Wednesday, 15 January 2025

 https://open.substack.com/pub/aliahd66/p/theaterisation-not-in-the-year-of?r=i1fws&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true

Theaterisation: Not in the Year of Reform

In a recent interview, a retired general informs that single service commands that were to be consigned to the dustbin of history when integrated theatre commands (ITC) are raised would instead persist, with the ITCs being an additional rung in the ladder of formations.

The general makes clear that at least some of the service commands are being retained, saying, that instead, ‘one more rung (ITC) is being added.’

This is intriguing since one of the reasons touted for the raising of ITCs has all along been that there are some 17 single service geographic commands, that could, consequently, do with some integration, either doing away with them – jointness demanding it - or reducing their numbers – since the defence budget requires it.

The discussion has been prompted by concurrent mention in the media of a policy tweak to the annual reporting on three-star rank officers of the army.

Using the opportunity, here I revisit the theaterisation muddle, covering not only the tweak in question but, further, how the ITCs could shape up and what the implications are for apex level professionalism and command and control.

The quantification bug

The new policy step requires annual reports for lieutenant generals to be written up for selection to apex level three-star billets in forthcoming ITCs, either as commanders or chiefs of staff. It’s uncertain if this is also applicable for selection for single service commands.

The step has mostly found favourable reception in terms of furthering meritocracy. It certainly appears useful to sift out the commanders with the background of service in inter-service organisations and yen for tenanting theatre commander appointments.

Already, measures in terms of upgrading professional military education and for officers gaining experience in joint service thematic commands and also of cross postings. The defence staff college has even started an experimental course on joint staff duties, preparing its latest cohort to tenant middle piece staff appointments in soon-to-go-live ITCs. The legal regime has been modified to allow command and disciplinary authority to flow without regard to colour of the uniform.

The introduction of rating is useful, if only for the army to catch up with the other two services, that apparently are a step ahead.

Admittedly, more clarity on the step is necessary.

One report has it that the grading system will help identify the most suitable candidates for corps and army commanders, including for ITCs, based on performance rather than only seniority at the time of commission and residual age.

While another media report says that the policy does not specify if it is also applicable for selection to single service command-level appointments.

The former may be accurate since it makes the step inclusive, allowing for the whole set of eligible three-star officers to be considered in order to cull out those with an additional flair and capacity for placement in ITCs and field armies.

The more significant reform pending

The quantified grading system is to be in place as early as this spring. This has resulted in the expectation that ITC rollout is close at hand.

The government – as is its wont – might yet thrust another surprise on the strategic sphere in what the defence minister promises as a ‘Year of Reforms’.

Admittedly, the press release does not mention any such rollout, unambitiously stating: ‘Reforms should aim to further bolster Jointness & Integration initiatives and facilitate establishment of the Integrated Theatre Commands (emphasis added).’

The Media has been set to interpret this more boldly, creating the by now familiar hype around trivia.

One outlet states: ‘The policy comes at a time when the blueprint for the three theatre commands for China, Pakistan and the Indian Ocean Region has been finalized to ensure an integrated war-fighting machinery (emphasis added).’

Nevertheless, the discussion on the promotional aspects must not be allowed to obscure the more important point: Both rungs – the separate commands and the ITCs - will apparently be present in a post-reforms structure.

This begs the question: Why separate command headquarters are not being jettisoned and are instead being subordinated to the ITC?

One of the reasons for service foot-dragging on jointness was their reluctance to give up multiple billets for the brass as commanders-in-chief of the several geographic commands.

If the interpretation of the policy that at least some service commands are to be retained, it implies that the military’s hesitance anchored on institutional considerations has carried the day.

Prima facie and in light of preceding din against geographic commands, their retention – or that of some - sounds somewhat regressive.

It may be an interim measure, till ITCs come into full gear.

Since their twin presence – ITC and service commands - was not contemplated earlier, a fuller discussion on this has been absent in the strategic discourse.

It is possible to visualize ITCs assuming command over service commands, even if the latter are reduced in number, with some being sacrificed for the ‘jointness and integration initiatives’ called for in the press release.

When the German Army invaded Russia in Operation Barbarossa, it had three group armies operating along the front, each of which subsumed more than one field army, each of which sequentially had on respective order of battle (orbat), a set of corps.

The two rungs are also visible in the operations of the Coalition of the Willing in the first Gulf War. Under the combatant command Central Command (CENTCOM) were land, air, naval and marine components commanders. For instance, General Schwarzkopf, commander CENTCOM, had General Yeosock, as the field army level land component commander of the Third Army, who in turn had the VII and XVIII Corps reporting to him.

Thus, for an army group to have within it field armies and equivalent formations from sister services, as fleets or wings, has eminent precedence.

An unofficial blueprint

A think tank informs that a ‘blueprint’ for the ITCs was presented to the Raksha Mantri at the Joint Commanders Conference (JCC) at Lucknow last September.

From this it can be inferred that initially perhaps only the South Western Command of the army will be wound up for emplacing the Pakistan facing, Western Theatre Command (TC).

Under it may be placed the Pakistan facing proportion of Northern Command; the Western Command, other than its elements in Himachal Pradesh (HP); and the proportion of the Southern Command not hived off to the maritime command.

This makes for three field army level headquarters, which are themselves liable for merging and a rejig of their areas of responsibility (AOR) and boundaries. Indeed, Southern Command AOR on the Pakistan front can revert to Western Command, as it was in 1965 War.

In particular, attention would be required for the manner Northern Command is divvied: whether it should remain whole to take on the two-front threat that will be most significantly manifest in its AOR or should it be divided into east and west facing halves under the two ITCs, Pakistan and China facing.

The latter is more likely since an ITC facing China not having Ladakh within its AOR makes little sense. In such case, the Western Command would require taking on 15 Corps AOR, itself stretched to include Siachen.

If the former is reckoned reasonable, then the Northern Command will require upgrade to an ITC of its own – a matter that has not found mention in the latest bout of policy transparency.

As with Jaipur changing hands, the army’s Central Command at Lucknow would likely require to make way for the China oriented Northern TC.

While the Eastern Command can be easily slotted, the front from Daulat Beg Oldi to the Nepal border would require a command headquarters level supervision.

Maybe it can be under a reconfigured and re-sited Northern Command, with 14 Corps in Ladakh, less Pakistan’s Northern Areas facing elements; the strike corps relocated from the plains during Covid times to Ladakh; the Sugar Sector in HP; and the erstwhile Uttar Bharat Area, now 18 Corps, under it.

This would make for two field armies under the Northern TC.

The Maritime TC will then have the Southern Command for overseeing all land force operations in the AOR; the Andaman and Nicobar Command; and the two naval Commands at Vishakhapatnam and Mumbai.

This leaves the Indian Air Force (IAF) to be reckoned with.

In the debate on jointness, the IAF energetically held its own, determined not to have its strategic role wrested away by being split into penny packets.

In the ITC rubric, the IAF can have its cake and eat it too if it amalgamates itself into one Air Command per ITC, with the planning, coordination and operational control of air assets under it, but in service of jointness mandated by respective ITC.

The model for this could be the ‘Chuck’ Horner led air component to Shwarzkopf’s CENTCOM during Iraq War I.

This is one manner the ITC reform can be proceeded with, mitigating the two road bumps that have held it up so far: the threat of reduction in geographic commands and the IAF’s not unreasonable argument against institutional harakiri.

The case for perpetuation of geographic commands is easy to see.

Even though the China front is under the Northern TC, the stretch requires an intervening headquarters between it and operational corps. The challenges on the Ladakh and Arunachal fronts may be similar, but cannot be handled individually from Lucknow – as seen in the 1962 War. Additionally, Eastern Command may require to oversee counter proxy war operations.

Likewise, in the Western TC, spatial contiguity, operational connectedness and proxy war dimension of the area from Siachen to, say, the Sialkot Bulge liable to be overseen by one field army headquarters. The remainder of the border can be under another field army, especially since the possibility of a conflict going nuclear is highest in that area.

Thus, there is no wishing away geographic commands. As for the need for ITCs, it is now past the discussion stage, so is not gone into here. The service training, logistics and maintenance commands can be subsumed by thematic joint commands.

Back to the new grading system

The reform is predicated on professional ability of a demanding order.

An example of how not to go about it is in the manner the women officers were thrust hastily into command positions on orders of the court, without the requisite training and socialization necessary, resulting in the infamous case of a missive from a mountain strike corps commander ruing the resulting deficits.

For operational effectiveness, the military would require the ability to cruise at the below given levels:

· Integrated Defence Staff headquarters (HQ) and Service HQs – Grand strategic

· ITC – Grand strategic and Strategic

· Service geographic commands – Strategic and Operational

· Corps – Operational and Tactical

· Integrated Battle Groups – Tactical

An ITC handling the strategic level and the service commands restricted to the operational level, owing to their expertise in Operational Art, makes the two rungs complementary.

In this case, the corps would be operating mostly at tactical level, with integrated battle groups under command, and only minimally at the operational level – if and when on/in/as a separate axis/theatre/expeditionary force.

Given that the nascent three-star grading system is soon to be operationalized, it must not merely restrict itself to considering earlier service in and potential for command of joint organisations, but must include those not so destined by ascertaining capability of officers’ comprehension of the grand strategic and strategic levels.

The assumption is that those at three-star rank have received their third star based on their competence in operational art.

However, at the upper rungs it’s breadth of outlook, catholicity, critical thinking, character and - as the since-censored Western army commander observed last Army Day – a ‘secular and apolitical’ perspective.

Since these traits are applicable for all three-star command billets, whether single service or joint, the grading system must be applicable across the board.

The assessment of more than a technical and managerial proficiency must begin at one-star rank.

This, not so much because there is any pressing need for that at the tactical level, but because such officers would tenant spear-shaft appointments at command/ITC level and would help spur them on to acquire felicity with higher order issues.

This will also reduce the premium on the grading at three-star level, mitigating the reservation that that officers will end up more politically pliable (in the parochial sense) if they are judged on this score solely at the final hurdle.

The most troubling aspect – C2

Any command and control arrangements discussion must be considered in light of the Indian political system and national security establishment.

A cardinal feature of this is a jealous guarding of relative power positions by civilians. While politicians want coup proofing, bureaucrats don’t want to be upstaged.

Any hold up from the brass-hats feeling shortchanged by reduction in command opportunities – with reduction in commands – appears to have been balanced by the military seeking an upgrade to four-star rank for ITC commanders.

This would reduce casteism within the three-star rank that otherwise has staff, command and staff, PSOs and army commanders nested in it.

An upper grade, formalized as colonel general, can be adopted for all command positions above corps - field armies, both geographic and thematic, and ITCs – to make the upgrade saleable.

It wouldn’t do to have the reform of the century held up by sparring over ranks.

Two C2 options that have done the rounds of are: one, ITCs reporting to the Chief of Defence Staff and, two, are under the RM.

The latter is a non-starter, given that perhaps the last credible RM was Jaswant Singh, who held on for all of six months a quarter century ago. Thus, emulation of the Americans gets automatically ruled out.

The former would require empowering the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) and the Headquarters Integrated Defence Staff, not so much to breath down the neck of the ITCs as much to handle the two-front threat and the nuclear dimension, input the grand strategy and supervise the war-making thematic commands.

However, a CDS with command authority over ITCs in the Indian political system – either democratic as it was once or authoritarian as now - is unlikely.

This increases the attractiveness of the third model: of TC commanders reporting to a Chiefs of Staff Committee, as was the British committee system of World War II. It could emerge more like the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW) than an Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH), with ITCs likened to army groups commanded by generals, such as Rommel’s Afrika Corps or, later, Army Group B. The CDS must be like General Marshall to the ITC’s Eisenhower and MacArthur.

Not an idea whose time has come

The Chief only this Army Day during his annual meet-the-press rued that the authorization for two sets of battle groups is pending, hinting at abandoning the idea itself. Recall the idea is now two decades old.

If a mild ‘reform’ as that takes so long, it might take till India gets to Viksit Bharat to get ITCs on road.

And we know that getting to that requires an ‘era not of war.’ ITCs signal an avoidably offensive intent for one suddenly stricken with adulation for Ashoka and the Buddha.

Knowing this well, Rajnath Singh has called on the Services to, ‘(D)evelop a shared understanding of operational requirements and joint operational capabilities through inter-service cooperation & training.’

Since that could take a generation, he throws the gauntlet back at the military.

It allows him to get back to more significant pursuits, such as an impending one of changing the name of Army War College to hindi, to make it easier to roll off the tongue.

In any case, the final word is with National Security Adviser, Ajit Doval.

Doval is handicapped by Jaishankar and Amit Shah not wanting the military to intrude on their respective - external and internal - turf, which ITCs – resonant with the combatant command phraseology – inevitably herald.

In the interim, the regime is happy with orchestrating periodic media eddies over cosmetic steps as setting three-starers to chase nine-pointers. It would keep them juvenile and on drip. It would incentivise shedding of the spine.

It would help the regime identify the pliant, and the ideologically compliant.

All this makes theaterisation just another jumla – to borrow Amit Shah’s eternal phrase for campaign promises.

Blame the VK Singh et al for taking the military up the garden path and the nation down the drain.

Saturday, 11 January 2025

https://aliahd66.substack.com/p/much-ado-over-the-chiefs-office-annexe?utm_campaign=unknown&utm_medium=web

https://m.thewire.in/article/security/armys-shift-towards-hindutva-much-ado-over-the-chiefs-office-annexe 

What Moving a Painting From Army Chief’s Office Says About Indian Military's Hindutva Shift


Much ado over the Chief’s office annexe

Two images involving the army did the rounds of social media recently.

The first was the army chief with the raksha mantri propitiating a deity at a temple near Mhow, where the defence minister was on an official trip. The army chief was in the traditional devotee attire.

The second was a clip from the Southern Command X handle showing the army commander in a jeep ferrying the new Maharashtra chief minister. The jeep is driven by a brigadier, while, a major general in the co-driver’s seat is seen shooing away those coming in the way.

Trips to Amarnath cave and to the Vaishnodevi shrine being de rigueur, the first is unremarkable.

The second is equally unsurprising. The army commander in question has eminent right-wing pedigree.

Gossip has it that at the last promotional hurdle to three-star rank, a professional competitor commanding a consensus amongst peers as by far the most competent officer of his cohort, was tripped up by an intelligence agency interfering with the process. Consequently, per grapevine, the proverbial chain of succession list has this general sitting atop it. (Incidentally, the intelligence intervention is for the second time, the first being in the whisper campaign against the sure-shot chief-in-waiting, General Bakshi.)

Signs of professional fidelity taking a tumble are aplenty.

The latest instance is the shoving out the iconic image of the surrender at Dacca from its prime location in the Chief’s office annexe.

That the painting has found a ‘befitting place’ in the Manekshaw Center appears to be a post-controversy after-thought (the new painting was spotted on 14 December and the old one reinstalled on 16 December).

Dust having settled on the controversy, here one can only wish the painter, an infantry major, well.

Of interest instead is the figure of the Brahmin, central to the painting, waving the army on in Ladakh.

A critic has it that the painting depicts Indian occupation of the Kailash heights, putting the Chinese on notice.

The suggestion is that besides the posturing over four years on the heights, a Chanakyan policy of exhausting the Chinese got them to retract.

The proportion between the figure and the military symbols depicted tells as much.

The Brahmin standing tall, overshadowing all else in the painting is Chanakya.

In the context of the painting, the Brahmin could well be Jaishankar and/or Doval, both brahmins. Kshatriyas in the foreground scurry about as ordered; theirs’ not to reason why.

The policy they are implementing flows from the strategic vision articulated by Prime Minister Modi: ‘this is not an era of war.’ The latest iteration of policy phrases it thus: ‘Bhavishya yuddha mein nahin, buddha mein hai (The future lies not in war, but in Buddha.).”

In that sense, the painting shows the national security structure and process – the top to down flow of policy-grand strategy-military strategy and the military’s exercise of operational art giving teeth to policy.

The Brahmin can be taken for the brain: the apex of the national security structure, the national security council, serviced by the national security adviser.

The Karm Kshetra (Field of Endeavour) is the Himalayan heights. As in Siachen where the army got comfortable with time, so shall be the case in Ladakh, with high altitude service serving as the new locale for adding stars to epaulettes – quite like Kashmir was till recently.

Concerning however is the army’s perspective on the painting put out by a source:

It (the painting) portrays the Army as a guardian of Dharma, fighting not merely as a defender of the nation but to uphold justice and protect the nation’s values. This inspiration is complemented by the strategic and philosophical wisdom of Chanakya, whose principles guide the Army’s approach to leadership, diplomacy, and warfare (italics added).

That sounds familiar, redolent as it is of the Pakistan army’s one-time self-image as guardians of Pakistan’s ideological frontier. During the period of Islamisation under dictator, Zia ul Haq, the frontier was understood as Islam. The scope ranged from the Islamic Bomb to being defenders of the faith in thrice-partitioned South Asia, beginning with Kashmir. Consensus has it that the Islamist idea has been of little help to Pakistan and its army.

Missed by the Indian military also is Islamism has been violently rejected by most Muslim states, with militaries putting it down through active combat.

Can a bout of mimesis this this side of the border prove any more useful?

More pertinently, if and since the army cannot autonomously determine what’s righteous, that is to be set for it by the ‘Brahmin’ – the national security apex.

The presence of Garuda and Arjun’s chariot in the backdrop show the values to be defended are to be drawn from ancient Indian philosophy and culture.

That the civilizational extent of ancient Bharat coincides with the Akhand Bharat imaginary is left unsaid. The painting depicts what was once part of the Tibetan near abroad. The religious geography of Bharat can someday go beyond the Kailash range to include the Kailash massif itself. A case has already been made that a statue of the conquering warrior general of a feudal lord grace Ladakh.

Votaries say it would be more appropriate than a recently installed one, with no connection with Ladakh. However, the Chhatrapati’s statue appearing in Ladakh is not mere coincidence. Recall the Chhatrapati had to undergo purifying rituals before being anointed. The surfeit of Kshatriyas in Ladakh must be subtly conditioned.

More troubling is the army’s internalization of the notion that the wellspring of heritage is only ancient India.

It must register the subversive point in today’s context put out by the United Services Institution at its well-curated Indian military heritage festival that Indian value systems have significant breadth and depth to draw on. Perhaps the syncretic Moghul period needs to await the decolonization train getting to the Durand and Radcliffe lines.

In the interim, selective decolonization is visible in the removal of the plaque carrying the inspiration for successive generations of army officers: the quote from Field Marshal Chetwode’s inaugural address of the military academy.

The substitute board reads:

The more forgiving you got, the more the Kauravas assumed you were a coward. The glow of modesty lies hidden in the quiver and those the victors can expect his truce and treaty offers to be respected.”

The army’s logistic feat in an energetic adoption of the defensive posture in Ladakh is laudable in itself. But did it get the Chinese scurrying?

The poem itself was quoted first after the non-surgical strike at Balakot, to cover the pussyfooting around then and later after the Pakistani counter strike. Its recurrence makes for an alibi, both signifying and reinforcing self-delusion.

Further, it is in Hindi and without an accompanying translation. This perhaps because the army chief thinks that Hindi is the ‘binding’ language in the army. If so, it oughtn’t to be thus.

Hitherto the regimental language was the internally binding glue. Part of bonds of ethnic and cultural affinity, a shared language enhanced primary group cohesion.

Officers interfaced with outside counterparts in English, ensuring cultural affiliations do not intrude. Professional intercourse should be in English, placing the same disadvantage on all. ‘Professional’ in the Huntington sense is restricted to matters of the officer cadre, the soldiery equated to a trade or craft.

This may not stand the test of the Agnipath scheme. Besides, majority of the officer intake from north-Indian lower middle classes has led to pervasive use of Hindi by default.

Hindi is the trojan horse to open up the army’s innards for the grand reordering by Hindutva, the verities of which have been bought into by the army – such as, it appears, the caste responsibilities represented in the painting.

The problem with Hindutva is that unity will be under a Brahmanical yoke. Brahmanists have weaponised Hindutva and we know Brahmanists are to Hindutva as salafis are to Islamism.

PM Modi’s latest reference to Buddha and Ashoka is dead give-away on this score. The principal challenge to Brahmanism though the ages has been Buddhism.

It is now up for appropriation. Similarly attempted in regard to Ambedkar, the jury will remain out on the project’s success.

History as guide, a scrum is in the offing. The army would do well to not list over.

Else, the project failing, the army will end up as an ‘army without a country’ – in contrast to a neighbouring ‘army with a country’.