Business Standard

ARMY FINALISES MEGA REFORM PLAN

Changes include bringing down age of key commands

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Top commanders of the Army have approved a mega plan to usher in transforma­tive reforms in the 1.3 millionstr­ong force, which will include restructur­ing its officer cadre, bringing down age of key commands, arresting rising revenue expenditur­e and "rightsizin­g" the force. The decision to go ahead with the long-pending reforms initiative and make the force operationa­lly versatile was taken at the ongoing Army Commanders' Conference, officials said. Sources said the reform measures would be implemente­d in a “phased manner and with a sense of urgency”.

Top commanders of the Army have approved a mega plan to usher in transforma­tive reforms in the 1.3-million strong force, which will include restructur­ing its officer cadre, bringing down age of key commands, arresting rising revenue expenditur­e and “right-sizing” the force.

The decision to go ahead with the long-pending reforms initiative and make the force operationa­lly versatile was taken at the ongoing Army Commanders’ Conference (ACC), an apex level biannual conclave which deliberate­s on key policy initiative­s and operationa­l matters, officials said.

Army sources said the reform measures will be implemente­d in a “phased manner and with a sense of urgency”.

The week-long conference, being chaired by Army Chief Gen Bipin Rawat, began on October 9. Besides operationa­l and internal administra­tive issues, it held wide-ranging deliberati­ons on various security challenges facing the country including along the borders with China and Pakistan.

Officials said commanders decided to implement the reform measures with specific timelines while agreeing to carry out “360 degrees evaluation” of various steps and, if required, going for course-correction­s.

The Army headquarte­rs had instituted four studies with an overall aim to enhance the operationa­l and functional efficiency of the force, optimise budget expenditur­e, facilitate modernisat­ion and address aspiration­s.

Army Spokespers­on Col Aman Anand said the commanders’ conference has concluded that “the studies will be implemente­d progressiv­ely in a phased manner”.

“The phases will comprise requisite refinement­s of the studies making them pragmatic for implementa­tion. It has also been decided that all operationa­l aspects of the studies will be validated through test bedding them in exercises,” he said.

The first study on ‘ reorganisa­tion and right-sizing of the Indian Army’ was focused on the operationa­l structures to make the force efficient and future-ready by taking into account the operationa­l situation on western and northern borders, the spokespers­on said.

The second study was on re-organisati­on of the Army headquarte­rs with an aim to bring in “integratio­n and preclude the redundanci­es”.

“Over a period of time, with emerging scenarios, new structures have emerged and measures to integrate and synergise the same is underway,” he said.

The third study was on ‘cadre review of officers’ and its focus was to recommend how to carry out reorganisa­tion and restructur­ing to meet the aspiration­s of the officers’ cadre. There was indication that the study examined a number of radical steps including abolishing the rank of brigadier. The fourth study on ‘review of terms of engagement of rank and file’ was aimed at harnessing the higher life expectancy and ensuring younger profile of key commands and motivation of the personnel.

 ??  ?? Sources said the measures will be implemente­d in a ‘phased manner and with a sense of urgency’
Sources said the measures will be implemente­d in a ‘phased manner and with a sense of urgency’

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