotiations with Pakistan.

Since Operation Parakram, the Indian Army has worked on converting some of its Holding Corps to Pivot Corps by adding armored brigades to them. It has also reduced the mobilization time of its Strike Corps from over three weeks to around one week. No work, however, had been undertaken to create integrated battle groups. As a concept, Cold Start never had any buy-in either from the Indian government or the Indian Air Force . The army itself preferred the term proactive strategy options, with General VK Singh even denying that anything such as the Cold Start doctrine existed. The army’s inability to prosecute such operations was made public following the 26/11 terror attacks on Mumbai in 2008 when the Indian Army admitted that it was not ready to fight Pakistan.

In 2014, Narendra Modi-led BJP has come to power as the very first non-Congress non-coalition government in independent India’s history. This ascension led to expectations of a much more muscular Indian foreign policy especially vis-à-vis Pakistan. Were India to experience an attack anything close to the 26/11 Mumbai attacks in scale or gravity, Modi would be compelled to respond lest he lose all legitimacy. The surgical strikes conducted by India in response to the killing of nineteen soldiers by Pakistani militants in 2016 confirmed as much. More importantly, in 2017, India’s current Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Bipin Rawat at last acknowledged that the Cold Start doctrine exists for conventional military operations. Pakistan in response, continues to affirm its faith in the Full Spectrum Deterrence policy that it came up with in 2013 in response to Cold Start. This policy is an attempt to rationalize Pakistan’s relatively recent acquisition of tactical nuclear weapons.

The flaw in Pakistan’s posture of flexible response when it comes to nuclear deterrence is that while the Pakistani threat is a serious one, but it is not a credible one. In Bharat Karnad’s words: “Pakistan’s actions to first provoke a Cold Start operation capable of achieving only small goals and then to threaten to unleash its nuclear weapon as punishment for this reaction, which will only fetch it state-ending losses in return, is not credible… to assume that the nuclear deterrence system relevant to the near equal Cold War blocs applies to the absolutely unequal India and Pakistan is to skew the analysis. The nearest analogy from the Cold War years would be to isolate the United Kingdom with its “independent deterrent” or France and its force de frappe from the U.S. strategic umbrella and pit it against the Soviet Union in a nuclear confrontation in Europe. It conveys the nuclear military problem in extremis facing Pakistan in an actual nuclear war. In an exchange, India may lose a city or two, but Pakistan would, for all intents and purposes, cease to exist. Pakistan may have acquired nuclear weapons but their deterrent or dissuasive power is entirely at the sufferance of India.”

This view prevails not simply among Indian defense policy analysts but also at the highest levels of the Indian government. The serving COAS General Rawat has made clear that if the Indian Army were to confront Pakistan, then it would call Pakistan’s nuclear (bluff) and cross the border. As noted by India’s former foreign secretary Shyam Saran , “What Pakistan is signaling to India and to the world is that India should not contemplate retaliation even if there is another Mumbai because Pakistan has lowered the threshold of nuclear use to the theatre level. This is nothing short of nuclear blackmail…The label of a nuclear weapon used for attacking India, strategic or tactical, is irrelevant from the Indian perspective. A limited nuclear war is a contradiction in terms. Any nuclear exchange, once initiated, would swiftly and inexorably escalate to the strategic level.”

There are manifold reasons why India is presently incapable of executing the more aggressive versions of Cold Start. These range from the Indian Air Force’s doctrinal and organizational bias against close air support, to Pakistan’s ability to mobilize its forces much more rapidly than India, to the very low operational readiness rate of India’s armored forces, the extremely limited availability of self-propelled artillery, the absence of dedicated satellite bandwidth to conduct net-centric operations, to its subpar logistical network and the lack of personnel with the necessary initiative and flexibility to execute a maneuver doctrine. The biggest reason however, lies in the fact that no effort whatsoever had been made thus far to disaggregate its strike corps into smaller elements (integrated battle groups).

This last and most important requirement is what India may now be putting into place. Till last month’s army commanders conference, India’s January 2017 acknowledgement of the existence of Cold Start could have meant one of two things . One, was that General Bipin Rawat was simply referring to a more streamlined mobilization procedure, which would represent no doctrinal shift. Second, was that Cold Start referred to the Indian Army’s intention to undertake multiple, short notice, armored thrusts into Pakistan to seize and hold territory, something that would be a real doctrinal shift. Now, however, it is clear that India is envisaging the latter as well.

As on date, the fighting segment of the Indian Army’s 1.2 million active duty personnel are principally found in forty divisions distributed across fourteen corps (Strike, Holding or Pivot). These forty divisions comprise eighteen infantry divisions, twelve mountain divisions, four RAPID’s (Reorganized Army Plains Infantry Division), three armored and three artillery divisions. Each corps comprises about three divisions, and each division, has roughly three brigades under it. Lt Gen. Harcharanjit Singh Panag (retired) correctly notes that with all of India’s potential adversaries being nuclear weapon armed states, the probability of a full-scale decisive conventional war is quite low. The twenty-first century requires a more agile army. A clean break is required from existing brigades and divisions as tailor made, all arms battle groups are more suited for the kind of wars that India is likely to be engaged in. With IBG’s, the Indian Army is looking to integrate in peacetime to save the time wasted in integrating when going for combat.

Some light has already been shed on the likely number and nature of these composite fighting units . The IBG’s that India is now contemplating raising may be considered lighter divisions or heavier brigades . The Indian Army is considering two kinds of IBG’s. Smaller ones for the mountains facing China and larger ones for the plains facing Pakistan. Eight to ten IBG’s are being contemplated for use against Pakistan. Each IBG could have four to six battalions of infantry and armored units, two to three artillery regiments, an engineers unit, an integrated signals unit and dedicated integral logistics (eight thousand to ten thousand troops). The Indian Army has been clear however that not every corps, division or brigade will be replaced by an Integrated Battle Group. The terrain, threat perception and options available to the enemy will be critical factors for determining whether or not an IBG will replace the present structure.

To be sure, there is a long road ahead before IBG’s are operationalized. Presently, the concept itself is expected to be finalized in six to eight months . Following that, the same IBG’s will be tested. Plenty of doctrinal testing through simulated wargaming and field exercises should be expected before India actually fields these formations.

Praveen Swami had remarked, “every Indian Prime Minister has faced this impossible challenge: how to punish the Pakistan Army’s sponsorship of terrorism, but ensure victory doesn’t come at a price the country cannot afford.” Should it commit to operationalizing this concept, India may finally have an answer.

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Himanil Raina is a research associate at the National Maritime Foundation in India.
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Laungewala battle hero Brig Kuldip Singh Chandpuri fades away

CHANDIGARH: Brigadier Kuldip Singh Chandpuri, Maha Vir Chakra, was the quintessential soldier. Fearless and selfeffacing. The hero of the famous Battle of Laungewala remained so until he breathed his last at Fortis Hospital, Mohali, around 8:30am on Saturday, just a few days short of his 78th birthday on Nov 22.

The cremation will take place at the Sector 25 cremation ground in Chandigarh on Monday. According to his eldest son Hardeep Chandpuri, he was diagnosed with blood cancer in July.

Border, the 1997 film in which Sunny Deol played his role with flamboyance, catapulted the shy Chandpuri to instant fame but he remained unchanged. In a conversation with HT a few months ago, he said, “My jawans had as much a role to play in the victory as I did. We should never forget that.” Filmmaker JP Dutta, who directed Border, says he grew up hearing about Chandpuri’s bravery from his brother, late Deepak Dutta, one of the fighter pilots who came to the battalion’s rescue on December 7, 1971. Then a major, 31-year-old Chandpuri was the commander of 23 Punjab guarding Laungewala post on the Rajasthan border with 120 men when the unit was attacked by a Pakistani force comprising three battalions (3,000 men) and 70 tanks.

Severely outnumbered, Chandpuri’s company repulsed two attacks and held on to the post despite being encircled by the Pakistanis.

He won the Maha Vir Chakra for his action; in all, his company received seven gallantry awards. Military historian Mandeep Bajwa says Chandpuri’s brigade commander, Brigadier R O Kharbanda, who was in touch with the officer throughout the assault, called him a “solid soldier who held his ground in the face of insurmountable odds.”

A man not given to flamboyance, Chandpuri fired up soldiers by reminding them of the epic Battle of Chamkaur Garhi in which Guru Gobind Singh countered an army of Mughals with only a handful of men. He used to say, “No army can win without josh (passion).”

Major General KAS Bhullar (Retd), who was posted as the commander of Jodhpur RAPID division, remembers inviting him for an annual presentation on the Battle of Laungewala. “Chandpuri never charged us anything and would come by train.”

The soft-spoken officer never tolerated any harm coming to his men. He was once posted on the Line of Control in the Valley when two of his soldiers were killed by Pakistani forces. He recounted how his men went across the border and killed 14 personnel on the other side.

Born in Montgomery district of Pakistan in 1940, Chandpuri was fascinated with the army from childhood. His grandfather Sant Singh was in the army while his two uncles were fighter pilots.

Chandpuri cleared the National Cadet Corps exams after graduating from Government College, Hoshiarpur, in 1962, and graduated from the Officers Training Academy, Chennai, a year later.

He soldiered on in Chandigarh even after his retirement as he would take up the issues related to ex-servicemen.

As a nominated municipal councillor from 2006 to 2011, he got a Tower of Homage built for soldiers at the Terrace Garden in Sector 33, where he was among the first to buy a plot in 1967 when the city was in its infancy.

An avid gardener, he was very fond of his chrysanthemums. A few months ago, he rued that people in the city no longer continued with the tradition of inviting ex-servicemen for tea on the death anniversary of Bhagat Singh.

But he remained as passionate about the army as he was in his childhood.

As he once told a TV channel, “If I were to be reborn, I will become a soldier again.”