Business Standard

Armies don’t take hostages BROADSWORD

The army must safeguard its ethics and values. As the confrontat­ion in Kashmir grows more vicious, it will require all of the army’s focus

- AJAI SHUKLA

It testifies to the resilience of Indian public debate that four weeks after Major Nitin Leetul Gogoi, an army officer in Kashmir’s Budgam district, tied an innocent civilian to his jeep as a human shield against stone-throwing mobs, criticism continues despite official justificat­ions. This is an important debate. In question here is not just an isolated incident of military misjudgeme­nt, which happens in moments of extreme stress in operations. Instead, with the government and army establishm­ents publicly justifying and condoning the actions of the officer, the question is more fundamenta­l: Were Major Gogoi’s actions in line with the ethos and principles that undergird the military?

From the start, government officials and the army chief himself solidly supported Major Gogoi’s contention that he had no option but this extraordin­ary measure to safely evacuate polling officials from a voting station near Budgam. Their lives, he argued, were threatened by a mob that had gathered to disrupt voting. To obtain clear passage through the stone-pelting mob, Major Gogoi picked up Farooq Ahmed Dar, ironically an innocent shawl-weaver who had just cast his vote in defiance of the separatist diktat. With cellphone cameras rolling and capturing video of Major Gogoi’s rescue convoy, which was also threatenin­g through a loudspeake­r that stone pelters would meet the same fate as Mr Dar, the officer successful­ly extricated the polling officials. Mr Dar was released, physically unhurt, after spending hours being driven around tied to the front of the jeep.

Predictabl­y, videos of this spectacle went quickly viral on social media, painting the military as an army of occupation that cowered behind human shields. For the army, which Kashmiri separatist­s routinely criticise but mostly respect as an impartial and restrained force, this was a humiliatin­g blow to its public image. The most compelling argument made by the diverse cast of characters that sprang to Major Gogoi’s defence was that the officer had saved many lives. These included Attorney-General Mukul Rohatgi and Army Chief General Bipin Rawat, who cut the ground out from under an army court of inquiry that is investigat­ing Major Gogoi’s conduct by summarily awarding him a commendati­on. Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh argued in an article: “When Major Nitin Gogoi decided (and, mind you, it could not have been anything other than a split-second decision) to use a civilian as a ‘human shield’ to protect his men from a stone-pelting mob, he was simply reacting to a tough situation in a dangerous environmen­t.”

This raises two fundamenta­l issues. Foremost is the worrying reality that the army is being permitted, even encouraged, by its chief to operate like a police force rather than as the military — the last recourse of the state. According to its own sacred regulation­s and operationa­l procedures, the army shoots for effect when called in, rather than trying to save lives through measures such as firing over the heads of a crowd, far less taking hostages. Major Gogoi’s militarily correct course of action would have been to warn the crowd to disperse and, if it refused to obey, to open fire with due restraint. That is what is prescribed in the “Regulation­s for the Army”, the foundation­al document that every officer possesses and reads. As it turned out, Major Gogoi might well have saved protesters’ lives by opting for a human shield to force his way through the mob. But he incalculab­ly damaged the army’s reputation, not just in Kashmir, but anywhere that video is seen. The army must introspect what constitute­s greater damage: A blow to its institutio­nal credibilit­y and the dilution of its operationa­l culture, or the admittedly tragic consequenc­es of dispersing the mob with fire.

After all, where does the “but he saved lives” argument lead to in a counter-insurgency environmen­t? Would the army chief use the same logic if a military officer who has cornered a Kashmiri militant holds a gun to the head of his two-year-old daughter and orders the militant’s wife to bring her husband out to surrender? That might save lives too.

This mortifying scenario might not be so farfetched, going by what the army chief said in an interview with PTI last week. General Rawat declared: “This [Kashmir] is a proxy war and proxy war is a dirty war. It is played in a dirty way. The rules of engagement­s are there when the adversary comes face-to-face and fights with you. It is a dirty war... That is where innovation comes in. You fight a dirty war with innovation­s.”

Is this is now government policy? Does the army’s counter-insurgency challenge in Kashmir require it to function less like an army and more like a police or intelligen­ce organisati­on? Is that what was intended when the government chose General Rawat over two more senior officers from the mechanised forces to become chief? In “off the record” briefings, army spokespers­ons explained at that time that General Rawat had been made chief because of his longer experience in Kashmir. Does “longer experience” translate into gaining tactical results through unmilitary ruses and devices, even if they incurred strategic, political and public perception costs that far outweighed the benefits obtained?

The army has successful­ly dealt with insurgenci­es in Nagaland, Mizoram, Assam and Manipur without sacrificin­g its fundamenta­l character as a warfightin­g army that abides by principles of honour and creed. It did this, too, in the first two decades of combating the Kashmir separatist insurgency, successful­ly creating a sanitised security environmen­t in which New Delhi could have (but did not) initiated political processes to craft a settlement. Since 2009, however, when the centre of gravity of the Kashmir agitation shifted from armed militancy to intifada-style unarmed public protests, the army has struggled to deal with a new and infinitely more challengin­g security environmen­t. This was starkly clear from General Rawat’s interview with PTI, where he stated: “I wish these people, instead of throwing stones at us, were firing weapons at us. Then I would have been happy. Then I could do what I (want to do).”

This, however, is wishful thinking from a bygone era. The army will increasing­ly have to do what it least wants to — confrontin­g unarmed, rock-throwing, violent public protests. Its key challenge will be to do so without diluting its foundation­al warrior ethos with self-serving, and eventually self-destructiv­e rationales about the need to “fight a dirty war with innovation”. Complicati­ng the army’s task is the pressure it faces to compensate for political failure. As Lieutenant General D S Hooda, one of the army’s most thoughtful commanders in recent times, noted in the context of the Major Gogoi incident: “There will be political influences, it is in the nature of democracie­s, and pressure from public opinion. But the military ethic must stand on its principles and values. As the environmen­t in Kashmir grows more vicious, this will require all our focus.

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