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Nirmala Sitharaman To Inaugurate Bein Bridge In Jammu And Kashmir

Nirmala Sitharaman To Inaugurate Bein Bridge In Jammu And Kashmir

Nirmala Sitharaman will inaugurate Bein bridge in Samba district of Jammu and Kashmir.

SAMBA: 

Union Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will inaugurate the strategically important 331-metre-long Bein bridge in Samba in mid-February, an officer said Tuesday.

The bridge is considered to be most strategic for the movement of armed forces and the BSF along the Indo-Pak border, Commanding Officer Col Aditya Shahi told PTI.

It will usher in a new revolution in the connectivity of roads and bridges in the border areas of Jammu and Kashmir, he said.

“Minister of Defence Nirmala Sitharaman will inaugurate 331.20-metre-long Bein bridge in Samba district of Jammu and Kashmir and dedicate it to the nation (in the middle of next month),” Col Shahi said.

The Bein bridge has been constructed at a cost of Rs. 21.03 crore under the supervision of Border Roads Organisation (BRO), he said.

“It has been completed six months before its scheduled time,” he said, adding that the bridge is constructed on the Parole-Rajoura road.

“The Bein bridge is strategically very important for the Army in deploying forces on the border areas as well as in smooth connectivity for the people of border villages in Samba sector,” the officer said.

COMMENT

The bridge is important as connectivity gets disrupted during monsoon.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)


Cell phones, weapons seized from militants in Jammu jail Call records of inmates under scrutiny; more recoveries likely: Police

Cell phones, weapons seized from militants in Jammu jail

Photo for representational purpose only

Arteev Sharma

Tribune News Service

Jammu, January 21

A day after the recovery of mobile phones, sharp-edged weapons and deep freezers from the high-security Kot Bhalwal jail here, security agencies have started scrutinising the call details made from the premises “to break the nexus between prisoners, including militants, and prison staff”.

“We are analysing the details of phone calls made from the seized mobile phones through their IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) numbers as we are yet to find the SIM cards. We are hopeful of getting vital clues. It is premature to comment as who brought and provided the phones to prisoners,” a senior police officer, who was part of the search operation, told The Tribune.

He, however, did not rule out the possibility of presence of more mobile phones and other incriminating material inside the jail.

“There is no record of the last search operation conducted inside the jail. The authorities had noticed suspicious activity inside the prison about four months back and wrote to DGP Dilbag Singh, who is also DGP (Prisons), for necessary action,” a source said, adding that “security agencies were planning to conduct a search operation since then”.

On Sunday, the Special Operations Group (SOG) of the J&K Police and the Kot Bhalwal jail authorities conducted a joint search operation on the prison premises and recovered two mobile telephones, five pen drives, sharp-edged weapons, LPG cylinders, stoves, cooking material, deep freezers and several other incriminating items from the militants lodged there.

Daylong searches were carried out by around 300 men from 15 teams of the SOG, Jammu rural police, prison staff and some NGOs. The high-security prison, where the UN-designated terrorist, Masood Azhar, was once detained, currently has 510 prisoners, including 13 Pakistani and 170 local militants, stone throwers and detainees under the Public Safety Act.

“We cannot rule out the involvement of the jail staff in providing these facilities to militants and other hardcore criminals in the prison. We are investigating their role. Meanwhile, searches on the jail premises will continue until all incriminating items are seized. However, we are not sure as to how many more mobile phones are still there inside the jail,” another senior police officer said, adding that “clarity on prisoners’ contact with militant groups outside the jail will be established soon”.

In February 2018, the Centre had asked the J&K Government to fully review the security measures inside jails and transportation of inmates after a Pakistan militant, Naved Jatt, who was recently killed in an encounter in south Kashmir, managed to escape.


SOG men carry out search

  • The Special Operations Group (SOG) of the J&K Police and the Kot Bhalwal jail authorities on Sunday conducted a joint search operation at the Kot Bhalwal jail
  • It recovered two cell phones, five pen drives, sharp-edged weapons, LPG cylinders, stoves, food items and deep freezers from militants lodged in the prison

Prison staff’s role to be probed

“We cannot rule out the involvement of the jail staff in providing these facilities to militants and other hardcore criminals in the prison. We are investigating their role.” —Senior police officer 

 


Pak ceasefire violations in 2018 highest in last 10 yrs

Violations touch 2,140 in 2018, increasing from 971 in 2017 and 449 in 2016

NEW DELHI: Ceasefire violations along India’s border with Pakistan and the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir more than doubled in 2018 from the previous year to reach the highest this decade, according to data compiled by India’s security and military establishment.

The ceasefire violations, with increased Pakistan sniper activity, touched 2,140 last year, increasing from 971 in 2017 and 449 in 2016, according to the data seen by HT. This led to a decadal high of 30 civilian casualties and 29 casualties among security personnel manning the border with Pakistan and the LoC.

Every Tuesday, for the past three Tuesdays, India’s Director General of Military Operations (DGMO) has red-flagged a massive escalation of ceasefire violations along the international border and the LoC to his Pakistani counterpart. This isn’t new, but indicates no change in Islamabad’s approach under a new government, with Indian security officials saying all monitored parameters have touched alltime highs.

The Pakistan DGMO, on his part, and as in the past, has flatly denied all charges.

Analysts say the Imran Khan government may have been emboldened by the lowering of pressure from the US as the latter needs Islamabad when it exits from Afghanistan. That the US needs Pakistan to start the peace and reconciliation dialogue between the Taliban and the Ashraf Ghani government was evident during the meetings between US Special Envoy on Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad,and Indian interlocutors including NSA Ajit Doval on January 10-11.

According to officials familiar with the matter, the Indian side made it clear to the US interlocutor that its humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan was linked to Kabul containing terrorism and that New Delhi would explore other options if the peace dialogue is not inclusive and not proAfghan. Although Pakistan submitted its risk assessment report on action taken against terrorist groups to the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) at a meeting in Sydney on January 7-8 , Indian security officials say it continues to provide a base for terrorists targeting India.

Terrorist violence in Jammu and Kashmir is at levels not seen in a decade: 614 attacks in 2018 with 38 civilians and 257 Islamic extremists killed.

FATF, on its part, found the Pakistan assessment unsatisfactory and asked the Imran Khan

government to make required changes in its anti-terrorism strategy before it grants any relief to Islamabad.

Adverse action by FATF could have consequences for Pakistan’s already troubled economy with a possible downgrade of Islamabad’s debt ratings and restrictions being placed on how much it can borrow from global monetary institutions.

Chances of Pakistan being downgraded to a black list and be clubbed with Iran and North Korea are, however, remote.


Protocol and politics of state funerals BY Lt Gen SR Ghosh (Retd)

Lt Gen SR Ghosh (Retd)

Whims and fancies of people in power, vote-bank pressures and a loose ‘discretionary’ clause can imbalance protocol-based events, resulting in controversies and debates. While honours accorded to well-known personalities have generally not been objected to, what has vexed people is the draping of Tricolour over bodies of some of the departed.

Protocol and politics of state funerals

Homage: State funerals with full military honours, including the 17-gun salute, should be accorded to Field Marshals/Marshals of the Air Force/Admirals of the Seas and all Param Vir Chakra/Ashok Chakra awardees.

Lt Gen SR Ghosh (Retd)
Former GOC-in-C, Western Command

RAMAKANT Achrekar, a cricket coach known for having nurtured Sachin Tendulkar and Vinod Kambli, passed away recently. However, even before the embers had cooled, a controversy flared up about a ‘state funeral’ not being accorded to him. The Maharashtra Government had to go into overdrive and apologise for the ‘omission’.

Such controversies have erupted several times. In 2017, the Karnataka Government was slammed for according a state funeral with a 21-gun salute to Gauri Lankesh, a journalist known for her support to Naxals and views on right-wing Hindu extremism. The administration claimed that the gun salute was given as “a mark of respect for her selfless service and not for ideological reasons”. Another recent case was that of Sridevi, who was given full state honours at her funeral under the Chief Minister’s discretionary powers for being an “eminent personality who has done public service”. A third case is that of Sarabjit Singh, convicted of spying and subsequently killed in a Pakistani jail in 2013, for whom the Punjab Government ordered three-day mourning and a state funeral.

It is these powers of discretion that give rise to controversies and hype among the public. Over the past several years, state funerals under the discretionary powers have been given to several other personalities, including Rajesh Khanna, ex-cricketer Ajit Wadekar, journalist Muzaffar Hussain, Mother Teresa, Sathya Sai Baba, singer Gangubai Hangal, BJP leader Pramod Mahajan, who held no ministerial position when he lost his life, and Dada JP Vaswani. It is strange that Bollywood star Shashi Kapoor was also given a state funeral, complete with a three-gun salute by the police, while legendary thespian Raj Kapoor had been accorded none of these honours. 

However, nothing can be as glaring as the difference in the treatment meted out to two giants of the Armed Forces. In September 2017, Marshal of the Indian Air Force Arjan Singh was cremated in Delhi with full state honours. The Tricolour was flown at half mast and both the President and the Prime Minister paid tributes at his residence, where the body lay in state. The funeral was attended by top political leaders, including Manmohan Singh and LK Advani, the Raksha Mantri (Defence Minister) and the three Service Chiefs. A 17-gun salute, a fly-past by three Sukhoi fighters and helicopters carrying the IAF colours were part of the honours accorded to the ‘Air Warrior’.

Compare this with the shocking treatment meted out to India’s most iconic soldier, Field Marshal SHFJ Manekshaw, the Chief of the Indian Army which liberated Bangladesh in 1971 and captured over 90,000 Pakistani prisoners of war. Sam passed away in June 2008 at Wellington, Tamil Nadu. However, for reasons unknown, the Indian Government appeared to deliberately downplay the state honours that this great soldier so richly deserved. In any other country, such a funeral would have been attended by the highest officials of the nation. However, here no national mourning was declared and not one among our constitutional and central political leadership, including the Defence Minister, found time to attend his cremation. Nor did the Governor or Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. The sole representative of the government was the Minister of State for Defence. Even the Air Force and Navy Chiefs did not attend the funeral and instead chose to send two-star-ranked officers.

All these cases exemplify how politics, whims and fancies of people in power, vote-bank pressures and a loose ‘discretionary’ clause can imbalance such protocol-based events, resulting in avoidable controversies and debates. While honours accorded to well-known personalities have generally not been objected to, the two main issues that have, however, vexed the people are the draping of the Tricolour over the bodies of some of the departed and the rendering of gun salutes to them.

A ‘state mourning’ was initially reserved only for the President, Prime Minister and former Presidents, while Governors were added to the list for ‘state funerals’. However, this came with a clause that in the case of other dignitaries, the Centre could issue special instructions or order a state funeral. Thus, over the years, rules have been relaxed or overlooked on several occasions to accommodate some personalities. There is, therefore, a need to review existing instructions and streamline and standardise these to ensure uniformity and transparency across the country.

Some recommendations are: ‘National mourning’ and a ‘national funeral’ should be authorised only for the President, Vice President, Prime Minister and former Presidents. These dignitaries would be entitled to most of the existing protocols, including a 21-gun salute by the military and a recommended four-day period of mourning during which the Tricolour would fly at half mast. Based on a Fifth Pay Commission recommendation in 1997, the government had notified that a public holiday would be declared only in the event of the death of the incumbent President and Prime Minister. It is now recommended that this practice be abolished in totality.

‘State funerals’ should be reserved for former Vice Presidents and Prime Ministers, sitting Cabinet ministers, Governors, Lieutenant Governors, Speaker of the Lok Sabha, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Chief Ministers and Bharat Ratna awardees. The Honour Guard at such funerals should be drawn from the state police or the Central Armed Police Forces, which would fire three volleys by seven riflemen. Bodies would be draped in the Tricolour, but there would be no lowering of the National Flag.

State funerals with full military honours, including the 17-gun salute, should be accorded to Field Marshals/Marshals of the Air Force/Admirals of the Seas and all Param Vir Chakra/Ashok Chakra awardees.

All other prominent citizens of great stature could be accorded a ‘ceremonial funeral’ at the discretion of the Central or state governments. A ceremonial funeral should also be authorised for former Union Cabinet ministers or equivalent former government dignitaries.

Such a funeral would basically entail logistical and security arrangements by the government, provision of a police escort and attendance by appropriate elected/government dignitaries. Bodies of such departed citizens would neither be draped in the Tricolour nor would rifle volleys be fired.

National mourning with flags lowered to half mast throughout the country should be proclaimed if the nation goes through any major calamity or natural disaster resulting in large-scale loss of lives.

 


Battle of the Bulge: Bipin Rawat’s radical plan to restructure army

Army chief Gen. Bipin Rawat has an ambitious blueprint to restructure the bloated Indian Army and make it a lean and modern fighting unit. Will it succeed?

FORWARD LINE: The Kumaon regiment at a Republic Day parade. (Photo: Chandradeep Kumar)

ORWARD LINE: The Kumaon regiment at a Republic Day parade. (Photo: Chandradeep Kumar)

The biannual army commanders’ conference, presided over by the army chief and his eight seniormost lieutenant generals, is the force’s supreme decision-making body. So, when General Bipin Rawat called for an informal meeting of the army commanders in September 2018, a month ahead of the scheduled conference, the brass knew something was afoot. They were right. In the huddle in New Delhi, Gen. Rawat unveiled plans for reform and restructuring of the force unlike any attempted in decades. The defence budget last February had left the army with one of its lowest budgets to buy new equipment-just 13 per cent or Rs 26,826 crore. This was because nearly 87 per cent of its budget would be spent on paying salaries, buying fuel and ammunition. When the army commanders met again, formally in October, they had already flagged off four study groups to move into thrust areas identified by Gen. Rawat. The four studies, each headed by a Lt Gen., have a fourfold mission. They are meant to reshape the field army into an agile, operationally effective force capable of handling conventional and hybrid warfare, restructure the army headquarters in New Delhi, give its officer cadre a younger profile and revise the terms of engagement of the soldiers, a vast majority of whom retire at the age of 35.

The 1.2 million-strong Indian Army, the world’s second largest after China’s 2.1 million-strong People’s Liberation Army (PLA), hopes this restructuring will cut back up to 100,000 soldiers and reduce its crippling revenue budget (what it spends on manpower). Revenue spends are projected to rise to over 90 per cent in the years ahead. The goal of Gen. Rawat’s radical reform plan is to make the army fighting fit and to find the resources within the existing budget to make it happen. At the heart of the plan is the new concept of bulked-up brigades-called Integrated Battle Groups or IBGs-to replace division-sized forces. As Gen. Rawat puts it, his plan has three objectives: “to be prepared for future warfare by strengthening our capabilities, become more efficient and better manage our budget (see interview).”

Army officials are calling this the deepest cadre restructuring of the force in over three decades and, depending on how effectively it is implemented, potentially the army’s most far-reaching change since Independence.

The army reforms are a continuation of the ones set in motion by the defence ministry in 2017, when it began implementing the recommendations of the Lt Gen. (retd) D.B. Shekatkar committee report of December 2016. These reforms will see the redeployment and restructuring of 57,000 men, including officers, junior commissioned officers (JCOs) and soldiers.

The first stirrings of reform are kicking in. Two of the army’s advanced base workshops in Guwahati and Udhampur, each with over 1,500 personnel, have been shut down, the personnel transferred to army units. The nearly 50 station workshops, partly staffed by civilians and the army’s corps of military engineers (EME) are next on the chopping block. A majority will be outsourced to industry under a government-owned commercially operated model (GOCOMO). The World War II-era army postal establishment and military farms in peacetime establishments will be shut down. While the Shekatkar committee reforms, the brainchild of former defence minister Manohar Parrikar, targeted the flab within the army’s support elements like the supply corps and the engineers, it left the field army untouched. That’s where Gen. Rawat aimed his restructuring.

THE BIG IBG FORCE

Gen. Rawat, known for speaking his mind, can often be a journalist’s delight and a media advisor’s nightmare. His recent comments on the unsuitability of women officers to lead soldiers in combat set off a storm on social media. But beneath the candour lies a steely determination to leave a legacy. At a recent meeting of military veterans, Rawat said he wanted to bequeath an organisation to his successors that is lean, agile and capable of realising the military’s objectives.

The army’s Land Warfare Doctrine, released in December, bears the Rawat stamp. It reiterates conventional war as being central to the army’s operations and that it will continue to wage counter-terrorism and counter-insurgency operations to ‘ensure deterrence through punitive responses, against state-sponsored proxy war’.

His reorganisation hopes to reshape the army to fight under two overhangs-nuclear and budgetary. Both its potential adversaries-China and Pakistan-are nuclear armed. The defence budget is unlikely to rise substantially to meet their collusive threat. The chief has taken the axe out on the field formations that will fight conventional conflicts.

Structural reforms in the army, especially of the field formations meant to fight battles, are usually personality-driven attempts to alter the status quo. The last time this was done was in the mid-1980s when the visionary army chief General K. Sundarji adapted the US air-land battle concept to reshape four infantry divisions into the Reorganised Army Plains Infantry Divisions or RAPIDs, mobile divisions each comprising an armoured brigade equipped with battle tanks that would punch through enemy lines and two mechanised infantry brigades that would carry troops in newly acquired armoured personnel carriers.

The son of retired army deputy chief Lt Gen. Lachu Singh Rawat, the current army chief was deep-selected by the government over two other senior generals in December 2016. Since then, he has constantly pressed his field commanders on their preparedness to fight wars at short notice. ‘Cold Start’, the army’s battle strategy evolved after the 10-month Operation Parakram standoff with Pakistan in 2001, envisages the army going into battle at a few hours’ notice.

But, as a general says, a lot of Cold Start-related tactical work was up in the air before Rawat’s time. “What he’s trying to do is actually implement those on the ground,” one general says. In the pipeline is a plan to reduce the number of army commands facing China from the present four to just two.

If Gen. Sundarji gave the army RAPIDS, Gen. Rawat has called for raising IBGs. Equipped with infantry, tanks, artillery and mechanised infantry, the IBGs will be commanded by a major general and operate under the 14 corps-sized formations in the army. The concept is similar to the US army’s basic manoeuvre unit, the infantry brigade combat group, and the PLA’s ‘combined arms brigades’, a feature of China’s military reorganisation under way since 2013.

The IBGs will replace the primary all-arms fighting unit, the infantry division. Each infantry division is a force of around 14,000 soldiers backed by an armoured brigade of 80 tanks and artillery brigade of 500 guns, and can independently fight a ground war. One school of thought within the army calls for replacing all the 40 infantry divisions with nearly 140 IBGs. This will, however, depend on the results of a test bed in two of the corps in the Chandimandir-based Western Command this year, where field exercises will be carried out to see how it will work. The 2,900-km Indo-Pak border is not uniform-the LoC in Kashmir is rugged mountains, Akhnoor and Chhamb in Jammu are in the plains, Punjab is crisscrossed by rivers, Rajasthan and Gujarat have deserts and marshes. Each IBG on the western border with Pakistan will be sector-specific, each area getting the resources it needs to strike across the border in case of a conflict. The deserts will have a different application. “The chief wants to fix troops and equipment for each of these sector-specific IBGs,” a senior army official says.

The IBGs, the army feels, will kill several birds with one stone. They will operate direc­tly under the Corps HQ, thus, doing away with division headquarters. They will see an increase of nearly 95 major generals, needed to command nearly 140 IBGs, thereby increasing the promotion prospects of lower ranks. Currently, a colonel has to wait for nearly six-to-eight years to become a brigadier. The army has proposed diminishing the importance of the brigadier rank by making it a ‘non-selection’ grade appointment as it is for the equivalent ranks of air commodore and commodore in the Indian Air Force and Navy. All colonels will thus automatically become brigadiers, drawing higher pay and with better prospects of becoming major generals. These measures will reduce the total number of brigadiers from 1,165 to 936, increase the number of major generals from 301 to 396 and, overall, reduce 134 officers in the army.

The army has proposed doing away with all its division headquarters because the corps will now directly control the IBGs. They will also abolish the NCC Directorate, the Military Training Directorate and the Deputy Director General Military Farms. Several other separate directorates will be merged. The DGs of Perspective Planning and Weapons & Equipment directorates are to be merged into a single director general (PP & WE). The Director General Signals and Telecom and Director General Information Technology are to be merged into the DG-ST.

Some of the officers it thus saves will be moved into the Directorate General of Shaping of Information Environment (DGSIE) to fight hybrid warfare, another of Gen. Rawat’s pet themes. Hybrid warfare is a military strategy that is a lethal cocktail of conventional warfare with irregular warfare, lawfare, cyber warfare and diplomacy. This proposed specialist vertical will enable the army to fight a defensive hybrid warfare challenge.

SHOW ME THE MONEY

The world’s second largest army faces multiple challenges, each of which has changed in varying degrees over the past three decades. It is fighting an insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir that has flickered with varying intensity. Its troops are strung out over 4,000 km of disputed boundaries with Pakistan and China. Fighting a full-scale conventional war on a collusive Chi-Pak axis is now cast in stone in its military strategy. “It’s not just about fighting a two-front war, it’s also about obtaining decisive military objectives on both fronts,” a senior army official says. What has changed dramatically, however, is the army’s ability to pay for all of this.

Over the next decade, the army needs to find Rs 100,000 crore to pay for new attack helicopters, utility helicopters and missiles to replace its 1980s arsenal. The army has over 800,000 infantry. These numbers mean even the cheapest item on its shopping list-assault rifles, carbines and light machine guns-will cost Rs 15,000 crore. Yet, the army also needs to find the manpower and equipment for its Mountain Strike Corps-three divisions that will move into China in the event of a military conflict-and to staff new directorates it is creating to respond to nascent threats like information warfare.

All these require huge jumps in budgetary allocations at a time when the government is focused on reducing the fiscal deficit-the gap between revenue and expenditure. In its budget this year, the army got Rs 17,756 crore less in capital outlay and Rs 24,755 crore less under the revenue head than what it had sought. The army accounts for 55 per cent of the defence budget, but swallows 69 per cent of the revenue budget of all the three services. The defence budget, at 1.58 per cent of the GDP, is the lowest in over 50 years, the army has said while arguing for a budgetary hike. The government is unlikely to relent.

A July 23, 2018, statement tabled in the Rajya Sabha by MoS for defence Subhash Bhamre captured the government’s thinking. “The defence budget as a percentage of GDP may appear to be decreasing due to increasing trend in the growth of GDP,” Bhamre said. “However, it is increasing in absolute terms, implying higher spending.”

SYNERGY QUOTIENT: A tri-service exercise in Karwar, Karnataka, in Nov. 2018

To bolster his argument, Bhamre mentioned the ‘total defence budget’ this year-Rs 4.04 lakh crore (and not the Rs 2.9 lakh crore which the government spends only on the armed forces). This also includes military pensions, which was delinked from the armed forces’ budgets and placed under the MoD budget in the 1980s. Seen in its entirety, the defence budget is actually 31 per cent larger because of this hidden pension component. All told, Bhamre said, the defence budget in 2018-19 would account for 16.6 per cent of the total central government expenditure.

Bhamre nudged the armed forces to “optimally utilise” their budgets, asking them to “reprioritise schemes to ensure urgent and critical capabilities are acquired without compromising operational preparedness”. The statement shocked the armed forces, particularly as the MoS mentioned the touchy issue of defence pensions.

India pays out $15 billion (Rs 1 lakh crore) for its 20 million defence pensioners a year, a figure almost equal to the salaries it pays to serving personnel. This figure, analysts note, is more than Pakistan’s $9.6 billion defence budget this year and is projected to climb over the years, further increasing the military budget’s revenue component.

The navy and air force have received smaller outlays. The navy asked for Rs 37,932 crore but was given only Rs 20,848 crore, Rs 17,084 less than what it had sought. The IAF got Rs 41,924 crore less than what it had demanded. With minor budgetary increases barely sufficient to cater to inflation, there is despondency all around. To make matters worse, in 2017, the government took away duty exemptions on the import of defence equipment, which means the defence services have to pay more for hardware. This translates into a 20 per cent hit on the capital budget across the services.

The budget cuts, as one service chief told india today, show the yawning gap between intent and reality. “We aspire to be a superpower and we want to be strategically autonomous, which means we can’t have military alliances. But creating hard power requires a hike in defence spending, which isn’t happening either.”

WILL IT SUCCEED?

The revenue capital mismatch has been faced by several of Gen. Rawat’s predecessors. As far back as 1975, then Lt Gen. K.V. Krishna Rao headed a panel that spoke of the need to reduce the army’s teeth-to-tail ratio or the ratio of fighting personnel to the supply and logistics personnel. In 1998, under what was informally called ‘save and raise’, Gen. V.P. Malik ‘suppressed’ 50,000 vacancies within the army. The army would work with manpower deficiencies and not replace retiring soldiers. It was a great idea, but got scuppered by the Kargil war of 1999. Overnight, the army grew by over 150,000 soldiers as it raised two new corps, one in Ladakh and another in Pathankot, to man the gaps along the LoC. In order to brighten career prospects in the armed forces, they pushed for higher pay and allowances and pensions under the sixth and seventh pay commissions over the past 20 years. These have now come back to bite. “We are in a Catch 22 situation,” says a senior army officer. “The armed forces are a low priority career option, so pay has to be kept at the level it is to attract people, otherwise you won’t get good candidates.”

Gen. Rawat is confident the government will approve his restructuring. This shouldn’t be a problem because ever since the defeat in the 1962 war, when the Nehru government was accused of foisting an unpopular general on the army, successive governments have left the army to itself. The army is yet to project the savings on account of reorganisation, but back of the envelope calculations show it could shave off up to Rs 6,000 crore from its revenue budget if it reduces 50,000 soldiers.

But will the finance ministry, which allocates budgets, transfer revenue savings to the capital account? There is no evidence to show this will be the case. Still, Rawat believes the government will meet him halfway. “I am quite confident the government will support us. You know when we tell the government that ‘we are coming halfway, are you also willing to come halfway?’, I’m sure they will understand.” It remains to be seen how the finance ministry reacts to this.

Graphics by Tanmoy Chakraborty

“The defence ministry already accounts for 33 per cent of the government’s entire capital spend,” says Laxman Kumar Behera, a scholar at the MoD think-tank Institute of Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA). “It is difficult to see how the finance ministry will want to increase this allocation. All savings will only go into the Consolidated Fund of India.”

Former Northern Army Commander Lt Gen. H.S. Panag says the reforms are meaningless without the government finalising a national security strategy after which it can kick off resource-intensive modernisation plans like seamlessly linking up soldiers on the battlefield through information-technology and sensory networks like those in the armies of the US or China. “Technology acquisition is an expensive exercise which needs the government on board. Since this is not a priority for the government, this (the reforms) will remain nothing more than a plan for internal reforms,” he says.

Downsizing the army is a concern shared by the government. A report submitted to the National Security Advisory Board, which operates under NSA Ajit Doval, last November recommended cutting 20 per cent of the standing army into reserve formations to save costs. The report, independent of the four studies being undertaken by the army, was prepared by former Northern Army Commander, Lt Gen. D.S. Hooda. A big imponderable, though, is the fate of all such reform plans-Gen. Rawat’s included-at a time when the government is rapidly slipping into election mode. And it’s easy to be sceptical. The Indian Army is a behemoth that inherently defies any attempts at change. None of the army’s right-sizing moves over the past three decades have succeeded. And last but not the least, a change at the top frequently results in a change in priorities.

THE MIRAGE OF ‘JOINTMANSHIP’

The bane of all attempts to reform budgets is the fact that these are single-service endeavours. Analysts point out that the army’s attempts to reform itself suffer from the same problems afflicting national security. It reflects a single-service action when the remedy lies in a joint approach. “Future wars will not remain only army- or infantry-centric. They will need all three services to fight together. Hence, jointness-the three services fighting together-is the need of the hour,” says Lt Gen. Shekatkar, who headed the MoD reforms committee. “The services haven’t even touched the toenail of this elephant in the room,” says an MoD finance official. “Why do the services need 17 separate commands? Why is there a Southern Naval Command in Kochi and an Air Force Southern Command in Thiruvananthapuram?”

Graphics by Tanmoy Chakraborty

These are solutions which have to be pushed through at the political level. But here again, the government is yet to act on one of the most contentious recommendations of the Shekatkar committee-the creation of just three joint theatre commands: north, south and west-which will merge the existing 17 commands. Each command will report to a theatre commander. The theatre commanders will report to the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), the single point military advisor to the government. It is also yet to act on the proposal for a permanent chairman, Chiefs of Staffs Committee (a halfway house to a CDS). The post is presently held in rotation by the seniormost of the three service chiefs. For years, the services could never build a consensus on the roles and responsibilities of the permanent chairman. This year, however, after years of infighting, they did the unthinkable. Navy chief Admiral Sunil Lanba, chairman, CoSC, says the services finally buried their differences on a permanent chairman, CoSC, and submitted a proposal to the government last year. Now, the ball is squarely in the government’s court.

Gen. Rawat says the army’s reformed structure will lead to more jointmanship and has called for officers from the two other services to be posted within each others’ commands to increase efficiency.

Rawat has another year to go before he hangs up his boots, the first chief in nearly two decades to enjoy a full three-year tenure. This year will be crucial for him to realise his vision. He is confident his successors will carry on his reforms, a task that could take up to five years to realise. His success or lack of it will determine whether the Indian Army turns into a 21st century fighting machine or be fated to remain in the last century.


Lady officer to lead contingent on Army Day for first time

NEW DELHI: For the first time in Indian Army’s history, a lady officer will lead a contingent on the Army Day Parade on January 15.
Lieutenant Bhawna Kasturi will lead a contingent of 144 personnel of the Service Corps, which is participating after a gap of 23 years in the parade. It handles the logistic support function of the Army.
Army chief Gen Bipin Rawat will take salute on this occasion.
After rehearsal parade, Lt Kasturi said, this is the first time ever a lady officer is leading a contingent. Earlier, never a lady officer led a jawans’ contingent. Boys are putting too much effort and we have been practicing since past one year.
Our centre is in Bangalore and I’m coming from our regimental center and it’s been six months we are practicing. Along with me, there are two male officers from the center are practicing as contingent commanders, the army officer said.
She also lauded the Army for this opportunity and said, this shows the kind of acceptance, the change and the evolutions which is happening in the entire organization.
This shows acceptance for woman officers also.
On permanent commission for the women officers, she said that the higher authority in the Army is working hard for it and they also recognising the efforts being put by the lady officers.
Indian Army will celebrate its 71st raising day on January 15. (agencies)


PM a master of deceit: Capt Disputes every statement made by Modi in Gurdaspur on Thursday

PM a master of deceit: Capt
Capt Amarinder Singh, Chief Minister

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, January 4

Describing the Prime Minister as “a master of deceit and disinformation”, Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh on Friday challenged Narendra Modi to show even one instance of a promise fulfilled by his government in the past five years, which had witnessed India plunging into utter ruin and devastation under his anti-people and divisive policies.

Taking Modi head-on over the statement made by him from the dais in Gurdaspur yesterday, Captain Amarinder said the “jumlebaaz” Prime Minister had brought the nation to its nadir with his deceptions and fabrications, and was staring at his moment of judgment at the hands of the people, who were set to throw him out of power for good.

Disputing every single statement made by Modi in Gurdaspur, the Chief Minister said the Prime Minister was misleading the people in the face of his imminent defeat in the upcoming Lok Sabha elections. “Modi once again lied on every issue, from the 1984 riots and Kartarpur corridor to the farm debt waiver,” said Capt Amarinder Singh.

Questioning Modi’s silence on the BJP/RSS workers named in the Tilak Marg police station FIR related to the 1984 riots, the Chief Minister said he desperately trying to drag the Gandhi family into the matter even though no fingers had been pointed at them.

“And what about the 1992 riots in Gujarat which happened right under your nose and in which your own party members were squarely blamed and named?” Captain Amarinder asked Modi, demanding to know why the Prime Minister continued to remain silent on the issue.

Captain Amarinder also lambasted the Prime Minister for trying to seize credit for the Kartarpur corridor, which the Congress had been actively pursuing since the days of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, right down to Dr Manmohan Singh. He himself had been taking up the issue with Pakistan for years, said the Chief Minister, asking Modi to reveal what he had done to get the project going.

“You have not even given a single paisa so far for the celebration of the 550th Parkash Utsav of Guru Nanak despite our repeated pleas and requests and yet you claim to be the guardian of the Sikhs and their religion,” asserted the Chief Minister, pinning Modi down on the issue.

 


Army Chief Gen Bipin Rawat reviews security situation along LoC & hinterland in J&K

@adgpi

Army Chief Gen Bipin Rawat reviewed the security situation along the Line of Control and the hinterland in Jammu and Kashmir. Gen Rawat, accompanied by Northern Army Commander Lt Gen Ranbir Singh and Chinar Corps Commander Lt Gen AK Bhatt, visited the frontier district of Kupwara yesterday.

Army Chief was briefed about the recent counter-infiltration operations. Gen Rawat interacted with the troops and spent the first day of 2019 with troops in the Kashmir Valley.

Army spokesperson said, Gen Rawat was appreciative of the sharp vigil and ness along the Line of Control and high morale of the troops, and further exhorted them to remain for any eventuality.

Army Chief also interacted with senior police officials and discussed the prevailing internal security situation in the valley. Gen Rawat also appreciated the seamless cooperation and synergy being maintained among all the agencies.

Army Chief arrived in Kashmir valley yesterday on a two-day visit to the state.


Defence college study group calls on Malik

Jammu, January 29

A group of faculty and course members from the National Defence College led by tour coordinator Banita Devi Naorem called on Governor Satya Pal Malik at Raj Bhawan here on Tuesday.

The group of officers from armed forces and civil services who are on study trip to J&K comprised Brig Satish Dahiya, Air Cdre S Dutta, Brig V Parida, Col Sani Ahmed (Nigerian Army), Brig Sanjeev Kumar, Col Myo Htut Win (Myanmar), Col Brett Paul Chaloner (Australian Army), Brig Yogesh Chaudhary, Brig V S Sekhon, Ponugumatla Ramjee, Cdre Subir Mukherjee, Captain MD Hasan Tarique Mondal (Bangladesh Army) and Brig Ajay Kumar.

During an interaction, the Governor shared his perspective about the Kashmir issue and initiatives taken by his administration in meeting the aspirations of people about investment, environment, tourism potential, education scenario and ongoing developmental programmes in the state. — TNS


Over two years after launch, war heroes memorial and museum in Amritsar battles poor footfall

 Footfall of tourists is low as awareness about the memorial has not been created. Against the projected average daily footfall of around 5,000, we only get 200 on weekdays and 500-600 on weekends. COL HP SINGH (RETD), project director

AMRITSAR: More than two years after it was inaugurated in October 2016, footfall at the state-of-the-art Punjab State War Heroes Memorial and Museum is bitterly short of expectation. Officials from the Sainik Welfare department, which maintains the memorial, say that average footfall has been around 300 visitors per day since inauguration against the projected 5,000. Amritsar itself sees tourist football of 50,000 each on weekdays and around a lakh on the weekends. The then chief minister Parkash Singh Badal had inaugurated the memorial, with work pending on two of its galleries.

“Footfall of tourists is low as awareness about the memorial has not been created. Against the projected average daily footfall of around 5,000; we only get 200 on weekdays and 500-600 on weekends. Since inauguration, around 2 lakh people have visited the memorial,” said Col HP Singh (retd), project director, of the memorial, spread in 7 acre opposite the India Gate on the GT road.

The ₹150 crore project covers the heroism and sacrifices in Punjab from the days of Alexander the Great to the Kargil War. It also covers the origins of Miri Piri, which evolved at the time of the sixth Guru, Guru Hargobind Singh.

“We are short of funds. Once we get these, we will publicise the memorial properly to increase its footfall,” the Col added. There are nine galleries in the memorial. Visitors have access to only six. Construction work on its fourth gallery, which will depict the battle of Saragarhi, Jallianwala massacre, and battles in the World War-I and II remains suspended.

The eighth gallery, which displays the history of Kargil War in the form of paintings, art work, and two and threedimensional (2D and 3D) projections, is waiting for inauguration. The ninth gallery is meant to inspire the youth to join the armed forces; its status is unclear. “We need ₹1 crore to complete the fourth gallery. However, the Kargil gallery will soon be thrown open. Work will start, once we get funds,” the Col added.

The others six galleries are dedicated to information about Antiquity (ancient times), the era of Guru Hargobind Singh till the rise of the Sikh Empire, the Sikh Empire and the Anglo-Sikh Wars, Jammu & Kashmir Operations (1947-48), Indo-China War (1962), Indo-Pak War (1965-1971) etc.

Another 45-metre high mild steel sword stands in the middle of the memorial. It represents the strength and courage displayed by at least 3,500 Punjab soldiers, while defending the nation. The memorial also has an original Mig -23 and a model of the decommissioned INS Vikrant.

The memorial authorities have also written to the government to sanction ₹60 lakh to inscribe names of 4,000 martyred soldiers, including 54 of Punjab (who have been missing since the first Indo-Pak War (1947-48) on the boundary walls of fountains inside the memorial with stainless steel plates.