Friday, July 5, 2019

EMERGING TRENDS IN INDIA’S NATIONAL SECURITY

For nation states, national security would mean securing the National Interest—but what constitutes the National Interest (NI) must first be determined and then clearly stated. Broadly, the NI could be seen in terms of the survival of the nation-state, wherein the minimum requirement would be the protection of its physical, political and cultural identity against encroachments by other nation-states. These remain the primary and vital interests of a state, which cannot be compromised and which must be defended at all costs.
The above formulation, when placed in specifics for a nation state, would encompass the preservation of one, the territorial integrity of the state, two, the preservation of the existing politico-economic structure and three, the preservation of the nation-states’ ethnic, religious, linguistic and historical norms and traditions. Post the First World War, American policy makers such as President Woodrow Wilson, while formulating their nations foreign policy, drew upon the work of scholars and philosophers like Sir Alfred Zimmer, Nicholas Murray Butler and others who dedicated their efforts to promoting a more peaceful world and was essentially Utopian in concept. Post the Second World War, American foreign policy was driven by a sense of realism, promoted by the work of authors such as Hans J. Morgenthau, Hallet Carr, Reinhold Niebuhr and others. Indeed, Henry Kissinger credited Morgenthau with making the study of international relations into a major discipline.

In India, Post independence, the decision makers were not associated with an institutionalised doctrinal approach to foreign policy-making. Though attention to India’s foreign policy making has attracted major intellectual inputs, it remains insulated from outside influence. India’s national security policy-making process too has not yet been institutionalised, nor has it defined the incorporation of stakeholders and their role. The policy is personality driven and remains highly individualistic and hostage to those who are in key decision making roles, with hardly any publicly accepted inputs from non-partisan strategic planners or experts belonging to think-tanks, the academia or public intellectuals. 

Shri Jaswant Singh, who in the Vajpayee led government (1998-2004) held at various times, the important portfolios of Defence, External Affairs and Finance, expounded on this aspect in 1995. He spoke of a document called the Operational Directive, which “seeks to bring out as clearly as possible, under the given circumstances, the threat situation which has been visualised in consultation not only with the three Services but the various agencies, the Ministry of External Affairs, and when necessary, with the Home Ministry in consultation with the Prime Minister’s Office and, finally, it is approved by the Defence Minister”. he further went on to state that “the contents of this document required considerable change because of the enormous change that has taken place or is taking place not only in our immediate vicinity but all round…Now if you were to ask, is this the defence policy? I would not be able to say that the answer is in the affirmative because India’s defence policy, to the extent that I can venture to make a statement, on it, from 1947 onwards— more precisely from 1950 onwards—has been basically a policy to defend our territory, our sovereignty and our freedom, and no more than that”.

This very clearly brings out the fact that India at that time did not have a declared defence policy. The situation has not changed much till date, in terms of a clear enunciation of a national security policy, which has led some Indian and foreign strategic thinkers to state that India lacks a strategic culture. Foremost amongst them, George Tanham, came to the conclusion that Indian political elites showed little evidence of having thought coherently or systematically about national strategy, reasoning that the forces of history and culture had worked against the cultivation of a strategic mindset. This however betrays a limited understanding of India and its civilisational construct of over five thousand years. We have the example of Kautilya’s Arthashastra, which propounds the science of governance including the relationship with other powers, kingdoms and rulers. Hindu scriptures, the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, Hitopadesa, Manu Smriti, Bhagavatam Purana and others, all have large sections devoted to statecraft and external relations. So to state that India lacked strategic thought would not be accurate. India has a sense of history and is very clear of what it wants to be. It wants rapid domestic growth, abolition of poverty, national unity and equality. It is not looking to burning bridges, but will stand up for what is right and just, with a world view based on equality and non-discrimination.

The objectives then of India’s National Security, would be threefold: first, national stability and integrity; second, social political and economic progress; and third, peace and stability in terms of India’s relationships with other countries across the globe. India’s national security as an essential component to securitise its national interest must be seen in terms of these larger goals. In effect, this would encompass ensuring a safe environment within the country, free from internal and external threats, and a dynamic foreign policy, to enable social, political and economic progress of the nation.

Changing Global Economic Scenario: The Rise of Asia
In the 17th century, Asia was the envy of Europe with India and China alone having nearly half the worlds share of GDP. The Indian economy went into a state of decline at the beginning of the 18th century, though China continued to prosper for another hundred years before slipping into rapid decline at the turn of the 19th century, a period referred to by Chinese scholars as the century of humiliation, denoting the period between the First Opium War in 1839 and the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949. A turn around started towards the close of the 20th century as seen in the chart at figure 1. By 2000 CE, Asia accounted for just over a third of the world output. This is set to equal the output of the rest of the world in 2020, and thereafter surpass the economy of the rest of the world, marking the world’s imminent entry into the Asian age. This is taking place, not just because of the growing economies of India and China, but also due to growth among smaller and midsize countries in Asia. (See Figure 2)
The reversal of the Asian decline has set in motion changes in the geopolitical landscape of the world, with nation states coming to grips with an altered reality. The Chinese leadership is conscious of China’s growing economic clout and has characterised the first two decades of the 21st century’s as a “period of strategic opportunity,” to facilitate domestic development and the expansion of China’s “comprehensive national power.” China is leveraging its growing economic, diplomatic, and military clout to establish regional preeminence and expand the country’s international influence. In the 19th National Conference of the CPC, President Xi Jinping laid emphasis on a “great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation”. He outlined China’s ambition to emerge as a superpower by 2049, which will mark the centenary of the establishment of the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Timelines to achieve those targets are the full modernisation of the PLA by 2020, emerging as a socialist modernised country by 2035 and having a world-class army and the eventual attainment of super power status around the middle of the century.
India’s foreign policy too, under the Modi led NDA government, has seen great transformational changes since 2014. Prime Minister Modi has led the transformation, which is clearly visible and is now seen to be more bold, proactive, innovative and ambitious—and also clearly showing an uncompromising firmness on issues relating to the nation’s integrity and honour. While traditionally, India has been looked at as a notoriously reticent nation in international affairs, it is now being seen as proactive in its engagements with the international fora. There is a greater expectation of India’s role in the world, as reflected by India emerging as a natural participant in several regional and global discourses. Another important transformation has been the rekindling and strengthening of India’s linkages with its diaspora, cooperation in the field of counter terrorism, emphasis on the neighbourhood with significant progress taking place in terms of physical and cultural connectivity and on a renewed economic vigour.
China now views itself as the natural competitor to the United States, and seeks a bipolar world with China being the second pole. Within Asia, China views India as its only economic and geo-strategic rival. Regardless of any churning which may take place in the internal power dynamics in China’s ruling communist party, Beijing's policy towards Delhi will continue to be shaped by its desire to achieve pre-eminence in the region. There will thus be renewed competition between India and China, but there will also be cooperation.
The India-China Relationship
The driving force in the India-China relationship is political, with the governments of the two countries’ determining its shape and content. The people and the media have had little role to play in shaping this relationship; however, since the mid-eighties, people to people interaction has enabled broadening and stabilising the relationship to some extent. Chinese perceptions of and policies regarding India have had greater continuity and focus than Indian perceptions of and policy towards China, largely due to the different nature of the polity of the two countries. Primarily, the focus of both has had a heavy security component. Since the mid-eighties however, there is an increasing emphasis on development issues, helped in no small measure by a consensus that the ‘development of one would in no way constitute a threat to the other’. History, however, imparts to both India and China the same need to restore a feeling of national pride, a need that each fulfils in parallel quests for greater international standing. In this paradigm, Beijing's policy towards Delhi will continue to be assertive, shaped by its desire to achieve pre-eminence, initially in the region and by 2050 in world affairs. Today, a combination of historical circumstances, cold war rivalry and a competition for resources is setting the agenda for the way the two nations perceive each other. While commonality of interests exists in some areas that widen the field for further cooperation, other factors are pushing the two countries towards the path of rivalry and confrontation in pursuance of each nation’s perceived self-interest.
The India-China relationship remains strained, largely due to India’s unsettled border with Tibet. Today, the relationship can be categorised as stable at the strategic level, but marked by political, diplomatic, and military instability at the tactical level. The major irritant in the relationship is the unresolved border issue, which has the potential to lead the two countries to conflict. China illegally occupies the Aksai Chin plateau in Ladakh and also lays claim to the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh. While the McMahon Line is the effective boundary between India and China, its legal status is disputed as China does not accept the validity of the 1914 Simla Accord. India thus has both a territorial as well as a boundary dispute with China, which has the potential to lead to conflict in future. Massive upgradation of infrastructure in Tibet by China has a distinct military bias and is a cause of concern to India as it greatly enhances Chinese military capability across the Himalayas. When considered with growing military asymmetry including nuclear capability, the threat to India increases exponentially. It must be noted that China has moved away from its earlier theme of peace as the dominant trend, to stating that some conflicts may be inevitable. It is in this respect that India needs to be prepared to thwart any hostile activity by China across the Himalayas.
For many years, China has supported insurgencies in India’s Northeastern states and continues with transgressions across the undemarcated Line of Actual Control (LAC). On the diplomatic front, China has been particularly assertive in recent years, continuously blocking Indian attempts to become a Member of the Nuclear Suppliers Group and resisting India’s attempt to seek a place on the high table as a permanent member of the UN Security Council. For long, it resisted India’s efforts to list Masood Azhar, the founder of the Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammad—a UN-designated terrorist group, to be labelled a terrorist by the 1267 Sanctions Committee of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) and only relented on this on 1 May 2019, after China dropped its long-held objections to the move. Beijing had earlier put a "technical" hold on the 1267 UN resolution in March, the fourth time it had scuttled India's attempt to sanction the man it holds responsible for multiple terror attacks in India. China also needlessly objects every time an Indian political leader visits Arunachal Pradesh. But it is the collusive nuclear warhead-ballistic missile-military hardware nexus between China and Pakistan, described by both as an 'all-weather friendship,’ which is of major concern to India.
Post the 1962 Sino-Indian conflict, the relations between India and China remained frozen for 26 years, thawing finally with the visit of then Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi to Beijing in 1988. A slew of confidence building measures started in September 1993, with the signing of the Agreement on the Maintenance of Peace and Tranquility along the Line of Actual Control in the India-China Border, which was followed up in 1996, 2005 and in 2012. However, to prevent border incidents from flaring up, the Border Defence Cooperation Agreement (BDCA) was signed between the two countries in October 2013. The BDCA reiterated the provisions of most of the earlier CBMs, but in addition provided for additional mechanisms for the maintenance of peace in a situation involving a direct face off between the soldiers of the two countries, such as Article VI which stipulates that the two sides shall not follow or tail patrols of the other side in areas where there is no common understanding of the LAC. While the border has remained peaceful, with no incidences of firing taking place since then, the possibility of a flare up still exists as seen in the India-China border stand off for 70 days in Doklam—a tri-junction between Bhutan, India and China. The statements issued by Chinese government controlled media during the course of the crisis including Global Times, Xinhua and others, as well as spokespersons of the foreign and defence ministries of China went ballistic in condemning India. Offensive epithets were used to threaten India to withdraw or to face consequences, which would be far worse than the defeat of 1962. India however stood its ground, and China was eventually forced to back off, marking a victory for the Indian stand, and highlighting India’s firmness and resolve, on issues relating to the nation’s integrity and honour.
The Doklam face-off further strained relations between the two countries, but a reset took place with Prime Minister Modi meeting his Chinese counterpart President Xi Jinxing in Wuhan in April 2018. The two leaders are set to meet again at an informal summit, this time in India, later in 2019. Despite differing perceptions on many issues between India and China, India’s approach in dealing with China has been one of pragmatism, wherein the focus has been on compartmentalising the problems and not letting the differences turn into disputes and disputes into conflict. Today, there is substantial economic engagement between the two countries as also an ever increasing people to people contact. There is also substantial cooperation on regional, multilateral and global issues, a prime example being on climate change. But despite the many positives, there is a need to reset the relationship in a new paradigm, as the relationship has entered a more challenging phase, though remaining as a mix of competition and cooperation.
There are growing concerns in India about China’s increased assertiveness, and about China’s regional and global ambitions. China is no longer seeking a multi polar world, but seeks bipolarity and in the hierarchical order, aims eventually to replace the United States and occupy pole position. This is in strong contrast to India, which would like to see not only a multi polar world, but also a multi polar Asia. The India under Modi has a vision for the country that is distinct from the kind of approach taken earlier about India’s role as a balancing power—a non-aligned power. That terminology fortunately lies buried now, and in its place is a new found assertion of Indian interests and what that means for India. This will lead to contestation, as India will not bow down to any foreign power. In the long term, the India-China relationship will hence be a difficult one to manage. India’s  core concerns will remain the economic upliftment of its people, technological advancement, military modernisation and gaining its rightful place under the sun. In this process, it would not like to be sidetracked by any distractions from China or any other power in the region.
China’s Assertiveness in the Region
China’s “One Belt, One Road,” now renamed the “Belt and Road Initiative” (BRI), is intended to develop strong economic ties with other countries, shape their interests to align with China’s, and deter confrontation or criticism of China’s approach to sensitive issues. Countries participating in BRI could develop economic dependence on Chinese capital, which China could leverage to achieve its interests. For example, in July 2017, Sri Lanka and a Chinese state-owned enterprise (SOE) signed a 99-year lease for Hambantota Port, following similar deals in Piraeus, Greece, and Darwin, Australia.
China seeks to secure its objectives without jeopardising the regional stability that remains critical to the economic development that has helped the CCP maintain its monopoly on power. However, China is also willing to employ coercive measures—both military and non-military—to advance its interests and mitigate opposition from other countries. For example, in 2017, China used economic and diplomatic pressure, unsuccessfully, in an attempt to urge South Korea to reconsider the deployment of the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system.

In its regional territorial and maritime disputes, China continued construction of outposts in the Spratly Islands, but also continued outreach to South China Sea claimants to further its goal of effectively controlling disputed areas. China also maintained a consistent coast guard presence in the Senkakus.
The Pakistan Factor
Chinese desire to contain India finds a willing ally in Pakistan. Here, the interests of both Beijing and Islamabad converge. The nuclear, missile and military hardware nexus between the two is well known and is a cause of serious concern for India. China is Pakistan's largest defence supplier and is widely perceived to be using Pakistan to fight its proxy war against India, to counter Indian power in the region and to divert Indian military force and strategic attention away from China. It also provides a bridge between Beijing and the Muslim world, a geographically convenient trading partner, and a channel into security and political relations in South Asia. For Pakistan, China is a high-value guarantor of security against India. Chinese officials also view a certain degree of India-Pakistan tension as advancing their own strategic interests as such friction bogs India down in South Asia and interferes with New Delhi's ability to assert its global ambitions and compete with China at the international level. China is also expanding its footprints in Nepal, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, which leads to a perception within India of being hemmed in by the Chinese. When viewed with Chinese capability to support insurgent groups in Northeast India and to Left Wing Extremists, India’s concerns deepen.

India is also concerned about China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), the crowning jewel of which is the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), connecting China’s Xinjiang province to Gwadar in Balochistan, Pakistan. In April 2015 President Xi Jinping signed agreements with Pakistan over development projects worth USD 46 billion, focussed on building a 3000 km (1800 miles) CPEC. This corridor will connect Pakistan’s deep sea port Gwadar, located at the Arabian Sea, to China’s western Xinjiang region. International analysts see this CPEC as President XI Jinping’s biggest gambit in the One Belt One Road strategy. The projects under development are now assessed to be in the range of USD 62 billion.

Indian concerns over the CPEC pertain primarily to issues of sovereignty. In its annual report submitted to Parliament on 11 July 2018, the Union Defence Ministry bluntly stated, “The CPEC passing through Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir challenges Indian sovereignty”. A large number of Chinese labour along with military personnel are also located in Gilgit-Baltistan, which has grave security implications for India. Many in Pakistan, especially those in the military, see the completion of the CPEC as a possible game changer in the region, which could lift Pakistan out of poverty. That view is however now being contested as most of the economic benefits will go to Chinese hands. In the Gwadar port complex itself, where the expectation is that one million tons of cargo will be handled annually, 91 per cent share of the revenue from the operations of the port and the terminal and 85 per cent of the revenue generated by the free zone will go to Chinese companies. There is also the underlying fear that such a huge investment could result in a debt trap for Pakistan, much on the lines of the Hambantota port in Sri Lanka, which China has now taken over on a lease for 99 years. There are also fears that the CPEC may not dee fruition, primarily because it passes through territory which is increasingly being contested. in Balochistan, the ongoing freedom movement, which keeps cropping up off and on since 1947, is major source of concern to the Pakistani establishment. The current struggle of the Baloch people against Pakistani subjugation dates back to 2005. The ethnic Baloch feel marginalised at the plunder of their rich resources, and are waging a bitter freedom struggle against the government, targeting both the Pakistan security forces as well as the Chinese workers.  The CPEC is also vulnerable to attacks emanating from Gilgit-Baltistan and from the TTP (Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan), which has forced it to upgrade security measures across the length of the project. Pakistan is now raising a Special Security Division comprising approximately 15,000 personnel to provide security for the CPEC against attacks.
Pakistan has also been waging an undeclared war on India since the last three decades, through what its leadership called a ‘war by a thousand cuts’. The Indian response to Pakistani intransigence was reactive, and based on taking defensive measures to reduce the impact of terrorism which emanated from across the border. There was hence no punitive action taken against Pakistan, despite a series of highly provocative attacks such as the attack on India’s parliament in December 2001, Akshardham Temple in September 2002, Mumbai in September 2008, Pathankot Air Base in January 2016 amongst others. But it was the attack on a forward military base Kashmir in Uri which made the government rethink its strategy. It was Pakistan’s analysis that India would not retaliate against a nuclear armed neighbour, and hence it continued these acts of terrorism on Indian soil under the nuclear umbrella. Indeed, when Indian forces raided a terrorist hideout in Myanmar, the Pakistan interior minister, Mr Nisar Ali Khan, in response to a statement by Minister of State for Information & Broadcasting Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore that military action in Myanmar to hit back at rebels who killed 18 soldiers in Manipur was a message to other countries, said, “Pakistan is not like Myanmar”. He further added that Pakistan will not be cowed down by threats from across the border. That was an oblique reference to Pakistan’s nuclear capability and response options. However, when the Indian forces carried out a retaliatory strike on terrorist hideouts within Pakistan occupied Jammu & Kashmir, 11 days after the Uri attack, on 29 September 2016, it caught the Pakistani establishment off balance, especially because India’s Director General of Military Operations, Lt Gen. Ranbir Singh, in a press conference, announced the details of the operation. Pakistan responded with a denial, saying that Indian troops had not entered Pakistani territory but had only fired at Pakistani positions which was for the most part ineffective. Denial by Pakistan was mainly to reassure its home constituency and enabled Pakistan to avoid confrontation and an escalation of hostilities. But on a more serious note, in a car bomb attack on an Indian police convoy on 14 February 2019 in Pulwama, J&K, which led to the death of 40 police personnel, the Indian Prime Minister made it clear that the attack would not go unavenged. Pakistan’s Prime Minister, in response said that Pakistan would retaliate, with all the means at their disposal if India were to attack Pakistan. Earlier, Pakistan officials had threatened to use nuclear weapons should India attack Pakistan. The Indian response with an air strike against the base of Jaish-e-Mohammad in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, deep inside Pakistani territory, shattered once and for the nuclear myth and set in place a new normal in India-Pakistan relations. It gave a clear message to Pakistan and indeed to the rest of the world that India will not be cowed down by the threat of nuclear weapons and would respond firmly to any attack on Indian soil, sponsored by Pakistan. The era of nuclear blackmail was over. To this end, it appears that India’s policy towards Pakistan is veering from deterrence to compellance.

While the new Indian policy of taking the fight to the enemy in his own territory has set a new normal in India-Pakistan relations, it is yet to be seen whether this will impact on Pakistan’s support to terrorist groups based in  its areas of control for operations against India. Pakistan views these groups as its strategic assets, and would be unwilling to disband them. The inter-se dynamic between the two countries will hence remain hostile, at least for the immediate future and ties between the two countries will remain strained. While Pakistan is no longer a conventional military threat to India, its capacity to foment terrorism within India remains intact. That is a reality which India will have to live with. Peace can only come about if the costs to Pakistan for indulging in terror attacks are made unbearable and this will be the thrust of the Modi government in its second tenure after winning a handsome mandate in the elections in May 2019.

The Indian Ocean Region (IOR)

The Indian Ocean holds 16.8% of the world’s proven oil reserves and 27.9% of proven natural gas reserves. An abundance of natural resources in the Indian Ocean, among other factors, has facilitated trade-led growth within this region. Home to major sea routes connecting the Middle East, Africa and East Asia with Europe and the Americas, these vital sea routes facilitate maritime trade in the IOR, carry more than half of the world’s sea-borne oil and host 23 of the world’s top 100 container ports. Container traffic through the region’s ports has increased fourfold from 46 million TEUs in 2000 to 166 million TEUs in 2017. Increased connectivity within the region has strengthened ties with external trading partners. China has emerged as the most important trading partner of the IOR, accounting for 16.1% of its total goods trade in 2017, up from 4.8% in 2000. On the other hand, between 2000 and 2017 the share of trade has declined with other major partners such as the EU (16.8% to 12.0%), the US (13.9% to 7.9%), and Japan (14.6% to 6.5%). Intra-regional trade is even stronger, accounting for 27.2% of total trade in 2017. Increasing share of trade to Asian players marks a shift to the Asian century.

Over 80 percent of the world’s seaborne trade in oil transits through Indian Ocean (Journal of the Indian Ocean), making the sea lanes of vital strategic importance. This aspect gets magnified as the sea lanes pass through various choke points—the Strait of Hormuz (40%), the Strait of Malacca (35%) and the Bab el-Mandab Strait (8%). Both India and China are dependent on their energy flows from these sea lanes. Over 70 per cent of China’s oil imports come from the Middle East and Africa, which has to transit through these vulnerable choke points. While China is exploring other means of energy supply, the vulnerable sea transport from the Middle East and Africa will remain the primary mode of petroleum import for the foreseeable future. To secure its Sea Lines of Communication, China has embarked on what has been described as its “String of Pearls” geopolitical strategy. Stretching from Gwadar in Baluchistan province of Pakistan to the Hainan Islands, these strategic geopolitical ‘pearls’ have however been non-confrontational, with no evidence as yet of imperial or neocolonial ambition. However, powerful and modernised armed forces provide China with military capabilities that could potentially alter the status quo in future. As of now, for both New Delhi and Beijing, trade and commercial activities will play the dominant role in their strategies for the IOR.

India’s location in the Indian Ocean gives it a unique centrality and importance. While India’s fixation since independence remained on its land borders, to deal with threats posed by China and Pakistan, this changed in the 1990s, when it started to look towards the Oceans to address severe economic problems at home. The Look East policy was initiated to boost trade and commercial ties to Southeast Asia and East Asia, while at the same time, ties were strengthened with the gulf countries to secure energy supplies, to expand trade and to support the Indian diaspora working in these regions. Thus, India’s more militarised continental approach saw a shift towards an economically focussed strategy for the region. This was given a much needed push by the Modi government in 2015, with Prime Minister Modi enunciating a new vision for the IOR, called SAGAR (Security And Growth for All in the Region) and a strengthening of the Look East Policy which was called Act East. India’s External Affairs Minister, Ms Sushma Swaraj defined the region as extending from the Gulf of Aden in the West, through Chabahar Port in southwest Iran, and over to Burma and Thailand in the East. The emphasis is on commerce, infrastructure development and diplomatic engagement, all three drivers being critical to India’s domestic economy and electoral politics.

China however treats the Indian Ocean as an extension of its Maritime Silk Road—the trade and infrastructure corridor linking coastal China to other Asian countries—which is a subset of its broader BRI, and seeks to expand China’s links throughout Eurasia. For Beijing, the region has a wider sweep, extending from coastal China to the Saudi peninsula and African littoral. The land half of the BRI, the Silk Road Economic Belt, extends from western China through Central Asia to the Middle East, the Caucasus, and Russia, with both axes have endpoints in Europe. The aim of the BRI hence appears to be to dominate Eurasia, which leads Beijing to pursue an integrated set of trade, commercial, diplomatic, and military initiatives from the South China Sea to the African littoral.

While the emphasis in the IOR is on trade, freedom of navigation and in keeping the Sea Lines of Communication secure, security considerations cannot be overlooked as presently, more than half the world’s armed conflicts are located in the IOR. The waters too are home to continually evolving strategic developments including the competing rises of China and India, potential nuclear confrontation between India and Pakistan, the US interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan, Islamist terrorism, growing incidence of piracy in and around the Horn of Africa, and management of diminishing fishery resources. Consequently, there is a substantial deployment of military force in the IOR, with almost all the world’s major powers have deployed substantial military forces in the Indian Ocean region.

Both India and China have genuine aspirations of developing blue water naval capabilities through the development and acquisition of aircraft carriers and an aggressive modernisation and expansion programme. As China increases its military presence in the Indian Ocean, the Indian Navy is increasingly focused on countering its Chinese counterpart. However, absent a direct confrontation, it seems likely that military factors will remain secondary drivers. In addition, the dominance of the army in Indian military planning, together with persistent problems in acquiring advanced naval and air equipment to operate in the Indian Ocean, will continue to undermine India’s ability to be a strategic partner to the United States in the region.

The U.S. initiated a pivot or rebalance of its strategy towards Asia in 2011, marking a change in its perspective based on over seven decades of forward presence in East Asia. The Indo-Pacific strategy now enunciated ties the growing U.S.-India relationship to the wider Asia-Pacific region, reflecting the growing economic, trade, and diplomatic links between the littoral countries of the Indian Ocean and those in Southeast and East Asia. In terms of geographical reach, the Indo-Pacific strategy largely excludes Pakistan, the Arabian Peninsula, Iran, and the African littoral from its conception of the Indo-Pacific region. The U.S. has sought to de-hyphenate India from Pakistan, in order to improve its relations with India and views Pakistan as a part of its South Asia policy, which is focussed on counter terrorism. Iran, the Arabian Peninsula, and the African littoral are viewed as Middle Eastern or continental African issues, with U.S. strategy in the region being shaped by concerns relating to energy supplies, counter-terrorism, and other security matters.This fits in well with America’s strategic interests in the Middle East, its ongoing troop commitment to Afghanistan, and its global role.

While the U.S. will push for strengthening of ties with India, especially in the military domain, the Indian response will be more measured and cautious. The U.S. will continue to look at the region through a military lens, while the Indian concerns will predominantly be on increasing their economic footprints in the area. The region is likely to witness continued contestation and shifting coalitions between the U.S., India and China with other countries in the IOR and outside powers like Russia and Japan.

China’s aggressive soft power diplomacy has widely been seen as arguably the most important element in shaping the Indian Ocean strategic environment, transforming the entire region’s dynamics. By providing large loans on generous repayment terms, investing in major infrastructure projects such as the building of roads, dams, ports, power plants,and railways, and offering military assistance and political support in the UN Security Council through its veto powers, China has secured considerable goodwill and influence among countries in the Indian Ocean region.

India’s centrality in the Indian Ocean region and its control over the air and sea lines of communication, provides it geographic domination. While India has increased its engagement with the region since the turn of the century, it faces challenges to its further expansion and cannot compete head-to-head with China which has much deeper pockets and is able to invest far more in trade and commercial investments. New Delhi will hence be forced to calibrate its resistance to Beijing. While increasingly aligning with the U.S., New Delhi will seek to minimise the possibilities of a U.S. China confrontation which could spill out of control. As of now, the further escalation of such geopolitical tensions, as seen in the South China Sea, would threaten freedom of navigation which is vital for the smooth flow of Indian Ocean maritime trade and the openness of the region’s sea routes, which would negatively impact on energy flows. 

Neighbouring Countries

China’s growing influence in Bangladesh, Myanmar and Nepal would need to be watched and countered both diplomatically and economically. Closer ties with China provide Bangladesh with a sense of security against India. China values Bangladesh for its immense natural gas reserves where Bangladesh’s geographical proximity to Myanmar makes these reserves accessible to China through pipelines as also providing a strategic foothold to China in South Asia. During Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Dhaka in 2016, the two countries established a strategic partnership. Bangladesh has been an official partner of the China-led BRI since then. In terms of military cooperation, the Bangladesh armed forces are largely equipped by Chinese armaments. China also sold six surface ships to the Bangladesh Navy between 2009-2015 and two submarines in 2016. But it is the economic ties that form an important aspect of the bilateral relationship. China is Bangladesh’s biggest trading partner with bilateral trade worth USD 10 billion, thought the trade is skewed in China’s favour. In terms of infrastructure development, China is building bridges, roads, railway tracks, airport, and power plants. In terms of economic cooperation, there is greater scope for Bangladesh trade with India. Relevant in this regard is a statement by the Bangladesh Additional Foreign Secretary, “We have nothing to sell to the Chinese. We could sell a great deal more to the Indians if they allowed us.” Bangladesh also shares three of its borders with India and none with China, thereby limiting Bangladesh’s ability to distance itself from India. 

While India considers Nepal a part of its sphere of influence, it is increasingly being challenged by China’s inroads into Nepal with China providing assistance in exploiting Nepal’s hydro electric potential and in construction of road and rail linkages. There has thus evolved a multi-layered engagement between China and Nepal which supports its wider South Asia policy. In Myanmar, China's strategic objective appears to be to gain direct access to Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea through Myanmar, bypassing the narrow Straits of Malacca. China has greater economic, political, and military clout than India and India is unlikely to replace China’s position as the most influential country in Myanmar. However, both Chinese and Indian interests converge in Myanmar towards economic development and maintenance of peace. While there would be competition, there would also be cooperation.

Internal Armed Conflict and Terrorism

Internally, conflict in India’s Northeast has reduced considerably, though Manipur still remains disturbed and getting peace to Nagaland is still a work in being.  Concerns remain in Assam about illegal immigration, wherein the influx of Bangladeshis has considerably altered the demography in certain areas. Left Wing Extremism (LWE) has been contained from the levels that existed in the period 2004-2014, but while the number of districts affected by LWE has reduced, the ability of the Maoists to cause casualties to the security forces remains. However, concerted efforts by the Centre and the states, both in enhancing security measures as well as in effective development produces has reduced the reach of the Maoists and they are getting confined to increasingly smaller spaces. 

The situation in J&K remains volatile. Conflict in the state is externally sponsored which is why it remains difficult to achieve conflict resolution. In Sri Lanka, the Island nation’s military was able to defeat the LTTE because they were able to seal the battle space. The Soviet Union’s inability to do so let to their exit from Afghanistan. The U.S. too, in its war against terror in Afghanistan, has not been able to defeat the Taliban as the latter have safe havens within Pakistan. Similarly, Pakistani support to terrorism in J&K has enabled the conflict to continue over the last three decades. However, the change in policy being adopted against Pakistan after calling out  Pakistan’s nuclear bluff, is likely to reduce Pakistan’s overt support to the terrorist groups operating in the state. There is also a concerted effort by the Indian authorities to pursue the money trail and restrict the money flows to the coffers of terrorist groups. This, in conjunction with legal action being initiated against the Hurriyat and other groups supporting the terrorist in the state is likely to have a positive impact and will likely lead to peace returning to the state.

A matter of concern is the Islamic State (IS) indicating its presence in India. IS's Amaq News Agency, in an announcement on 10 May 2019,  named the new province, “Wilayah of Hind”. The easter Sunday bombings in Sri Lanka which killed over 250 people, had linkages with groups in Southern India, which indicated that the ideological spread of the IS has made some inroads in certain parts of India. While the investigative agencies have made a number of arrests and while the IS has not carried out any terror attack in India, it would be advisable to err on the side of caution and presume the existence of sleeper cells which could get activated.

ASSESSMENT

As China and India rise politically and economically on the world stage, it is natural that they compete with one another for influence. Rivalry between the two nations will be fuelled especially by each country's efforts to reach into the other's traditional spheres of influence, for example, China in South Asia and India in Southeast Asia. China's willingness to overlook human rights and democracy concerns in its relations with the smaller South Asian states will at times leave India at a disadvantage in asserting its power in the region, as was seen recently in Nepal and Sri Lanka. India will need to significantly enlarge its economic footprint in the South Asian region to ensure it maintains an edge in its traditional spheres of influence.

Energy competition between India and China is also reflected in the two countries' assertions of naval power. As India reaches into the Malacca Strait, Beijing is developing facilities along the Indian Ocean littoral to protect sea lanes and ensure uninterrupted energy supplies. Militarily, there can be no let up in India’s preparation to counter any Chinese misadventure. In the Himalayas, India will have to ensure air superiority at least in the areas South of the Tsang Po River. It will also have to upgrade its artillery capability in the mountains as well as develop infrastructure compatible to that which China has built up in Tibet.  India will also have to ensure that its Navy maintains an edge in the Indian Ocean region to protect national interests. To that extent, it is time that the country takes a de novo look on prioritising its defence expenditure to meet the challenges of the future. India also needs to change the way in which advice is tendered to the Government so that the Services concerns are adequately represented to ensure that the nations defence is not compromised.

Pakistan is unlikely to cease support to terrorist groups which it uses as its strategic assets against India. However, it will lay greater stress on promoting and using indigenous groups within the state of J&K to target the security forces or to carry out suicide attacks, so that the blowback against Pakistan can be avoided. India will, however continue to put diplomatic, economic and political pressure against Pakistan, to compel it mend its ways. In case of Pakistani intransigence, a military response by India remains a high possibility.

The downward trend in terrorist related activity in areas impacted by LWE is likely to continue. However, resolving the problem is unlikely at least in the immediate future. We are likely to see sporadic attacks by the Maoists in the coming years, thought he intensity and the frequency will see a decrease.

The coming decade will see a further decrease in violence levels in the Northeast. A political solution to the problem in Nagaland is possible and would greatly alter the security scenario in the entire region. However, the problem of illegal infiltration, which has altered the demographic balance is likely to create social tension in the region which would require strong governance to keep the situation under control. However, much of the angst will be reduced if the Act East policy of the Centre creates huge economic opportunities for the states

The state of J&K is likely to limp back to normalcy, provided the Centre continues with the firm policy which it has adopted, which constitutes firm action against the terrorists by the Army, restricting financial flows to terrorist groups, and investigating and prosecuting all those involved in fraudulent financial dealings and in providing support to terrorist groups. Certain legislations, like repeal of Article 35A and the abrogation of Article 370 may throw up temporary instability, but will in the long run lead to the emotional integration of the state with the rest of the Union.

Overall, India can look forward to a more safe and secure security environment in the coming decade. (Published as a book chapter by GCCT, Jaipur).

THE INDIA-PAKISTAN RELATIONSHIP: CONFLICT AS THE DEFAULT CONDITION

Relations between India and Pakistan remain at an impasse, largely because of the different trajectories taken by the two nations since independence. India chose an inclusive democracy and secularism as its central plank. It had tall leaders who nurtured the concept in the formative years of the young nation, but more importantly, the idea of democracy and secularism jelled well with the majority Hindu population, as Hinduism (Sanātan Dharma), in essence was inclusive and non-sectarian. Paradoxically, in Pakistan, a state which came into being based on a separate religious ideology, there was lack of ideological lucidity.
The word ‘PAKSTAN’ was coined by Rahmat Ali in a pamphlet he published on 28 January 1933, titled "Now or Never: Are We to Live or Perish Forever?” As originally conceived, Pakistan was to consist of the five northern units of British India—Punjab, North West Frontier Province (Afghania), Kashmir, Sind and Baluchistan. East Bengal was not a part of this calculus. By the end of 1933, the word ‘Pakistan’ had become common vocabulary where an ‘I’ was added to ease pronunciation. In the pamphlet, Ali spoke of the Muslim and Hindu being separate nations and expressed the need for the creation of Pakistan, lest “our Islamic heritage perish throughout the Sub-continent of India”. The underlying principle for the creation of Pakistan was thus based on exclusivity, and having a separate state based on religious affinity. 
This was the political theme which Jinnah too propounded. “It is a dream,” he said, “that the Hindus and Muslims can ever evolve a common nationality…The Hindus and Muslims belong to two different religious philosophies, social customs, and literature[s]. They neither intermarry nor inter-dine together, and indeed they belong to two different civilisations which are based mainly on conflicting ideas and conceptions…To yoke together two such nations under a single state, one as a numerical minority and the other as a majority, must lead to growing discontent, and final destruction of any fabric that may be so built up for the government of such a state”. While Jinnah was not the first to propound the two nation theory, he gave the concept political legitimacy, which led to the creation of Pakistan as a separate homeland for the Muslims. 
Was Jinnah conflicted on what Pakistan should be? In his address to the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan on 11 August 1947, as the Governor General designate of Pakistan, he spoke of a secular Pakistan. “You may belong to any religion,” he said, “that has nothing to do with the business of the state… We are starting with this fundamental principle that we are all citizens and equal citizens of the state… I think we should keep that in front of us as our ideal…” 
This was in direct contradiction to his earlier rhetoric seeking a different identity based on being Muslim. In any case, four decades of laying emphasis on the differences between Hindus and Muslims and the threat to the latter from the former could obviously not be erased by a single speech. An “Islamic Pakistan” may have been a slogan for the Muslim League to mobilise followers rather than as a goal of the League’s leadership. However, the slogan took on a life of its own committing Pakistan to incorporate Islam into the fabric of the state. While Jinnah may have been a secularist in his personal life, his politics was not based on secular principles.
The issue of what Pakistan should be still resonates in the country, without any satisfactory outcome and raises the question whether the idea of Pakistan was sufficiently imagined at its inception. In her book, historian Ayesha Jalal asks, ‘how did a Pakistan come about which fitted the interests of most Muslims so poorly’? This perhaps is an acknowledgement that the imagined Pakistan has not only not come about, but has taken on a form, which ill serves the people for whom it was supposed to be a new Medina, harking back to the imagined glory at the time of Muhammad.
Hans J. Morgenthau’s comments on Pakistan also make the same point. In an article published in 1956, critiquing the Asian policy of the US, he stated that the US military policy with respect to Pakistan was ‘fraught with illusion and danger’. The latter, he said was… ‘not a nation and hardly a state. It has no justification in history, ethnic origin, language, civilisation, or the consciousness of those who make up its population. They have no interest in common save one: fear of Hindu domination. It is to that fear and to nothing else that Pakistan owes its existence, and thus far its survival as an independent state’. He further observed that it was hard to see ‘how anything but a miracle or else a revival of religious fanaticism, will assure Pakistan’s future’. That miracle is yet to happen, but religious fanaticism continues to gain ground at a rapid rate.
What has made successive Pakistani leaderships use Islam as a tool for nation building? In the early years after independence, it was done to glue the nation together as there was an absence of nationalism in the various constituents that made the two wings of Pakistan. Each constituent had its own distinct social fabric, language and ethnicity, so the belief was that Islam could be used as the binding glue. The formation of Pakistan was attributed to a presumed unified Islamic ethos, and in the process, all kinds of tools were applied to de-emphasise local and regional agendas and any discussion of regional dynamics or prerogatives was considered subversive. The Urdu speaking elite which had migrated to Pakistan from the minority provinces of India abrogated to themselves a major say in the shaping of the narrative at the expense of the regions indigenous intellectuals and activists, as a consequence of which the latter had lesser influence in helping to shape the destiny of the new nation.
In the event, when Pakistan adopted its Constitution on 23 September 1956, Pakistan was declared an Islamic Republic. Earlier, the Constituent Assembly had adopted the ‘Objectives Resolution’ on 12 March 1949, as a set of guiding principles for the future constitution. Combining features from both Western democracy and Islamic principles, it stated that sovereignty belonged to Allah alone but He has delegated it to the state of Pakistan through its people for being exercised as a sacred trust. The principles of democracy, freedom, tolerance and social justice as enunciated by Islam were to be fully observed, fundamental rights were to be guaranteed, Pakistan was to be a federation and the judiciary was to be independent. However, incorporating into law the concept that sovereignty belonged to Allah alone was dangerous as it had the potential to override any law to appease Muslim sentiment and potentially delivered power to the clergy.
While Jinnah’s vision of a liberal Pakistan lacked roots, it was but one of the competing ideas in a series of narratives, the others being those put forward by the Islamists and the various ethno-linguistic groups in the Provinces. An astonishing aspect of Pakistan’s creation was the fact that it chose Urdu as its national language. Urdu was the language of the Mughal court and army, and of the Muslim elites and population of North India. It was not the mother tongue of the people living in either of the Wings of Pakistan and was spoken by less than 3 per cent of the population at that time. The strategy of forcing these populations to go to school in Urdu spurred local nationalist resentment in East Pakistan, Sindh and the North West Frontier Province (NWFP, now called Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), especially as Urdu was not the language of the top elites. Under British rule, English had remained the language of senior ranks of government, of high society and of higher education. The imposition of Urdu as the national language thus remained unpopular at the lower level of society and was treated with snobbish contempt by the English speaking elite. It thus got squeezed from both ends of society. In the case of East Wing, it eventually led to the breakup of the state in just over two decades with the erstwhile East Pakistan becoming sovereign and naming itself Bangladesh in 1971.
The first decade of Pakistan’s independence were witness to political instability, civil disturbances and a weakening economy, which prompted a military takeover by General Ayub Khan on 7 October 1958. Ayub’s coup was given legal sanction by Pakistan’s Supreme Court, citing the Doctrine of Necessity. Thus began Pakistan’s long experiments with military rule, broken by short periods of civilian rule which too were for the most part autocratic in functioning. Under Ayub, the military justified its rule in moral and strategic terms and took on itself the onus of addressing grave matters of state security from the hands of the political class. The security of Pakistan in turn came to be identified with the Punjab and NWFP as nearly all its manpower was drawn from these two provinces. This still remains the dominant theme within Pakistan. While remaining aloof from Islamic doctrine, the military focused on geo-strategic concerns while formulating a security policy for Pakistan. Security concerns voiced by the military were perceived in terms of a threat from India. This was centred on three prongs. The first was the need for a strong standing army ready to take to field at short notice against any threat from India. The second was to exploit Pakistan’s geo-strategic position to receive aid from the West and the third was to move towards better relations with both the (then) USSR and China. A curious aspect of Pakistan’s security policy was that it was entirely centred on the security of the West Wing. Ayub believed East Pakistan was indefensible, being surrounded on three sides by India. The defence of the East Wing hence lay in the strength of West Pakistan. This reasoning did not go down too well with the Bengalis and was one of the factors which led to the creation of Bangladesh.
It was under Ayub Khan’s presidency (October 1958-March 1969) that the study of Islam or ‘Islamiyat’ was made compulsory in Pakistan’s education system. As taught in schools, the history of Pakistan was no longer a product of a post-colonial constitutional power-sharing struggle or the subcontinent's syncretic and shared Hindu-Muslim heritage, but an almost inexorable culmination of the arrival of Islam on the subcontinent. Notions of implacable Hindu and Indian hostility were reinforced. While Ayub Khan was not imbued with radical ideology, he was neither a secularist nor was he averse to Pakistan having a state ideology. General Zia ul Haq went further down the road in Islamising Pakistan’s legal and educational system, but his policy was an extension of a consistent state ideology and not an aberration.
The period of Ayub Khan saw the transformation of Pakistan from an ideologically defined but ethnically circumscribed state to one whose orientation was perceived in terms of security against India. By the time Ayub was deposed by his Army Chief, General Yahya Khan, the Pakistan Army too had changed, from being an apolitical force to one that was deeply involved in the running of the country. The process had begun in 1947 itself, with the military invoking jihad and religious scholars issuing supportive fatwas or religious decrees to mobilise tribesman from the frontier for raiding and seizing Kashmir. Pakistan failed in this attempt, but it still took recourse to tapping jihadi sentiments as part of its war fighting strategy to asymmetrically secure political and territorial gains vis-à-vis India. Pakistan attempted this again in the 1965 war with India when it sent armed infiltrators into Kashmir, in the hope of igniting a wider uprising. It failed yet again, but in the aftermath of the conflict, the Pakistani military moved closer to an Islamist ideology with religious symbolisms being used to raise the morale of troops. Pakistan’s state controlled media generated a frenzy of jihad, extolling the virtues of Pakistan’s ‘soldiers of Islam’. Many young officers who fought in that conflict described it as a struggle between Islam and un-Islam, a terminology used previously only by religious ideologues such as Jamaat-e-Islami’s Maulana Maududi.
When Bhutto came to power post the disastrous 1971 war with India, which saw the breakup of Pakistan and the creation of Bangladesh, his slogan was “Islam our Faith, Democracy our Polity, Socialism our economy”. This period saw reference in Pakistani history text books to Mohammad bin Qasim, an Arab commander of the Umayyad dynasty who invaded Sindh in 711 CE, as the first Pakistani. This notion was first propagated in 1953 and soon after found its way into the narrative of religious parties such as the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI), before becoming part of the school curriculum under Bhutto’s watch. Zia ul Haq later aggressively promoted this idea in a bid to trace Pakistan’s roots to the Arab world in a bid to abandon Pakistan’s Asian roots. In 1998, Qasim was officially adopted as the ‘first citizen of Pakistan’ in ‘Fifty Years of Pakistan’ published by the Federal Bureau of Pakistan. This question of identity underlines an inherent fault line in Pakistan which continues to shape the Pakistani narrative. 
Bhutto sought to curtail the powers of the Army and initiated Pakistan’s nuclear weapons programme, both as a strategic wedge against India as also to undercut the Army’s claim to being the ultimate defender of Pakistan. But he remained in agreement with the Army that the primary threat to Pakistan came from India. The issue of Muslim identity continued to be asserted, with Pakistan’s parliament adopting a law that declared the Ahmadiyya community non-Muslims. The country's constitution was amended to define a Muslim "...as a person who believes in the finality of the Prophet Muhammad”. Zia ul Haq went further down that road, when he promulgated Ordinance XX on 26 April 1984, which prohibited the practice of Islam and the usage of Islamic terms and titles for the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.
Bhutto was replaced in a coup by General Zia ul Haq, the fourth in Pakistan’s brief history. His vision of a modern Pakistan had Islam at its core; he accordingly attempted to foster an Islamic ideology on the state declaring that the “preservation of that ideology and the Islamic character of Pakistan were…as important as the security of the country’s geographical boundaries”. While restoring the Army’s role in Pakistan, he also gave it the mantle of guarding the nation’s ideological frontiers over and above its mandated role of guarding Pakistan’s geographical boundaries. 
Zia championed a role for Islam that was more state directed and less a matter of personal choice. The Islamic Ideology Council that he formed soon after coming to power was tasked to prepare an outline of an Islamic theocratic state. He announced the basing of all laws on the Sharia and on Islamic tenets. He established the Federal Shariat Court to examine laws in the light of Islamic injunctions and to review all military and civil verdicts for compliance with Islamic law. The strategies that Zia appropriated and   propagated   were   based   on   narrow,   medieval   interpretations   of   Islam,   which resulted in gender biased attitudes and policies and militarised exhortations to take up arms for the sake of jihad. The stratification of Pakistan's educational infrastructure also created significant divergences of world views  with madrassa  students  tending  to gravitate  more  toward  jihad. Public school or Urdu-medium students too imbibed radical ideas but to a lesser extent. 
The Zia decade of power (July 1977-August 1988) coincided largely with the decade of Soviet occupation in Afghanistan (December 1979–May 1988), which allowed him to salvage his reputation at the international level. The anti-Soviet jihad which Pakistan supported and propped with US assistance served the purpose of defeating the Soviets but led to Pakistan becoming a major global centre of radical Islamists ideas and groups. During the war against the Soviet Union, a large number of Afghans took refuge in Pakistan and were housed in camps which later became the base for the recruitment of mujahidin. Financial and material support to the mujahidin came from the United States and Saudi Arabia using the ISI as the conduit. Over time, religious schools (madaris) became the breeding ground for these warriors and religious leaders assumed dominance in a society where traditionally they had a subservient role to play and were excluded from participating in tribal councils (called jirgas). By the time the Soviets were defeated and the U.S. had left the region, religion had become a major force in the frontier.
A consequence of the Soviet defeat was that the large numbers of jihadis trained in Pakistan were now free for employment elsewhere. These now became the strategic assets of Pakistan, to retain influence over Afghanistan and for employment against India. Zia’s death in a plane crash on 17 August 1988 brought back a semblance of civilian rule, though the political parties were mindful of the interests of the Army. But Zia’s eleven years at the helm of affairs had radically altered the social and religious landscape of the country. The children of those years are now radicalised young men and women. The assassination of Salman Taseer, Governor of Punjab Province by his security guard in 2011, reflects the mindset of those young men and women impacted by Zia’s thrust on Islamic ideology. Husain Qadri, the killer was unrepentant. ‘I am a slave of the Prophet and the punishment for one who commits blasphemy is death,’ he told a television crew from Dunya TV that arrived at the scene shortly after the killing, reflecting the level to which radicalisation had crept into society. 
The period of civilian rule coincided with the end of the Cold War, which diminished Pakistan’s geo-strategic importance to the US and the West and led to reduced inflows of economic and military assistance. But despite civilian rule, there was no push back against the Islamisation process. On the contrary, in 1998, Pakistan moved further down the Islamic road, with the Nawaz Sharif government declaring the Quran and the Sunnah to be the law of the land. The Bill provides for a federal Shariat court to determine whether any existing law is repugnant to Islam and empowers the federal government to issue directives and make laws for the implementation of the Islamisation process. It also bestowed sweeping powers on the government to take necessary action against any state functionary for non-compliance with its directives. Paradoxically, the bill was opposed by the secular polity as also by the religious right. The formers opposition was the fear that such a measure signalled a theocracy being established while the religious right felt that the Bill did not go far enough. In the event, neither group was pleased.
Deteriorating civil military relations prompted Sharif in October 1999 to sack the Army Chief, General Pervez Musharraf, and announce his replacement on national television. The Army however stood beside their Chief and in a bloodless coup, Nawaz Sharif was deposed and Musharraf seized power. The coup was not only bloodless but also popular. For Pakistanis across the sociological spectrum, the Army was not responsible for ruining their country’s desire for democracy. That dishonour went to Bhutto and Sharif.
Musharraf’s decade long stint at the helm coincided with the US War on terror. He adroitly capitalised on the situation and aligned Pakistan to US interests in its war in Afghanistan. But it also led to resentment within the country as what many perceived to be buckling under US Pressure. This, along with the attack on the Lal Masjid by military commandoes to evict the Mosques of terrorists, led to tribal leaders coalescing and declaring a jihad against the government and the military and spurring the loosely connected militant groups to come together. Thus was formed a united front under the banner of Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). The birth of the TTP, incorporating representatives from all the seven tribal regions of Pakistan as well as parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, including Swat, Malakand, Buner, and Dera Ismail Khan, where the Taliban movement was already active, led to a massive upsurge of insurgency in the region which has shown no signs of abating. It has led to sectarian conflict and continues to fuel radical ideology in the country. 
After Musharraf’s ouster on 18 August 2008, there has been an outward semblance of democracy in Pakistan, but the levers of power have remained firmly in the hands of the military. Whenever the ruling political establishment has tried to clip the wings of the Army, it has found itself beset with problems, and then forced to seek the Army’s assistance. Zardari found that to his cost when Hussain Haqqani, Pakistan’s ambassador to the US was falsely implicated by the Army in 2011, of masterminding a memo to US officials to help Pakistani civilians overcome the military’s hegemony in domestic politics. Thereafter, Zardari’s tenure was effectively that of a lame duck President. Nawaz Sharif was to receive the same fate when protests led by a cleric, Tahirul Qadri, and supported by Imran Khan, on the specious grounds that the elections were rigged, virtually paralysed the government, forcing Sharif to seek the Army’s assistance. Later, Nawaz was eased out of office on corruption charges in the infamous Panama Papers scandal, which linked his children to offshore companies which were used to buy expensive properties in London. This was widely construed to be a judicial coup, with the unseen hand of the Pakistan Army in the background. 
That neither the military nor the Mosque will let go of the power it enjoys has become the default condition of Pakistan as a state and this is what drives its foreign policy against India. The military has, over the years entrenched itself into a privileged position in the nations polity, and has also built up a sizeable commercial empire. Given the scale of its commercial interests and the need to safeguard them, the Army controls policy to prevent interference by civilian governments. Moreover, it is today not just defending its professional turf and institutional interests from civilian encroachment, but actively expanding them. Improving relations with India is thus antithetical to the interests of the Pakistan military, as to do so would negate the need for a strong and over arching military. The bogey of the Indian threat thus has to be kept alive, to ensure that the army maintains its disproportionate resources and influence in Pakistan. Consequently, the army will not  allow any civilian government to mend relations with India, making a state of no war no peace an inevitable default condition. It will continue to fuel destabilising policies in terms of both overt and covert support to anti India terrorist organisations such as the LeT and the Hizbul Mujahideen, which has the potential to escalate into conflict as happened in the Kargil war of 1999.
As a society, the Pakistani state remains overly radicalised. Two recent instances highlight the malady, both under the new government led by Imran Khan, which reaffirm the extent to which Islamist groups have penetrated civil society. When the new government was formed, Dr Atif Rehman Mian, a renowned Pakistani-American economist, was selected as one of the members of the newly constituted Economic Advisory Council (EAC). His appointment was however opposed by Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal and the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Parties, who objected to his Ahmadi faith. The government was forced to bow down under pressure from these groups and Dr Mian was dropped from the EAC.
The second case, following closely on the heels of the first, pertained to a decision by Pakistan’s apex court, which on 31 October 2018, struck down the death sentence for blasphemy, awarded by a lower court to a Christian woman, Asia Bibi. This led to countrywide protests by Islamist groups, with the TLP announcing its intent to paralyse the country if the decision was not reversed. Calls were given for the death sentence to be given to the three judges of the Supreme Court who had passed this judgement, and an appeal was made to soldiers to mutiny against their officers, if the Army supported the decision. Prime Minister Imran Khan warned the protestors, but was forced to retract and sign an understanding with them, a decision he rationalised  in the name of avoiding bloodshed. The News in its editorial remarked: “The PTI government has negotiated as complete a surrender as possible. For three days, the TLP’s violent members shut down the nation’s cities, threatened law and order and routinely called for mass assassinations of the country’s leaders…The only reaction to this document of surrender should be shame.”
The two issues highlighted above increasingly point to the government succumbing to the dictates of radical religious groups. As Pakistan continues in its path of Islamisation, where acceptance of a faith other than Islam is anathema, the political establishment will have little room if any to manoeuvre, should they attempt to normalise relations with India. The interest of the Mosque and the military coalesce in maintaining an anti India stance, which would ensure that the two nations exist in a state of perpetual hostility. In a statement given to the Jinnah Institute in 2017, Riaz Khokhar, Pakistan’s former foreign secretary pithily remarked in 2017, “There is no such thing as a normal relationship between India and Pakistan: relations are always either abnormal, or ultra-abnormal, or war-like”. Khokhar advocated talks as the way out, but that would depend on the Military-Mulla nexus foregoing the use of terrorism to destabilise India, something which these two groups cannot and will not do.
The suicide bombing in Pulwama in Jammu and Kashmir is illustrative. On 14 February 2019, a local Kashmiri lad, rammed his explosive laden car against a bus carrying personnel of India’s Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), killing 44 personnel. Within an hour, a video of the bomber was released by Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM), a Pakistan based Deobandi jihadist terrorist group, which claimed the attack, and shortly thereafter, India vowed retaliation to the perpetrators, wherever they might be. The raison d’être of the JeM is to separate Kashmir from India and merge it into Pakistan. It is but one of the terrorist groups operating in Pakistan against India and has, since its inception in 2000 CE, carried out several terrorist strikes against India including the infamous attack on India’s Parliament in 2001 and more recently, the attack on a military base in Uri in 2016 and the attack on an IAF base in Pathankot in the same year. Pakistan based terrorist groups have been waging what is termed as a proxy war against India, since 1990, with a focus on Kashmir,  as a "gateway" to the entire India, whose Muslims are also deemed to be in need of liberation. After liberating Kashmir, it aims to carry its ‘jihad’ to other parts of India, with an intent to drive Hindus and other non-Muslims from the Indian subcontinent.
On 26 February, India retaliated with an air attack on the JeM base at Balakot, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan. The attack was a precision strike carried out by 12 Mirage 2000 fighter aircraft, and the stated target was destroyed. It is believed that 200-300 terrorists were in the buildings hit in the early morning strike and all of them were believed to have perished. Predictably, Pakistan claimed that the Indian missiles missed the targets and no damage was caused, though weeks after the event, Pakistan has not permitted either the foreign or their own media to visit the site. A day later, on 27 February, Pakistan retaliated with an air strike with its F 16 aircraft, the missiles fired by the Pakistani fighters missing an ammunition dump of a forward brigade position of the Indian Army. The Pakistan premier said that the miss was deliberate as he did not want the conflict to escalate. In the ensuing dogfight, an Indian MiG Bison fighter was shot down, with the pilot ejecting and landing in POJ&K and being apprehended by the Pakistan military. The Pakistan Air Force lost an F-16 in the dogfight, which Pakistan initially claimed as an India MiG, but later maintained a stoic silence over the same. The Indian pilot was returned within 72 hours, and the immediate crisis was over, but underlying tensions between the two countries remain, as the prime cause—the use of terrorists by Pakistan as its strategic assets—has not been addressed.
Regardless of the claims made by India or Pakistan with respect to the effectiveness of the air strikes, the very fact that India used its Air Force to strike at targets deep within Pakistan signals a shift in strategy and indicates that India will no longer be restrained in confining its operations to within its boundaries but will strike at the very heart of the terror organisations. Another paradigm shift in the Indian stance was in calling Pakistan’s nuclear bluff. Henceforth, the rules of engagement stand changed, with the world by and large accepting India’s right to strike at targets within Pakistan which are being used as bases by terrorist groups to target India.

What then of the future of India-Pakistan relations? Talks between the two countries are unlikely to yield any result. If such potential was there, it would have been realised by now. Pakistan either will not or perhaps cannot dismantle its terrorist infrastructure, created over decades, as the possible blowback to the state may prove to be prohibitive. Islamic radicalisation has seeped into every aspect of life in Pakistan, and effecting a change in mindsets will take at least one generation. This does not signify a failure of what the founding fathers of Pakistan had imagines the Islamic state to be. Rather, it signifies the success of such venture. To that extent, we would do well to consider that Ayesha Jalal was perhaps not correct when she stated that the idea of Pakistan was not well imagined. It was imagined on precisely these lines. What perhaps was not imagined was that it would succeed so well and the consequences would not be to Pakistan’s liking. Hence, India must give up the chimera of seeking peace with Pakistan and prepare to make Pakistan pay for its antagonism. While peace may not be the outcome, a firm deterrent posture will in all likelihood lead to the avoidance of war. That is the best that can be hoped for.(Published as a book chapter in the book: INDIA-THE FUTURE OF SOUTH ASIA by Turning point publishers) Editor: Karan Kharab, pp130-143.

Monday, June 12, 2017

NEEDLING THE ARMY

A rather peculiar phenomenon which is now appearing on the political landscape and in the mainstream and social media, is that anyone who is anyone, feels compelled to comment on the country’s Armed Forces, more so on the actions of the Army. The trend gained traction after the  terror attack on the Air Force Station at Pathankot in January 2016, which caused casualties to own forces before the terrorists were eliminated. This was followed a month later by a terror attack on  a government building in the outskirts of Srinagar which resulted in the loss of three para commandos including two Captains, before the lone terrorist was eliminated. Then in September, 17 soldiers lost their lives in a sneak attack on a brigade HQ in Uri sector, which rightly caused rage and indignation across the country and led to the Indian Army responding by a surgical strike across the border, successfully targeting a number of terrorist bases. Finally, in November, the terrorists struck once again, this time at an artillery unit in Nagrota, killing three soldiers, including one Captain.

2017 has not yet seen the type of high profile attacks of 2016 on military targets, which perhaps points to the success of the Army in keeping the area under effective domination, but civil disobedience in the form of pelting stones at the security forces has taken on a more ominous dimension. It was to save the lives of election officials and their protection party from a thousand or so stone pelters intent on creating mayhem that Maj Gogoi, who was detailed to rescue the beleaguered officials, tied up a stone pelter in front of his jeep and carried out the rescue without mishap in April this year. But then all hell broke loose, with exaggerated concern being expressed for the human rights of the tied up stone pelter, but muted or no criticism being showered on the murderous stone pelters and their attempts to thwart the election process. The Army supported the action of Gogoi, with the Chief giving him his commendation card while stating at the same time that though not the norm for the Army, different situations required different responses. A former Army Commander of Northern Command however openly expressed his displeasure to the act of tying up a stone pelter, taking the high moral ground that such an act had no place in the Army’s ethos. The Government supported the Army Chief, but predictably, the opposition came out all guns blazing, indicting the Centre and the alliance government at the State  for its perceived failure in bringing peace and normalcy to the Valley and infringement of the human rights of the civilian stone pelter.

Soon public opinion was divided on the issue. Editorial pieces in the Indian Express slammed the Army, the Telegraph termed the sequence of incidents as shocking and unbecoming and the Hindustan Times bluntly stated “The General has it wrong”. Karan Thapar, the son of  a former Chief also jumped into the fray, stating that it was ‘not the Indian Army I know’. But other mainstream papers supported the Army, support pouring in overwhelmingly also from the social media. In all the brouhaha, the basic issue however got ignored.

Commanders need to take decisions in real time in situations which are akin to war. Their actions cannot be judged in terms of right or wrong — but on whether their action was done in good faith. How an action will eventually pan out can never be pre-determined and young commanders must always have the backing of their superiors in the chain of command for taking on the spot decisions. Otherwise, our junior leadership will lose confidence in the higher leadership with disastrous consequences for the Army and the nation. More importantly, as said so eloquently by Sadguru, decisions on the battlefield must be left to the commanders who are facing the bullets and cannot be the subject of debate in the media. Every action cannot be put open to public gaze. The Army is the instrument of final resolve and its edge must never be allowed to be eroded. Which is why the Chief supported his officers fighting on the battlefield. On a different note, Karan Thapar may be right when he stated that this is not the Army he grew up in. It most certainly is not. The present Chief upheld the interests of the Army. Sadly, that did not happen when his father was the Chief and we suffered humiliation at the hands of the Chinese in 1962.

EDITORIAL - Published in SALUTE: Apr-May 2017

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

ON THE CUSP OF CHANGE

When viewed in a historical context, the year 2016 will perhaps be remembered as the year where change was attempted for the first time from the status quo mindset that has consumed India since Independence. For the Armed Forces, the past year has seen many positive developments and some downsides too, but the process of change is visible, though it is still a work in being.
Three issues merit attention. The first of these pertain to operational issues, the second pertain to the acquisition process and the third to the state of relations between the military and India’s bureaucracy.
Operationally, there has been a distinct change in India’s response options to the war by other means that is being waged by Pakistan against India using terrorism as an instrument of state policy. The surgical strike was but a reflection of a more robust approach being taken to address issues that have bedevilled India’s response to Pakistani intransigence. Many defence analysts, this writer included, have long felt the need for increasing the cost to the Pakistan Army exponentially for supporting terror groups, thereby forcing Pakistan to act in a more responsible manner. It is no one’s case that just one strike will motivate Pakistan to follow a more rational path. The Pakistan military’s pride was hurt by the surgical strike and it was only to be expected that they would retaliate. With their nuclear bluff being called, Pakistan found that its only option was to continue with using terrorists to attack Indian Army posts. This does not signify a failure of  India’s offensive gambit, but perhaps speaks of its success.
The proactive response to Pakistani terror must now be renewed with greater force on the Line of Control (LC), without pause. The possibility of escalation remains, but that is the price that the nation will have to pay if retribution to the Pakistan military is to be effective. The Army must not get into a besieged mentality but must dominate its surroundings and ensure that armed attackers are eliminated before they are in a position to strike. This could lead to collateral damage at times. The military leadership must hold the hands of its units in such cases and simultaneously, sensitise the political leadership of the same. Post demonetisation, the terrorist groups are on the back foot and over time, will find sustenance difficult. This must be exploited to eliminate such groups from Indian soil.
The acquisition process is now getting streamlined with faster decision making and an increased focus on the Make in India campaign. The attempt towards indigenisation are still small baby steps, but they represent a forward movement, which earlier was conspicuous by its absence. The forces too must look for indigenous solutions, else India’s fledgling defence industrial base will never take off. The Tejas aircraft and Indian ship building represent important steps in this direction but much more needs to be done, especially in terms of making the DPSU’s, Ordnance Factories and the DRDO, more accountable and responsive to user needs. 
The state of relations between the military and India’s bureaucracy remains abysmal, largely a product of legacy attitudes wherein the babus continue to spare no effort in denigrating the Forces. Why the defence force are denied space in the decision making process remains a mystery, with India being perhaps the only democracy in the world where such practises obtain. The babus in the MoD lack expertise to advise on defence matters, yet they are vested with complete financial and decision making powers without being held accountable for the same. That accountability continues to rest on the shoulders of the military’s leadership, sans the financial and decision making powers. Such a paradoxical situation will sooner rather than later invite disaster. It is time that the entire MoD is revamped and staffed with at least 50 percent officers from the Armed Forces, with the post of defence secretary and secretary defence production being held by four star ranked officers from the Armed Forces. The CDS will come about in the New Year, but that by itself is not enough. Unless the rules of business are changed and the primacy of the bureaucrat is removed, India’s defence structure will remain compromised.
We are at the cusp of change for the first time since Independence. The tide is flowing, but will we take it at the proverbial flood, which leads on to fortune? Or will we let the opportunity go by, and stagnate? The future beckons and is exciting. Happy Reading and a Very Happy New Year to all our readers.

Editorial- SALUTE Mag; Nov Dec 2016

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

WHAT MAKES A SOLDIER FIGHT: The Challenge of Operating in J&K



2016 has been a tumultuous year for the Indian Army deployed in J&K. The challenge ironically came from a growing perception that normalcy was setting in and the role of the Army required to be re-calibrated to facilitate the normalisation process. How this was to come about was not defined, but a general perception that trickled down to the rank and file was that nothing should be done that could vitiate the atmosphere and which could potentially lead to alienating the people in the Kashmir Valley. Herein lay the flaw. The assumption, though not stated, implied that a major contributing factor to alienation was the presence and actions of the Indian Army. Remove that, and voila, peace and tranquility would return. By laying the onus of a return to peace on the men in uniform, causative factors were brushed aside, and the insidious role played by terror groups, their supporters from across the border and fifth columnists operating from inside the state and in other parts of the country was glossed over. Also overlooked was the role of the political class and the state administration in the entire process.

Peace in the Kashmir Valley as indeed in the whole state of J&K will remain a chimera for a host of reasons, not least of which is the fact that a peaceful J&K state does not fit in with the larger aims of Pakistan and its military. Kashmir is not the core dispute between India and Pakistan as is generally stated and believed. That core is ideological, going back to the events in history that led to the creation of Pakistan as a separate country for the Muslims of the subcontinent. Kashmir is but a symptom of the larger malaise that afflicts Pakistan’s polity and its military leadership. It defines itself as the antithesis of India and in that sense, Pakistan is what India is not. If the two countries were to live in peace, then the question - why partition, would be difficult to answer. Are the two nations condemned by history to live in a state of constant friction and hostility? That is the fundamental issue which policy makers in India and its military leadership need to confront and address. Pakistan will continue to keep the pot boiling in J&K. The challenge is to keep the population of J&K, immune to such influence. 

Like other states in the Indian Union, J&K too has had its share of poor governance, corrupt administrators and self serving politicians. While such factors have contributed to the spread of terrorism in the state, they are neither primary nor causative factors.  Had this been so, we would have seen a similar influx of violence in many other parts of the country. Violence in the state of J&K is more a product of instigation by forces inimical to the state and a vitiated political discourse. The threat is from deliberate fomentation of violence by foreign backed terrorist groups who are supplied weapons, explosives and money by their cross border handlers to carry out their nefarious designs and who are also trained and indoctrinated in safe havens across the border. Threats also emanate from a focused campaign to indoctrinate the people through propaganda and imposition of an alternate ideology which is inimical to the idea of a secular state. The latter is the more dangerous and insidious, as it poison’s the minds of the youth through a surreptitious network that has infiltrated into the states education system, sections of the print and audio visual media, government offices and into its religious edifice - the mosques. The psychological dimension of subversion of society also needs urgent address, along with measures to eliminate violence, stabilise the polity, improve justice delivery and ensure an efficient administration. As of now, the state suffers from multiple infirmities, and it is in such an environment of fear and distrust that the Indian Army has been operating. Since Independence, the Army has played a sterling role in the state, and has been very active in the last three decades in combatting terror supported from across the border. What India faces is not a proxy war by Pakistan but a war by other means emanating from that country. That is the prime reason why normalcy is yet to return to the state. Internal fault lines aggravate the situation further. The Army has successfully kept the situation under control but a total return to normalcy would require synchronised efforts of multiple organs of the state to play their part in sync with security force operations. That is still a work in being and hence the challenge faced by the Army is immense. In such an environment, we need to revitalise the capability and capacity of the military to ensure stability till a durable peace returns to the state.

In his ‘Mann ki Baat’ of 26 November, the Prime Minister stated “When the entire country stands with our jawans, their strength increase 125 crore times.” This is a truism which is oft forgotten. The support a soldier receives form the nation contributes in great measure to his morale and enables him to  perform, well over his abilities. Sadly, this support is conspicuous by its absence, both in India’s polity and in its administrative network, over long stretches of time. The row over AFSPA is but a manifestation of this malaise. AFSPA is neither the cause of violence, nor of its continuation. It is simply an enabling provision to permit the Army to effectively discharge its duties. But it becomes a handy tool for various inimical groups to demonise the Army and disparage the work it does in most trying and difficult circumstances. 

In conventional conflict, the whole nation stands as one behind its Armed Forces. All the wars that the nation has fought in since Independence stand testimony to the above observation, the Kargil war being the most recent expression of national will against an external enemy. But in long drawn out insurgencies and in wars conducted by other means, such as the current conflict in J&K, such support is not always forthcoming. In some cases, there are voices raised in the country supporting the terrorists, as happened in the prestigious environs of the Jawahar Lal University in February 2016, and later also in the Jadavpur University in  Kolkatta. What then compels the Indian soldier to fight, despite a perceived lack of support from the nation he is committed to defend? The reputed historian, S.L.A. Marshall, in his book, “Men Against Fire” was remarkably prescient in his observation when he stated: “I hold it to be of the simplest truths of war that the thing which enables an infantry soldier to keep going with his weapons is the near presence or the presumed presence of a comrade…He is sustained by his fellows primarily and by his weapons secondarily.”

Indeed, the primary motivation of men in battle is related to strong group ties and the desire of not letting their buddy down. Another noted research paper by Edward A. Shils and Morris Janowitz also showed similar results among Germany’s Wehrmacht soldiers who fought on even as Berlin fell. This primary motivation is as true today as it was in the great World Wars. The US validated this truth yet again in a study carried out in Iraq on what motivated soldiers to fight. The paper, published by the U.S. Army War College’s Strategic Studies Institute in 2003 validated the popular belief that unit cohesion is a key issue in motivating soldiers to fight. What makes men fight is hence a product of unit cohesion, esprit de corps and strong bonds of loyalty to one’s comrades in arms and the unit one belongs to.

This has been the Indian experience too. The ‘izzat’ of the ‘paltan’, unit cohesion and strong bonding makes a soldier persevere, despite the most formidable odds. The saga of Lance Naik Hanumanthappa Kopad, who was rescued alive after being buried 25 feet in an avalanche for five days at minus 50 degrees Celsius, in the Siachen Glacier, reflects that spirit. The nation mourned when the brave heart passed away after being evacuated to the Command Hospital at Delhi, but the sheer grit in surviving such odds galvanised the whole nation. While the courage and fortitude of the soldier was commendable, equally commendable was the will of his commanding officer and all ranks of the battalion, who continued with the rescue efforts in extremely hostile terrain and weather conditions, despite knowing that medically, the chance of finding a survivor were nil. It is this spirit instilled in the fighting soldier that imbues him with the will to fight. He will fight for his comrades, because he knows that his comrades will fight for him. The larger cause is the nation, but the immediate context is survival, the izzat of his paltan and the desire to stand up for his comrades, knowing fully well that his comrades will always stand up for him.

Imbuing such spirit in the rank and file of the Armed Forces is a product of regimentation. Simply stated, the ethos of the unit requires each man to ensure that his unit or sub unit is the very best that can be. No sacrifice is big enough to uphold the honour and good name of the unit. Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, as the Army Chief succinctly stated this in his address to the Gentleman Cadets in the Passing out Parade of the Indian Military Academy. “You are required to ensure the security of your country” he said. “Should you have to fight, you must fight to win. There are no runner’s up in war”. That desire to win is the cutting edge of every unit’s ethos.

It is regimentation that builds up the will to win, to conquer and persevere against all odds. Regimentation gives the individual the responsibility for the success of the unit and for preserving its honour. That is why he is ready to die to protect his comrades. And as his comrades are similarly inclined, the soldier gets the confidence that his back is also being protected. He thus trusts his colleagues with his life, just as they trust him with theirs. The third factor is trust in the military and political leadership and faith in the national aim. This is vital both in war and in long drawn out anti insurgency and anti terrorism campaigns. But this faith and trust is not something that can be taken for granted. It has to be nurtured, else, like everything else, it can decay and wither over time, with negative consequences for the Army and for the nation. It is this aspect that remains worrying in the ongoing war by other means which Pakistan is waging against India in Jammu and Kashmir.  

The war against terror being waged in J&K has been ongoing for nearly three decades and is not likely to terminate any time soon. In 2015, India witnessed the fourth highest number of terrorist incidents globally as indicated in the Statistical Appendix of US Country Report on Terrorism 2015. Civilian and security forces fatalities were 181 and 155 respectively, in 2015. The figures for 2016 are slightly higher, at 191 civilian fatalities and 173 security forces fatalities. Of these, 84 security forces fatalities have taken place in J&K alone. The environment of operations is thus difficult, but soldiers still persevere because of the strong regimental traditions and unit ethos. However, certain incidents in the recent past have the potential to erode the confidence of the rank and file in its leadership - both political and military. That is a cause for concern. 

Mistakes invariably will be committed by troops on the ground, which obviously must be investigated and analysed to learn the appropriate lessons.  How such incidents are dealt with however, requires a great deal of sensitivity and finesse to avoid an adverse impact on the morale and confidence of troops. An incident in November 2014 where a mobile check post of the Army fired on a car which did not stop is a case in point. The incident led to the death of two and injury to two more persons, all of whom were later found to be teenagers. The uproar over the killing of innocent schoolchildren is understandable, but the immediate reaction by the Army, (perhaps on political considerations) that the guilty Army personnel will be dealt with, sent a wrong message to the rank and file. How was guilt established without even a cursory investigation? Why was it made so public? Could not there have been better means to inform the public and assuage their anger? Regardless of the fact that the troops in this incident acted in good faith or otherwise, to arbitrarily condemn them as guilty broke that trust which a soldier has placed in his superiors. The larger fear of such breach in faith is that troops will prefer inaction rather than aggressively pursue a line which may have negative consequences for them, should things go wrong.

It is important that the morale of soldiers is maintained at any cost. Adverse occurrences need to be dealt with through skilful perception management which, while assuaging public sentiments, does not cause damage to military morale. At this all important cusp in the developing situation in J&K, it must also be ensured that the offensive spirit is not sacrificed in an attempt to reach a quick peace. This will lead to a siege mentality where troops will stay confined to their areas of operation, and will seek to avoid combat when they do venture out. In the process, we will see a resurgence in terrorist activity which for the moment has been effectively contained. 


It is also important for the state to get its act together. A revamping of the state’s administration and improvement in the criminal justice system is a crying need and must be taken up urgently along with steps to check the mushrooming of Madrasas that preach a virulent Wahhabi discourse. Many school’s too have been infiltrated which now propagate Wahhabism and which is putting a death knell into the ‘Kashmiriyat’ that was the state’s tradition. The Army on its part must continue with offensive operations, and must learn to handle flak when things go wrong. The road ahead is long and slippery, but it would be a test of the military’s leadership at all levels. The Army has no option but to persevere and come out with flying colours.

For CLAWS Journal, Spring 2017.