![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
HOME | NEWS | SPECIALS |
ELECTIONS '98
|
![]() |
|
'Yeh General banega'Major General Ashok K Mehta traces the background leading to Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat's dismissal last month.
In an unprecedented case, the government retired an air force chief in the forenoon and his successor who was to retire on the same day was appointed in the afternoon. Two years from now, when VCoAS Lt-General Chandrashekhar retires on the same day as CoAS Malik, will Chandrashekhar cite this IAF precedent?
This is how a major general, twice rejected in a board, was given an extension and promoted while another's case was deferred to accommodate this officer. Yet another major general having hibernated for nearly two years was forced to go to court to secure his promotion. The new slogan at army headquarters, 'MoD Power: Go get it', was coined after Sachin Tendulkar's ad campaign for a credit card. General Ved Malik had to remind Mulayam Singh Yadav that there was an army regulation forbidding serving officers from contacting politicians and bureaucrats for favours as this would undermine the chain of command and sanctify of promotion boards. Mulayam gave Malik a lecture on democracy.
Because of stay orders from courts the military secretary is forced to resort to promotion/posting orders like "look after the appointment of", "appointed conditional to outcome in court", and in one case "will assist in planning the security of Babri Masjid in Lucknow", while the general officer was actually on the strength of Rashtriya Rifles in Delhi. Such orders undermine the chain of command. Officers joke that a bench of the high court should be attached to the MS branch. Both the army and the IAF have accepted that the competent authority in approving the recommendations of promotions and appointment boards rests with the government. In fact, only recently, Malik's plea that service chiefs' dissent note on any arbitration by MoD must be placed before the ACC, was accepted. However, Bhagwat's invocation of navy regulation (Section 134) of the Navy Act through which he had sought to make his recommendation binding on the government was a one-off. No previous CNS had sought to impose this binding on the government. Further, the Lt-General Ved Airy case has been misquoted. Justice S Bhandare did not rule a carte blanche for service chiefs in the selection of their PSOs. At the time of writing, there are three outstanding cases, one from each service: Kadyan versus Kalkat. Harinder Singh versus Madanjeet Singh and Air Vice-Marshal P K Ghosh versus the defence secretary. The facts of these cases are clouded in fog and different legal interpretations. Both Kalkat and Madanjeet Singh were appointed conditionally, one as army commander and the other 'officiating deputy CNS subject to the court verdict and approval by ACC'. Now both appointments stand rejected. George Fernandes, described by many as the best defence minister India has had, has observed the proxy war from a ringside seat and promised to resolve the impasse in house. Why he let it get out of hand is a mystery. One of the weakest links in higher management of defence since Independence has been the defence minister. Barring Arun Singh, the other ministers have been singularly incompetent and ignorant. Recalls a former VCoAS: "The longest note ever written by any defence minister was 'Please Speak' by Y B Chavan who used to trace his ancestry to the great warrior, Chhatrapati Shivaji."
1998 was annus horribilis for the armed forces. The BJP leaders must re-read the section on national security in their manifesto. They should immediately set up a military reforms commission to end interservice rivalry by replacing the ludicrous revolving-door chairman chiefs of staff committee, by a permanent chairman and integrate service headquarters with the MoD. Services tribunals, on the anvil for ten years, must be established forthwith to prevent the courts from performing command functions. Dr N M Ghatate, member, Law Commission, is already reappraising the Army, Navy and Air Force Acts.
Unfortunately, many of the military's wounds are self-inflicted, reflecting the laid-back and relaxed style of its higher military leadership. Otherwise, how could it have accepted a deputy secretary with seven years service reporting on a selection grade Lt-Col with 17 years service in an interservice organisation? Civilians, ignorant about military traditions and ethos, should stop fooling around with the services. The armed forces cannot be run like other government or political services. Kind courtesy: Sunday magazine |
||
HOME |
NEWS |
BUSINESS |
SPORTS |
MOVIES |
CHAT |
INFOTECH |
TRAVEL
SHOPPING HOME | BOOK SHOP | MUSIC SHOP | HOTEL RESERVATIONS PERSONAL HOMEPAGES | FREE EMAIL | FEEDBACK |