Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

FIRST AMONG EQUALS

- Rahul Singh rahul.singh@hindustant­imes.com ■

General Bipin Rawat, as Chief of Defence Staff, will head the department of military affairs and will be the permanent chairman of the chiefs of staff committee

HIS KEY ACHIEVEMEN­TS

UN peacekeepi­ng efforts in DR Congo: Under his leadership, Indian brigade saved a key Congolese province from being overrun by rebels

2015 Myanmar surgical strikes:

Supervised a cross-border operation against insurgents belonging to NSCN-K

2016 PoK surgical strikes:

Supervised strikes against militant launch pads in PoK after the Uri attack

Army restructur­e: He is the brain behind a mammoth drill that could change the army’s complexion and direction and transform it into a deadlier fighting machine

THE FIRST CDS

Bipin Rawat was commission­ed into the army in 1978 after graduating from Indian Military Academy where he was awarded the Sword of Honour. He was commission­ed into the 5/11 Gorkha Rifles

NEW DELHI: From leading the United Nations peacekeepi­ng in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to initiating the biggest exercise to restructur­e the army to closely supervisin­g India’s two publicly acknowledg­ed strikes on foreign soil, Bipin Rawat brings enormous experience to the table as India’s first Chief of Defence Staff (CDS).

Those who have known the 61-year-old general for several decades say Rawat thinks outside the box, takes hard decisions, and is not afraid of challengin­g the status quo.

When Rawat took charge of the UN’s North Kivu Brigade in DRC 11 years ago, things weren’t going too well for the world’s costliest peacekeepi­ng mission, known by its French acronym MONUC. Rawat reworked the velvet-glove strategy to an iron fist within a month of his arrival in 2008, frequently authorisin­g the use of attack helicopter­s to strafe positions held by rebel groups responsibl­e for recruiting child soldiers, displacing millions of people, and civilian deaths.

Under Rawat’s leadership, the Indian brigade saved a key Congolese province from being overrun by rebels. Lieutenant General Babacar Gaye, the then Force Commander of the UN mission in the Congo, wrote in the commendati­on awarded to Rawat that it was due to his “leadership, courage and experience” that North Kivu’s capital Goma never fell, the country’s eastern region was stabilised and the main rebel group was forced to come to the negotiatin­g table.

“General Rawat is extremely hardworkin­g and bold in pursuin ing the organisati­on’s objectives. He has the ability to think differentl­y and take tough decisions without bothering about the accompanyi­ng criticism,” said Lieutenant General BS Sandhu (retd), who has known Rawat for almost 45 years and was his course mate at the Khadak waslabased National Defence Academy (NDA).

Son of a three-star general, Rawat was commission­ed into the army in December 1978 after graduating from the Dehradunba­sed Indian Military Academy where he was awarded the coveted Sword of Honour for exceptiona­l performanc­e. He was commission­ed into the 5/11 Gorkha Rifles.

The National Democratic Alliance government superseded two top generals — Lieutenant Generals Praveen Bakshi and PM Hariz — to appoint him army chief exactly three years ago on December 31, 2016. Rawat’s experience in Jammu and Kashmir and the North-east tipped the scales in his favour.

“General Rawat is the rare amalgam of intellect and hard work. He is extremely upright and fair,” said Lieutenant General Rakesh Sharma (retd), who was Rawat’s commanding officer the late 1990s. Sharma, who retired as the army’s adjutant general in March 2017, was also the aide-de-camp to Rawat’s father, Lieutenant General LS Rawat, in the early 1980s.

Rawat was closely involved in the planning of the army’s surgical strikes in Myanmar in 2015 followed by targeted operations against terror pads in Pakistanoc­cupied Kashmir a year later.

In his three-year term as army chief, Rawat courted controvers­ies on several occasions — his recent comments that were widely seen as being aimed at the anti-Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act protests across India; awarding the Chief of Army Staff’s Commendati­on card to Major Leetul Gogoi (who bound a Kashmiri civilian to the front of his jeep); and his position on the disability pension.

“He may have courted controvers­ies a few times with his comments but he is an outstandin­g soldier and military leader. He is very outspoken too. If you ask him a question, he will give you an answer,” said a senior officer, asking not to be named.

General Rawat is behind a mammoth restructur­ing drill, based on four comprehens­ive studies led by topmost generals, which could change the complexion and direction of the 1.2 millionstr­ong army and transform it into a deadlier fighting machine fully prepared for future wars.

The implementa­tion of the four studies in their totality will reduce troops (by about 100,000), allow the army to tap technologi­cal advances in warfare, create integrated brigades that can be mission-deployed swiftly, improve the army’s tooth-to-tail ratio and enhance career prospects for officer and men.s

 ?? PTI ?? Bipin Rawat and President Ram Nath Kovind on Monday.
PTI Bipin Rawat and President Ram Nath Kovind on Monday.
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General Bipin Rawat
■ General Bipin Rawat

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