INDIA’S MILITARY THREATS MANAGEMENT
POLITICALLY FLAWED
By
Dr Subhash Kapila
Introductory Observations
India today exists in a seriously embattled
security environment, far more than ever in
the last sixty three years, with external
military threats having acquired menacing
and dangerously devious contours, by virtue
of having intruded into India’s internal
security domains. India’s Armed Forces have
determinedly and innovatively strategized to
meet the expanded military threats to India
with the resources given to them and the
political constraints imposed on them by the
Government of the day in the last sixty
three years. Regrettably, India’s military
threats management stands politically flawed
by the strategic naivety, lack of strategic
vision and vulnerability to external
pressures of its political leaders and its
policy establishment. India’s political
leadership has yet to display its ‘will to
use power and exercise power’ in the service
of India’s security interests.
The
Indian Republic is a parliamentary democracy
and the Prime Minister exercises control and
direction of India’s Armed Forces and
India’s strategic responses to the hovering
military threats. If that be so then the
Indian Prime Minister is charged with
effective political management of the
multiple military threats that India faces
today. The
buck stops with the Prime Minister and he is
accountable for India’s security.
India’s two pronounced and major military
threats are Pakistan and China, singly and
in joint political, military and strategic
collusion. India’s’ political leadership and
the policy establishment needs to factor
this harsh reality into their political,
diplomatic and strategic policy
formulations. India’s political leadership
cannot resort to political and strategic
ambiguities on this count and de-emphasize
or devalue threats as that not only confuses
and confounds those battling these threats
on a daily basis but also tends to dull the
sensitivities of the Republic’s citizens to
the dangers lurking around them.
This
subject can be a complete thesis by itself
but then that is not the aim of this Paper.
The aim of this Paper is to shed light on
the flawed political management of the
military threats to India by India’s
political leadership in the present decade
of the 21st Century when
considerable lessons should have been learnt
as a result of the external and internal
conflicts that India has faced.
This
Paper is intended for easy comprehension by
India’s average readers so that they get
sensitized to the looming threats that
threaten the Indian Republic and is not
crafted to prove one’s strategic mastery of
issues.
Briefly therefore, this Paper would like to
dwell on the following issues:
-
The Pakistan Military
Threat Must Not be Politically
De-Emphasized
-
The China Military
Threat Management Needs Accelerated
Approach
-
Indian Armed Forces
War Preparedness: A Vulnerability
Perceived by its Military Adversaries.
-
India’s Foreign
Policy Formulations: Deficit of
Strategic Component and Loss of
Strategic Autonomy
The Pakistan
Military Threat Must Not be Politically
De-Emphasized
Pakistan has in the last sixty three years
displayed a propensity to wage wars against
India in 1947-48, in 1965, in 1971 and in
1999without any provocation from India.
Strewn in the intervening period and
alongside these wars has been the unleashing
of proxy wars, state-sponsored terrorism and
suicide bombings in heartland India.
Strategically, Pakistan Army which
represents the Pakistan nation-state has
exploited Islam as a religious force for
holding Pakistan together, as a motivation
for conflict for its Armed Forces and
Islamic Jihad as a policy instrument of
state by embracing and financing Islamic
Fundamentalist terrorist organizations
against India.
India’s political management of the Pakistan
military threat has to be viewed at multiple
political and military levels. The Indian
political leadership is charged with the
“intentions reading” of the Pakistani
nation-state and the Indian Armed Forces
with the assessment of the Pakistani threat
in terms of capabilities and maintaining
themselves in a high state of readiness.
The
Indian political leadership and the policy
establishment approaches to Pakistan are
seriously flawed and stand in a state of
“severe disconnect” with Pakistan’s
demonstrated military intentions towards
India and also with the mood of the vast
majority of India’s citizens.
Pakistan’s “trust deficit with India is
irreconcilable” and which stands examined in
detail in my last Paper. Pakistan’s trust
deficit with India arises from Pakistan Army
being an implacable foe of India, recently
re-asserted by Pakistan Army Chief, General
Kayani.
Hence there is no scope for any
reconciliatory approaches for peace with
Pakistan as long as peace with India emerges
on the Pakistan Army agenda. While war is
not advocated, India’s political leadership
would be well advised to ignore Pakistan
until such time the Pakistani masses arise
and overthrow the yoke of the Pakistan
Army.
In
terms of the Indian Armed Forces meeting the
Pakistani military threat in all its
manifestations, it is imperative for the
political leadership to ensure that the
Pakistan Army is not able to reduce the
Indian military superiority differential by
in-flow of United States advance military
equipment and military hardware from China.
In
passing and which does have bearing on
India’s political leadership management of
the Pakistani military threat is the
imperative of political stability and
security of Indian States bordering
Pakistan. Jammu& Kashmir is in violent
turbulence and Punjab is likely to witness
fresh turbulence being generated from
Pakistan. Rajasthan maybe deceptively quiet
but its long desert borders are porous and
open for exploitation by Pakistan. Gujarat
is unnecessarily being provoked on political
grounds and being made vulnerable.
Politically, India cannot b e seen where the
Defence Minister is being publicly
questioned on Pakistan related issues by the
Home Minister. Why should the Prime Minister
and the Home Minister question the Armed
Forces Special Powers Act when the ground
situation in Kashmir Valley is further
diabolically stirred up in yet another shift
in strategy by the Pakistan Amy to offset
the gains made by the Indian Army and
frittered away by politician?
The China Military Threat Management Needs
Accelerated Approach
The
China military threat continues to be real
and continues to persist though for a year
or two it seemed that China may have shifted
from her adversarial mode against India.
That optimism was short-lived. In the last
two three years China escalated tensions
along India’s borders with Tibet in terms of
border inclusions and transgressions.
Uncannily this was happening in a strange
coincidence with Pakistan Army breaking the
four year old ceasefire in Kashmir with
General Kayani taking over as Pak Army
Chief.
China continues with supply of military
hardware to Pakistan over and above what
Pakistan gets from USA. The end game of
China being to offset India’s military
superiority against Pakistan. Media reports
also indicate that China continues to assist
Pakistan in the nuclear weapons and missiles
field. China’s present focus is to build up
the military capabilities of the Pakistan
Air Force and Pakistan Navy.
China continues with it dilatory stance on
the border settlement issue as it provides
China with a pressure point against India.
China has vastly upgraded its military
infrastructure in Tibet and in close
proximity to India’s borders to improve its
war-waging capabilities.
Reverting to the political management of the
China military threat by India’s’ political
leaders, once again it needs to be viewed in
the context of China’s “intentions reading”
and the impact of China’s military buildup
on India’s borders with Tibet.
India went seriously wrong on China’s
“intentions reading” under Nehru. It cannot
afford to go wrong a second time. India
figures high in China’s threat perceptions
when India both in terms of intentions and
capabilities has not set any record as such.
Chinese strategic analysts have gone to the
extent of asserting in their writings that
India needs to be taught a lesson again like
1962 and Chinese strategies need to focus on
the fragmentation of India.
India’s political leaders have followed
flawed approaches once again in not drawing
the ‘redlines’ for China and whose
transgression would be read as unfriendly to
India and reflective of China’s real
intentions.
In
terms of the Indian Government’s response to
Chinese up- gradation of military
infrastructure in Tibet and on the Indian
border with Tibet, some plans have been put
underway but they are mired in
inter-ministerial bureaucratic wrangles. It
is reported that the new strategic roads
sanctioned in the last few years are behind
schedule as clearances by the Ministry of
Environment are holding up progress. Is
national security less important than
environmental protection?
Apex
level political leadership has to provide
impetus in India’s upgradation of its
military capabilities if the Indian Armed
Forces are expected to provide a credible
defensive deterrent against China.
Indian Armed Forces War Preparedness: A
Vulnerability Perceived by its Military
Adversaries
Even
after six years of being in continuous power
the present Indian Government, like its
previous political counterpart has been
oblivious to some major glaring deficiencies
in the war preparedness of the Indian Armed
Forces. These are the deficiency of 126
multi-role combat fighter planes for the
Indian Air Force and air-defence radars. The
Indian Air Force transport fleet of both
transport aircraft and utility helicopters
is woefully outdated.
The
Indian Army’s requirement of thousands of
its artillery guns has been held up for
nearly a decade because of bureaucratic red-tapism
in the contractual system. Surveillance
radars for the thousands of kilometers of
the Indo-Tibet border are scarce.
These are some of the major deficiencies
that stand pointed out in the media and even
in the Comptroller and Auditor General’s
report. No access is available to details of
major deficiencies in spare parts
inventories of weapon systems, communication
equipment, and more significantly in the
strategic reserves of logistics and fuel
supplies.
For
India’s political leadership war-
preparedness of the Indian Armed Forces may
just be reduced to a matter of statistics
but for India’s military adversaries it
becomes a vital factor in their military
strategies and military planning against
India.
No
wonder within a couple of days of Mumbai
28/11 one had seen reports in the Pakistan
media that India was incapable of
retaliatory military strikes against
Pakistan because of shortages in its war
preparedness. Nothing could be a more
damning indictment on the political
management of India’s military threats.
India’s Foreign Policy Formulations: Deficit
of Strategic Component and Loss of Strategic
Autonomy
India logically should not have come to such
a pass where it stands completely embattled
by its military adversaries, had India’s
political management of India’s military
threats had not been flawed. The two major
flaws have been the lack of strategic
component in its foreign policy formulations
and India’s loss of strategic autonomy.
Both
these factors are interlinked as with loss
of strategic autonomy, India’s foreign
policy also lost sight of the strategic
component that should have been factored in
every foreign policy formulation.
This
can best be illustrated by India’ strategic
shift at the turn of the millennium in its
foreign policy orientation from moving away
from Russia to evolve the US-India Strategic
Partnership. India painfully has started
realizing now that in terms of
countervailing power against China and
Pakistan that it expected from USA, has not
been forthcoming.
In
going overboard on the US-India Strategic
Partnership, especially under the present
Indian Government, India’s policy approaches
towards its most immediate military threat,
namely Pakistan became increasingly being
dictated by the Washington strategic
template on South Asia focused strongly on
Pakistan. India’s own Pakistan policy
formulations stood superseded by American
pressures.
Similarly on China, India has now come to
realize that United States policy
formulations on China did not factor-in
India’s strategic imperatives beyond
rhetoric.
As
things stand today in the international
arena, India is being perceived as a
satellite of the United States without any
corresponding gains for India’s national
security. India itself is to blame for its
distorted foreign policy formulations where
in the last couple of years it stands
reduced to the status of a “strategic
co-equal” of Pakistan. Forget any
recognition of its being a potential
counterweight to China in Asian security.
Concluding Observations
If
Indian military history since 1947 is any
guide in terms of India’s military threats
political management, it inexorably points
that on every occasion when India stood
embattled by its military adversaries,
India’s political management of its military
threats was seriously flawed in the
preceding period. So also was the political
neglect of the war preparedness of Indian
Armed Forces.
India can longer expect strategically that
it can successfully overcome armed inflicts
by last minute crisis-management and
reliance on the traditional valor of the
Indian Armed Forces.
In a
security environment when China as India’s
long range military threat has upgraded it
war-waging capabilities against India and
Pakistan Army as India’s implacable foe has
in an adept manner positioned itself
strategically where both the United States
and China feel obliged to bestow military
hardware on Pakistan for ‘Balance of Power’
purposes, India’s political leadership has
to awaken from its slumber and effectively
provide the political management of India’s
military threats and so also India’s war
preparedness in a manner that India’s Armed
Forces are not militarily handicapped or
disadvantaged in any future conflict imposed
by India’s military adversaries.
(The author is an International Relations
and Strategic Affairs analyst. He is the
Consultant, Strategic Affairs with South
Asia Analysis Group. Email:
drsubhashkapila.007@gmail.com)