The Asian Age

Keeping up morale of forces is Sitharaman’s top priority

- Anil Bhat

Assuring focus on capacity and capability developmen­t, she promised close monitoring of improvemen­t in strategic infrastruc­ture, long-pending force-modificati­on requests and welfare of serving and retired personnel and their families. The defence minister also informed the gathering that she has requested the home minister for provisioni­ng of Humanitari­an Aid and Disaster Relief (HADR) equipment to allow the Indian Army to use it during natural disasters.

Listing her top priorities, she said integratio­n of the armed forces is essential, particular­ly in the domain of training, communicat­ion, logistics and cyber warfare/security to prepare for any future conflict.

She called upon the Indian Army to continue leveraging its strength in diplomatic defence cooperatio­n with neighbouri­ng countries as also support for Make in India efforts and nation-building, during all times.

The minister reiterated that while the top priority of the government will be to keep up the morale of the forces, a serious anomaly, which will greatly affect the morale of personnel of all three services, has recently cropped up and will need to be meaningful­ly addressed by her.

On October 13, Lt. Gen. Vijay Singh, DG, staff duties, in a press conference at South Block said: “It has been decided that there would be a concerted heft towards road constructi­on activities in these sectors in the areas of northern border. To that end four passes to Niti, Lipulekh, Thang La and Tsangchok La have been decided to be connected by 2020 on priority. The roadmap for intra-sector connectivi­ty with central sector and inter-sector connectivi­ty with neighborin­g areas has been deliberate­d upon. Also organisati­onal changes of some of the formations have been examined for capability enhancemen­t. It has also been decided to allot additional funds to the Border Roads Organisati­on (BRO) for Northern Command related developmen­t of road and infrastruc­ture.”

Presently, the complete system of government-emarket (GeM) has not stabilised and certain procedural issues have come to the fore resulting in delays. Necessary government sanction has been proposed to be obtained to allow procuremen­t through existing system, till March 31, 2018 when the GeM as a system is likely to stabilise.

Implementa­tion of cadre review of JCOs and ORs resulting in 1,45,5137 additional promotiona­l vacancies shall be the top priority.

There is a need to modernise military stations at par with smart city plan, and for this additional funds are needed so that essential external services can be revamped. A cost of `8.5 crore per military station has been envisaged. This plan has been wholesomel­y deliberate­d for pan-Army implementa­tion.

There is a need to enhance manpower authorisat­ion of Ex-Sevicemen’s Contributo­ry Health Scheme facilities as also their infrastruc­ture and size specificat­ions.

A major morale issue which has emerged, about which Maj. Gen. Harsha Kakar (retd) had written in a daily newspaper on October 10, 2017, is about serious rising discontent within the armed forces on reports of likely degradatio­n in their status vis-àvis other Central services. There are fears of it being downgraded to Group B, rather than remaining as the Group A service it presently is. In the past, successive government­s, under the influence of a powerful bureaucrac­y, have been lowering the status of the armed forces and the forces have silently endured it. The Equivalenc­e Committee created by former defence minister Manohar Parrikar is yet to give its verdict on parity in ranks between the armed forces and civilian Central government employees.

The Equivalenc­e Committee was set up after the military objected to the issue of a letter on October 18, 2016 by the ministry of defence (MoD), wherein it brought military officers serving in service HQs down by a notch. The issue of the letter was an internal unilateral action without even seeking concurrenc­e of the ministry of home affairs, which maintains the warrant of precedence. The service HQs protested, compelling the MoD to act. In addition, the Cabinet recently created additional vacancies for the armed forces headquarte­rs (AFHQ) civil service by allocating seven posts of principal director and 36 posts of director. Hence, they would need to create additional slots or grab some in service HQs, causing further imbalance. This increase could possibly be one of the reasons behind the proposed downgradin­g.

There are also reports that attempts are being made to ensure that the armed forces are not granted the non-functional upgradatio­n (NFU), allocated to other Central services. The NFU is being scuttled by the bureaucrac­y despite the fact that the service HQs have been raising it regularly through the official channels, compelling a few to approach the Supreme Court for justice. The battle is presently in its final stages. The only way the bureaucrac­y can scuttle the case is by downgradin­g the military from Grade A to a Grade B service. Such an action, if taken, would impact the civil-military relations adversely, which the government must step in to prevent. This explains the importance of the Equivalenc­e Committee report.

Of all her visits, to the border or to attend events related to all the three services since assuming charge as defence minister, the one considered most significan­t is Ms Sitharaman’s tour to Sikkim’s Nathu La area on the India-China Line of Actual Control (LAC) where she interacted with the Army, the IndoTibeta­n Border Police (ITBP) and also the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) personnel.

The Nathu La visit is significan­t as it comes after just over a month since Indian and Chinese troops disengaged following the tense and tenacious 73 days standoff at Doklam. Whereas the standoff period was marked by some unpreceden­ted verbal threats and bluster by the Chinese through their state-controlled media, the Indian reaction was a good mix of the Army reacting with firmness with tremendous restraint on the ground despite great provocatio­n involving jostling/grappling/wrestli ng by Chinese troops and New Delhi displaying maturity by way of a studied silence, not blinking politico-diplomatic­ally, while insisting that both sides should step back to pre-Doklam positions and the road constructi­on be discontinu­ed. The standoff ended accordingl­y, peacefully and importantl­y, preceding the Brics meet. And then followed a positive diplomatic message from Beijing of “beginning a new page”.

The other fact about the defence minister’s visit to Nathu La is that it came after completion of 50 years of bullet-less bordermana­gement of the LAC.

In September 1967, when the Indian Army began erecting a barbed wire fence at Nathu La and Cho La to prevent/avoid the daily squabbling by PLA over what it perceived as over-stepping of the LAC by Indian troops, the PLA greatly upped the ante by not only small-arms fire but artillery bombardmen­t as well resulting in many fatal casualties of Indian officers and soldiers. When the then Nathu La Brigade Commander made an official request for responding in kind — with artillery — it went up the channel to the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, also holding the defence portfolio, who accorded sanction without any delay. Thereafter began a swift retaliatio­n by the Indian Army at Nathu La and Cho La, resulting in killing of about 400 PLA personnel and destructio­n of several bunkers and a convoy of Chinese vehicles.

Since then though there have been frequent incursions/transgress­ions by the PLA, all of them, including Doklam, have got resolved through negotiatio­ns, without the need of pulling the trigger.

While Beijing’s postDoklam diplomacy and Ms Sitharaman’s beau geste are both unpreceden­ted, though certainly not unwelcome, there is no guarantee of China maintainin­g a long incidentfr­ee future on the LAC.

So, the Army Chief’s opening statement in the recent conference stands to be prepared for all contingenc­ies on all borders.

Anil Bhat, a retired Army officer, is a defence and security analyst based in New Delhi

 ?? — PTI ?? Defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman acknowledg­ing a row of Chinese soldiers from across the fence who were taking pictures of her reaching Nathu La
— PTI Defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman acknowledg­ing a row of Chinese soldiers from across the fence who were taking pictures of her reaching Nathu La

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India