Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

In step with the government

- Manoj Joshi is Distinguis­hed Fellow, Observer Research Foundation The views expressed are personal

The answer to the question as to why a coup has not taken place in India lies in the quality of the military, writes MANOJ JOSHI

In our much-storied history, which our hyper-nationalis­ts will possibly claim is the most ancient, there has been just one recorded instance where a commanderi­n-chief of the army overthrew the government of the day and seized power. This issue finds some resonance today in the context of the attempted coup in Turkey. Many ask, could this happen here, although the answer is pretty unambiguou­s that it cannot and will not. The recorded instance referred to happened around 187 BC, when Pushyamitr­a Shunga, the senapati of the Mauryan empire, killed the king during a guard of honour, and founded a dynasty that lasted till around 70 BC.

No king, sultan, emperor, viceroy or prime minister — Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, Christian or Sikh — has since then has been overthrown by a military coup. In addition, of course, the modern Indian military identifies its DNA with that of Britain, another country which has never had the history of a coup.

Yet, even today, in the 21st century, dread of the man on horseback runs like a thread through India’s government­al attitudes towards the armed forces. It is not open, but exists in the shadow world of intelligen­ce agencies and civilian bureaucrat­s, who stoke the insecuriti­es of politician­s on the need to keep the military in check, and have succeeded in keeping uniformed personnel out of policy-making.

It was this perception that led Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru to eliminate the powerful post of commander-in-chief and make all three service chiefs equal in 1955. There were several instances in the 1950s and 1960s when politician­s revealed their insecuriti­es in relation to the armed forces. The first set of rumours came when General KS Thimayya retired as army chief in 1961. The train of events beginning with Thimayya’s resignatio­n in August 1959, its withdrawal under Nehru’s pressure, the appointmen­t of General PN Thapar as his successor, led to rumours of a coup with a specific date — January 30, 1961 — being designated as D-Day.

This is detailed in a book India’s Defence Problem by SS Khera, who was India’s defence secretary between 1963 and 1967. Khera noted that in January 1961, Nehru and home minister G B Pant had come to know of some military movements and had counterman­ded them. Apurba Kundu, who has examined the events, noted in his book Militarism in India that “the stories [of the alleged coups] may be dismissed as unfounded”. Khera did conclude that the chances of an outright coup were difficult, if not impossible, in India. Again, after the debacle of the 1962 border war with China, according to Neville Maxwell, Nehru expressed his concerns about the military in a letter to philosophe­r Bertrand Russell.

There is another incident widely known in the army. This is when the IB reported to the authoritie­s about the movement of military personnel in the wake of Nehru’s death in May 1964. Actually, the then Army chief, General JN Chaudhuri, ordered the movement because he thought that it would be needed to help handle the crowds that would gather, just as he had experience­d as a young officer in Mahatma Gandhi’s funeral. As a result, even today the IB maintains a discrete watch on the movements of military units in the vicinity of New Delhi.

All this could have been understood in the context of the 1950s and 1960s, when many newly independen­t countries — especially Burma and Pakistan — came under the heel of military dictators. But it sounds ridiculous in the 21st century, when the probity of the Indian armed forces has been thoroughly tested by time and circumstan­ces.

Yet, more than half a century after the Thimayya “coup”, New Delhi was rocked by a newspaper story hinting at a coup attempt and coincident­ally, again in January, in 2012. A front-paged report splashed across a New Delhi newspaper claimed that “central intelligen­ce agencies” had detected “an unexpected (and non-notified) movement by a key military unit … in the direction of the capital,” subsequent­ly, another similar movement was detected involving a parachute unit. This was in relation to a suit filed in the Supreme Court by the then army chief. The same newspaper later reported that “the MOD’s considered view now seems to be that it was a false alarm”. The ministry’s official spokesman too denied the report as being “baseless”. Actually, these sensitivit­ies continue in the highest levels of the Indian political system today.

All this has had a deleteriou­s effect on our national security planning. The dysfunctio­nal system we have arises from the decision to keep the uniformed personnel out of planning and administer­ing the military. This has prevented effective reforms to make our military a modern, war-winning force which requires the organisati­on and functionin­g of the military under the joint command of a chief of defence staff and the restructur­ing of the military under theatre commands.

But the answer to the question as to why a coup in India has not taken place, and will not do so, provided the country is not brought to the verge of collapse by its civilian leadership, lies in the quality of the military. Despite the fact that the politician­s and the bureaucrat­s have gone out of their way to undermine it, the Indian military has remained steadfast in its commitment to democracy. This has as much to do with its history and DNA, as the outlook of the personnel who constitute it.

 ?? ARVIND YADAV ?? The dysfunctio­nal system we have arises from the decision to keep the uniformed personnel out of planning and administer­ing the military. This has prevented effective reforms to make our military a modern, warwinning force
ARVIND YADAV The dysfunctio­nal system we have arises from the decision to keep the uniformed personnel out of planning and administer­ing the military. This has prevented effective reforms to make our military a modern, warwinning force

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