Business Standard

In a democracy, armed forces must remain apolitical

Introspect­ion of the sort indulged in by Army chief is best behind closed doors

- The Tribune, December 8

The Army chief, Gen Bipin Rawat, came out with yet another surprising formulatio­n at a public interactio­n organised by an Army-backed think-tank. In less than a year since taking over as the Army chief, the general has proven to be more garrulous than probably all his predecesso­rs combined. Besides talking up the surgical strikes in Pakistan, which of course was a done thing for the Army after South Block took public ownership of a cross-border operation in peace time for the first time, several of the Army chief's statements have been on the razor’s edge where detached profession­alism acquires hues of partisansh­ip towards the ruling arrangemen­t.

But what the army chief said this time was the right opposite: he spoke of politicisa­tion of the armed forces and hoped the military “should be somehow” kept away from politics. If this is what an Army chief feels in public, then there is something amiss. The principal profession­al obligation of a service chief is to ensure his force remains resolutely non-political and is steeped in conformity with constituti­onal principles. The army may have aggregated a few blemishes for pulling out the politician­s’ chestnuts out of the fire by endless deployment for internal security operations, but in the main, it has a stellar record of causing minimum collateral damage and discomfort to the civilian population. If the Army chief was rankled by internal conversati­ons, he should have opted to convey his impression­s to his crowd under Chatham House rules.

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