| This is how it is viewed in Pakistan By: Momin Iftikhar  A recent mutiny by the men of Ladakh-based 226 Field Regiment   Artillery against the highhandedness of their officers has served to focus   attention on the highly depleted state of discipline in the Indian army. The   humongous force is currently besieged by a spate of unsavoury incidents,   reflecting poorly upon the entire spectrum of command hierarchy and reaching   right to the institutional pinnacle. Gone berserk over   the severe beating of an enlisted man, assigned to a major as a valet, the   men of the 226 Field Regiment rampaged through the town of Nyoma looking for   the five Majors of their unit, who had fled and taken shelter there. Only the   hasty intervention by the Leh-based 14 Corps Commander, Lieutenant General   Ravi Dastane, and his promise to initiate disciplinary action against the   regimental officers involved in the episode, pacified the men enough to enable   their return to the barracks. In military culture, such large-scale incidents of insubordination are   extremely rare and are handled with utmost alacrity and dispatch whenever   they occur, since they are indicators of dark undercurrents. As recent developments   have shown, there is no dearth of straws in the wind that amply indicates a   sordid state of affairs in the Indian army. The rot is deep-seated and its   source is embedded among the top crust where unbridled ambition and lack of   integrity in senior officers continue to poison the attitude of lower ranks   as well. This is manifest from a well orchestrated and incessant campaign   involving top officials of the Indian army, who are bent upon disgracefully   kicking out the outgoing Army Chief, V.K. Singh - retiring this month - and   paving the way to facilitate the climbing up of their chosen men to the   highest rungs in the chain of command. The contrived controversy over the   Indian Chief's year of birth, which curtailed his   tenure of service by one year, ignored the fact that 1951 (as against 1950)   was accepted as genuine and true when he was considered for promotion as   Lieutenant General and then General; this was only one step in the campaign   against him. On January 16 this year, a night before General Singh moved the   Supreme Court on the issue, unspecified sources leaked in the press the move   of two army attack formations towards New Delhi without notification;   suggesting by implication that the General conveyed a threatening reminder to   the government to concede to his request. This was a total fabrication and   yet again, a confidential letter addressed by the General to the Prime   Minister, highlighting the operational imbalances that impinged on the state   of readiness of the Indian army, was also leaked to the press by his unseen   detractors. These incidents reflect the state of institutional rot in a   culture based on discipline, integrity, loyalty and fairness whose outfall is   certainly going to get percolated to the lower rank and file. The morass of intrigue and deception to grab top slots in the Indian   army is explained by a petition moved by the Ex-Chief of Naval Staff, Admiral   Ramdas, and a clutch of retired generals in the Supreme Court, asserting that   instead of promoting merit, intrigues were afoot to engineer the rise of   pre-selected individuals to top positions. According to the petitioners, the   chain of events were triggered by the ex-Indian Chief General, J.J. Singh,   who was the prime mover to manipulate the early ouster of the incumbent Chief,   in May 2012, in order to make way for the rise of Lieutenant General Bikram   Singh, currently the Eastern Army Commander, as the next COAS. It is interesting to note that General Bikram already has two court   cases pending against him, which compromise his integrity and honour;   rendering him ineligible for the highest slot. The first is for his   involvement in a fake encounter in the IHK in 2001 and the second relates to   a command failure during 2008 due to widespread rape and sexual assault by   the contingent under his command while on a UN peacekeeping mission in Congo.   Despite these blemishes, it is a measure of his clout as an up-and-coming favourite   to lead the Indian army that his designation to take over as the next COAS   was announced three months in advance, rather than the customary two. Such   brazen and blatant promotion of the morally tainted, as old soldiers would   affirm, is bound to have a derogatory impact on the discipline down the chain   of command to the last enlisted man. The absence of moral courage, integrity and all-pervasive sense of   impunity at the top echelon has percolated to lower command levels as well   where the sweeping unaccountability provided through draconian legislations,   like AFSPA, has become a major reason for the weakened bonds of discipline   amongst officers and men. The AFSPA grants impunity to the army personnel   against prosecution while on counterinsurgency operations, permitting the   killing of civilians on mere suspicion that they might commit a violent act   or even for the violation of prohibitory orders. The result is a spate of   extrajudicial killings and even when the soldiers are caught red handed in   cold blooded fake encounters, they cannot be prosecuted for want of sanctions   from the government, as envisioned in the AFSPA. The unbridled use of   unaccountable powers is well reflected through the fact that such government   sanction to allow for proceeding ahead with 42 cases was denied in the recent   months, provoking the Supreme Court to remark:  You go  to a place in exercise of the AFSPA, you commit rape, you commit   murder, then where is the question of sanction? The decay in the moral fibre of the army officers is evident from the   endemic corruption, which has become a corollary of the culture of impunity   and lack of accountability. Ever since the 80s, corruption has remained a   hallmark in all major defence purchase and the trend has only intensified in   the recent days duly reflected by scandals such as the Tatra truck case, the   Sukna land scam and the Adarsh Housing Society scandal. While India goes on a   military shopping spree in the next five years spending approximate $80   billion, this culture is likely to manifest itself in a more prominent   manner. The revolt by the soldiers of the Artillery Regiment in Ladakh should   not be shrugged off as an isolated incident because it is reflective of the   decay and rot that has seeped into the rank and file of the Indian army and   is a product of the culture of impunity that has taken root over the years,   through their employment in the counterinsurgency campaigns. It might be a   no-holds-barred, cutthroat manoeuvring for the top slot in the army,   intrigues to undercut the stature of the incumbent Chief, rampant corruption,   fake encounter, custodial deaths or incident of mutiny; a close scrutiny   would reveal a common thread provided by the political acceptance for the   ruthless suppression of urge for freedom in Kashmir. (The writer is a freelance columnist.) | 
I love my India and want it to be the best in the world. It has the talent and capability. The state has constantly deteriorated in last six decades. The downfall is due to low quality, incompetent and corrupt leadership, unaccountable, equally corrupt bureaucracy and ineffective judiciary unable to fulfil people's aspirations resulting in unparalleled corruption and lawlessness. Drastic changes are necessary to make systems vibrant and responsive to make it an India of every Indian's dreams.
Like every other part of the society or organ of the state, the Army is feeling the impact of changing social and moral norms. These are being manifest in the incidents outlined in the post. However, the broad claim that
ReplyDelete"sweeping unaccountability provided through draconian legislations, like AFSPA, has become a major reason for the weakened bonds of discipline amongst officers and men"
borders on the ridiculous. Probably the author has a bone to pick with AFSPA, and hence sees the act as the root cause for all that is ailing the army today.