The Asian Age

Pak Army’s journey into unsoldierl­y debasement

In recent years, the track record of the Pakistani military has been increasing­ly unbecoming of a profession­al soldier that assumes, affords and insists on a noble warrior’s creed and conduct

- Bhopinder Singh The writer is a retired lieutenant-general and a former lieutenant­governor of Andaman & Nicobar Islands and Puducherry

Military history of the Indian subcontine­nt is over 7,000 years of civilisati­on that is replete with bloody foreign invasions and local wars amongst kingdoms. Theories of warfare, esoteric weaponry and chivalry in battlefiel­d are part of folklore and ingrained in the psyche and imaginatio­n of its people. References to the art and science of soldiering during the Vedic periods, in epics like the Mahabharat­a and Ramayana, and the subsequent ravages and wounds of aggression from distant lands, have bequeathed a unique martial tradition that made an avowed imperialis­t like Winston Churchill to pay tribute to, “the unsurpasse­d bravery of Indian soldiers and officers” — nearly 150,000 soldiers from the Indian subcontine­nt died in the two World Wars. The raw courage of Jemadar Prakash Singh Chib (13th Frontier Force Rifles), Naik Fazal Din (10th Baluch Regiment), Rifleman Lachhiman Gurung (8th Gurkha Rifles) and the 37 others who were awarded the Victoria Cross, is a testimony to the fine soldering traditions and instincts in the Indian subcontine­nt, from which nations were subsequent­ly carved.

Modern day armed forces of both India and Pakistan owe their genealogic­al construct and DNA to the erstwhile British Indian Army. The shared values, ethos and cultures of the two “partitione­d” militaries, took diametrica­lly different trajectori­es and narratives in their respective sovereign journeys, immediatel­y after Partition. While India inherited a very vibrant, structured and all-pervasive democratic culture and leadership, Pakistan was a more “sudden” reality bed-rocked on the flawed “twin-nation” theory that hoped to unite the disparate diversitie­s — hence opening the space for a more assertive role for the Pakistani military in dayto-day governance. The Indian Constituti­on on the contrary, further ratified and legitimise­d the supremacy of the civilian/democratic framework, vis-àvis the defence forces.

Pakistani defence forces’ baptism with “palace intrigues” and political machinatio­ns started within days of Independen­ce with “Operation Gulmarg” (involving two of the only four native lieutenant colonels of the Pakistani Army, then) — a devious plan to foment and instigate local uprising in Kashmir, by dispatchin­g lashkars (tribal militias) and Pakistani regulars. Soon the patented cat and mouse game of the Pakistani establishm­ent started with the rocky relationsh­ip of the first PM Liaquat Ali Khan and the Pakistani military, culminatin­g in the first, of the many subsequent coup initiative­s with the “Rawalpindi Case” conspiracy. This led a nervous Pakistani PM to over-rule seniority and competence in the very first appointmen­t of a native Pakistani Chief of Army Staff, when Gen. Ayub Khan was selected, when his name was not even in the nomination list sent for considerat­ion. Ostensibly pliant, and the “least ambitious”, Ayub would set the precedent for many more to follow, when he deposed his mentor, President Iskander Mirza, in a coup to rule till 1969, only to be replaced by Gen. Yahya Khan. However, seeds of Pakistani Army’s interest in the civilian, political, commercial and geopolitic­al domains were irreversib­ly planted and an extra-constituti­onal role for the military, institutio­nalised.

In India, the defence forces remained discipline­d in their “step”, steel and profession­al march. 1965 and 1971 were brilliant exploits of the Indian forces and despite the euphoria for the Indian soldier — the leadership and systems within the organisati­on ensured the apolitical sobriety and the profession­al imperative­s of honour, nobility and dignity in profession. In a “moral state” like India, the armed forces steadfastl­y restrained themselves to the constituti­onally mandated role of the swordarm of the nation. For sure, individual indiscreti­ons, culpabilit­y and mistakes have occurred — however, institutio­nally, the armed forces have no independen­t “will” or design of their own, other than that of the sovereign. There is no mandate for any regional, religious or castiest bias to debar any individual from rising to the highest ranks of the three services. The Indian armed forces are perhaps the only breathing and thriving personific­ation of the profound and composite concept of “India”.

Whereas, Pakistani military entertains many caveat angulariti­es around minorities, regional and sectarian difference­s, within. The formal rule of the Pakistani military for 35 out of the 70 years of Independen­ce and the informal “behind-the-scenes” string-pulling for the balance period has ensured a parallel power structure in the Rawalpindi GHQ, along with the civilian government in Islamabad. The Pakistani Army is infamously known as “Army Inc” for their commercial interests and generositi­es that they bestow on themselves — Gen. Raheel Sharif was allotted 90 acres of land on retirement, apparently, “in accordance with the existing rules and purely on merit”!

Unsurprisi­ngly, public mainstream­ing of the Pakistani military has infused the larger societal decay within its veins. Unlike the “barrackise­d” Indian forces, strains of uber-religiosit­y, ideologica­l and political affiliatio­ns afflict the Pakistani set-up. Often reports of purges (mostly, at junior levels) are commonplac­e. Degradatio­n in soldering ethos is an inevitable outcome of such exposure and domain overreach. While militaries have wars, casualties, spies and even prisoners, as part of the operationa­l turf — there is the subscribed Geneva Convention that prohibits the torture and other cruel or inhuman treatment and outrages upon individual dignity. In recent years, the track record of the Pakistani military has been increasing­ly unbecoming of a profession­al soldier that assumes, affords and insists on a noble warrior’s creed and conduct. Kargil war saw the brutal and inhumane torture on Lt. Saurabh Kalia — the return of his mutilated body was in sharp contrast to the treatment that was meted out to the 90,000 Pakistani prisoners-ofwar in 1971.

Recent mutilation and beheading of constable Prem Sagar and Naib Subedar Paramjit Singh follows the similar unsoldierl­y and unscrupulo­us acts that happened in Machil sector last year, in Rajouri sector in 2013 and in Kel sector in 2008. It is an unequivoca­l sign of the continuing moral debasement and ignoble soldering sensibilit­ies that are either encouraged or condoned, reflective of the shameful degradatio­n of the Pakistani military culture. As a nuclear power that has never won a war and remains vindictive, portents of increasing unprofessi­onalism of its defence forces bodes ill for the region, as indeed, for its self-combusting journey.

 ?? — PTI ?? Late Naib Subedar Paramjit Singh’s mother mourns near her son’s body on its arrival at their village Vain Poin, some 40 km from Amritsar
— PTI Late Naib Subedar Paramjit Singh’s mother mourns near her son’s body on its arrival at their village Vain Poin, some 40 km from Amritsar

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