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First Technocrat To Lead Indian Army – Why New COAS Is The Ideal Choice To Lead World’s 2nd Biggest Military

Lieutenant General Manoj Pande has taken over as the 29th Chief of the Indian Army Staff (COAS) replacing General Manoj Mukund Naravane, who was in charge of the top post since December 31, 2019. 

The remarkable aspect of General Pande heading the 1.4 million-strong Indian Army — the world’s second-largest — is that he is the first engineer to do so. He belongs to the Army’s Corps of Engineers.

An engineer heading the Indian Army has drawn skepticism from some conservative quarters. Because, so far Indian Army Chiefs have been from the infantry, armored corps, and artillery.

Statistically speaking, the Infantry has produced maximum COAS (60.7%), followed by the Armoured corps (21.4%) and Artillery (17.8%).

As Colonel Utkarsh Singh Rathore (Retd.) told this writer, way back in 1973 there was a chance for an officer from the corps of engineers to become the Army Chief. He was Lieutenant-General PS Bhagat.

“A no-nonsense officer of high professional competence was seen as the natural successor of General SHFJ Manekshaw, the then COAS. It is believed that the political dispensation of that time was not comfortable with Lieutenant General PS Bhagat’s elevation to the rank of a four-star General. In a bid to scuttle his chances, Lieutenant General GG Bewoor, his immediate senior who was due to retire before General Manekshaw, was granted a service extension so that Lieutenant General PS Bhagat superannuated without becoming the COAS.

Those days, the political authorities were strictly going by the principle of seniority in appointing the heads of the military, judicial and civilian establishments. And that perhaps necessitated the extension to General Bewoor so that he would remain senior to Gen Bhagat at the time of appointment for the post of the COAS. But that principle of seniority for top jobs is no longer sacrosanct, whether in India or elsewhere in the world.

Indian Army
File Image: Soldiers

Changing The Norms

When Indira Gandhi was India’s Prime Minister, she had deviated from the principle of seniority when Justice AN Ray superseded three senior judges of the Supreme Court to become the Chief Justice in 1973.

Again it was Indira Gandhi whose government in 1983 appointed General AS Vaidya as the Army Chief by superseding General SK Sinha.

In 2004, the Manmohan Singh government appointed Shyam Saran as the foreign secretary by superseding four senior officials in the Indian Foreign Service. But what it did in 2006 was even more eye-raising.

It appointed Shivshankar Menon as foreign secretary, although 16 serving officers were senior to him; this was a decision that triggered a virtual rebellion in the Ministry of External Affairs, with many of the superseded diplomats deciding to quit the service.

In 2014, the same Manmohan Singh government appointed Admiral Robin Kumar Dhowan as the Navy Chief, bypassing Vice-Admiral Shekhar Sinha, the flag officer commander-in-chief of the Western Naval Command and the senior-most Naval officer at that time. Admiral Sinha resigned from the service in what was believed to be a strong protest.

In 2016, the incumbent Narendra Modi government appointed General Bipin Rawat (who was subsequently appointed as India’s first Chief of Defence Staff when the post was created in 2020) as the COAS by superseding the then “senior-most eligible officers” – the Eastern Army Commander Lt General Praveen Bakshi and Southern Army Commander Lt General PM Hariz.

“Strategic Leadership” Potential

Of course, this time General Pande happens to be the senior-most in the Indian Army to succeed COAS, General Naravane. But, given the past experience, it seems that his other qualifications, apart from being the senior-most, have played a crucial role in General Pande’s elevation by the Modi government.

Indian Army chief Gen. MM Naravane. (via Indian Army Twitter)

There is now an emerging school of thought in the military sphere that while efforts must be made to identify “tactical commanders” at battalion and brigade level, for higher posts officers with “strategic leadership” potentials should be rewarded.

Strategic leadership includes attributes of being a “combat genius” (fighting beyond the plan, innovating as one fights, staying well ahead of the enemy in the imaginative application of combat power); “political genius” (wielding and melding the elements of military power with allies and politicians, mastering civil-military discourse); “institutional genius” (managing a very large institution and making it relevant to the needs of the nation); and “anticipatory genius” (having the ability to think in time and imagine conceptually where the nature and character of war are headed).

Here, the “experience” suggests that those officers who had shown great tactical skill did not equal great strategic skill. Tactically talented officers can do a great job in making the convoys run on time, but they may not anticipate a battlefield that has yet to appear.

On the other hand, those gifted with strategic foresight have often been found wanting in tactical maneuvers; they have been better at conceptualizing warfare rather than practicing it.

It is quite possible that apart from the seniority factor, the Modi government has taken into consideration General Pande’s two qualifications, based on his academic and professional experience. Because these are relevant to the topmost priorities of the Government of India’s military planning at the moment.

Theaterization Of The Three Services

One is the idea of “theaterization” of the three services for future wars and operations. In essence, two reasons are cited in favor of the creation of theatre commands.

At a time when the national economy is in bad shape, there has to be a tightening of the belt by the three forces. Secondly, tightening of the belt has to be done in a manner that will not affect the combat capabilities of our forces.

And, that, in turn, will be possible when all the assets belonging to all the services in a given theatre are marshaled together.

With that view, it has been proposed that instead of the present 19 commands — seven army commands (six operational); seven air force commands (five operational); three naval commands (two operational); and two joint commands —  there should be only five commands: The Northern Command,  the Western Command,  the  Peninsular Command,  a full-fledged air defense command,  and the Command tasked with protecting the Indian Ocean and India’s Island territories.

Incidentally, General Pande has the experience of heading one of the two joint commands that India has at the moment – the Andaman Nicobar Command and the Strategic Forces Command — where the Army, Air Force, and the Navy work together.

He was the commander-in-chief of the Andaman and Nicobar Command (CINCAN) from June 2020 to May 2021. This experience of general Pande could have been considered valuable by the Modi government.

The second plus point of General Pande that could have gone for his promotion is his engineering/technical background at a time when the current military thinking everywhere is focused on technological prowess. It is all the more so in the case of India as it goes for massive modernization of its forces, with a focus on indigenization and self-reliance.

General Manoj Pande takes over as the 29th Army chief from General M M Naravane. The first-ever officer commissioned in the Corps of Engineers to head the 12-lakh strong force.

Replacing Cold War With Cold Peace 

In fact, in February, General Pande had delivered an important lecture at the Army’s think-tank, Centre for Land and Warfare Studies (CLAWS). His speech was on Contours of future wars and countermeasures”. He had made some significant points.

He had talked of how the world is increasingly witnessing Grey Zone Warfare. “Grey Zone campaigns are typically built around non-military tools, as part of the tactics of remaining below key thresholds of response. The linkages between nation-states in a technology-driven flat world will ensure that the strategic contest is limited, at least initially, to non-contact and non-kinetic measures. What was earlier ‘Cold War’, can at best be now defined as ‘Cold Peace’,” General Pande had said.

According to him, future warfare would essentially be fought across multiple domains by a joint force. “This force will operate in land, sea, air, cyber and space domains and must be fully integrated and enabled for dynamic responses. Modern warfare will see the use of covert swarms of miniature spy drones, unmanned ground vehicles, missiles with adaptive guidance, sentry robots, and offensive robotic systems.

“At the center of it would be Artificial Intelligence (AI), or computer algorithms, that can perform many functions, such as vision, decision-making, and ability to process vast quantities of information capabilities that are normally associated with humans.

Will such decision-making be successful? Or, will it only be an aid to be used at the discretion of decision-makers, remains to be seen,” he had asked.

Interestingly, General Pande had highlighted in his speech how the future battlefield milieu, though being technology-centric, will also need a new kind of leader. “The new generation of warfare can be won by leaders who are creative, adaptive to technology, and have developed decision-making skills with profound professional knowledge.”

It seems the Modi government found merits in this line of thought and rewarded the General with the post of the COAS, thinking he would deliver what he had promised, given his technological background.

  • Author and veteran journalist Prakash Nanda is Chairman of Editorial Board – EurAsian Times and has been commenting on politics, foreign policy on strategic affairs for nearly three decades. A former National Fellow of the Indian Council for Historical Research and recipient of the Seoul Peace Prize Scholarship, he is also a Distinguished Fellow at the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies. CONTACT: prakash.nanda@hotmail.com
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Author and veteran journalist Prakash Nanda has been commenting on Indian politics, foreign policy on strategic affairs for nearly three decades. A former National Fellow of the Indian Council for Historical Research and recipient of the Seoul Peace Prize Scholarship, he is also a Distinguished Fellow at the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies. He has been a Visiting Professor at Yonsei University (Seoul) and FMSH (Paris). He has also been the Chairman of the Governing Body of leading colleges of the Delhi University. Educated at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, he has undergone professional courses at Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (Boston) and Seoul National University (Seoul). Apart from writing many monographs and chapters for various books, he has authored books: Prime Minister Modi: Challenges Ahead; Rediscovering Asia: Evolution of India’s Look-East Policy; Rising India: Friends and Foes; Nuclearization of Divided Nations: Pakistan, Koreas and India; Vajpayee’s Foreign Policy: Daring the Irreversible. He has written over 3000 articles and columns in India’s national media and several international dailies and magazines. CONTACT: prakash.nanda@hotmail.com
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