Military leadership will have to match political vision: CDS
NEW DELHI: India’s military leadership will have to “more than match the political vision” that has mandated the creation of theatre commands to address future security threats, chief of defence staff General Bipin Rawat said on Thursday, while highlighting the need to stay prepared to counter threats from China and Pakistan and establishing “dominance” in the country’s neighbourhood and the Indian Ocean Region.
Rawat said “service parochialism” will have to make way for “a combined services outlook” to take theaterisation forward, calling for the military’s transformation to “outthink and outfight” India’s adversaries.
“It will not be easy and the transition to theatre commands will indeed be a challenging process. There is a need to create and propagate the narrative of strategic advantages that accrue at the national and armed forces levels (with theaterisation),” Rawat said ahead of a top commanders’ conference to be addressed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on March 6.
Theaterisation refers to placing specific units of the army, the navy and the air force under a theatre commander. Such commands are led by an officer from any of the three services, depending on the roles assigned to them.
The military is putting finishing touches to its theaterisation plan for the most advantageous utilisation of its resources to fight future wars, with the Air Defence Command and the Maritime Theatre Command set to be launched by May.
Rawat said the aim is to create the conditions to “outthink, outfight and outpace” India’s adversaries. He was speaking at a virtual event, Transformation: Imperatives for the Indian Armed Forces, organised by the Secunderabad-based College of Defence Management.
“Such seminars are expected to generate ideas about evolving joint structures that will address voids at the strategic and operational levels that single-service commands at present fail to address,” Rawat said. He added that the military currently has 17 single-service commands, none co-located with each other and with each of the three services discharging their operational and strategic roles in isolation.
The points raised by CDS are extremely relevant, said former Northern Army commander
Lieutenant General DS Hooda (retd). “We cannot continue with 17 individual commands while paying lip-service to integration and joint war-fighting. The three services will have to look beyond their stovepipes and work with CDS to find the best model and optimum command and control arrangement for integrated commands that is suitable for India,” Hooda added.
Apart from the Air Defence and Maritime Theatre Commands, India is expected to have three other integrated commands to secure its western, northern and eastern fronts — these will be rolled out by December 2022.
In addition, a logistics command is in the works to avoid duplication of efforts and resources.
CDS’s mandate includes bringing about jointness in operations, logistics, transport, training, support services and repairs and maintenance of the three services.
There is a need to create and propagate the narrative of strategic advantages that accrue at the national and armed forces levels
GENERAL BIPIN RAWAT, CDS