By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 16th Dec 13
Two recent
newspaper articles join issue over whether the army is opportunistically
expanding its role in Jammu & Kashmir (J&K) because of New Delhi’s
failure to initiate political dialogue with the state. On Saturday, Shekhar
Gupta argued in the Indian Express (‘Disarming’ Kashmir, December 7) that political stasis
in New Delhi had effectively given the army a veto on Kashmir policy. This permitted
the generals to scuttle essential political gestures like the revocation of the
Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), even though militancy was practically
dead in the valley. Gupta suggests the army is empire building, provocatively
recounting: “in the past five years, the army has built more new golf courses
and guest houses in Kashmir than the number of encounters it's had to fight.”
He says the army must give the Kashmiri people a peace dividend by curtailing
operations in populated areas, and focus instead on the Line of Control (LoC)
with Pakistan, where complacency has set in.
Four days
later, the same newspaper published a counterview (‘Victory’ in the Valley, Dec
11) by Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain, until last year the army’s top general in Kashmir.
Rebutting Gupta, Hasnain says the army is guided by a clear politico-military
aim that it formulated in the absence of a political directive from New Delhi.
He terms Gupta’s declaration of victory “premature”, since Kashmir remains vulnerable
to a jihadi influx from Afghanistan after NATO’s drawdown next year. While active
militancy has abated, many surrendered terrorists live in the valley, writes
Hasnain. With government promises to them still unfulfilled, violence could recur.
He says the army cannot hand over responsibility to the civilians because nobody
in J&K can yet take on that role. Dismissing critics of the army as
“armchair strategists”, Hasnain urges: “Learn to trust your army --- it is your
army.”
There is
common ground in these two viewpoints. Both agree that New Delhi has failed to
articulate a political vision for J&K; and to issue a strategic directive
that specifies security objectives for the army. Hasnain reveals that, “(T)here
has never been a clearly stated political aim given to the security forces (in
Kashmir).” He says not even a military aim has been spelt out in Kashmir.
Gupta and
Hasnain primarily disagree on whether improved security in J&K allows the
army to withdraw from a central role and restore power to the state
administration. Gupta says the army should step back since terrorists “have
been roundly defeated”. Hasnain straddles both sides of the argument, admitting
that there is peace today but arguing that success must be gauged not by today’s
calm but by tomorrow’s potential chaos. Demanding “a realistic assessment of
the future”, Hasnain evokes the “imponderables” of post-2014 Afghanistan.
Peace, he seems to argue, requires not just the elimination of every last
militant today, but also certainty that no more would arrive tomorrow.
Not every
general favours such caution. Lt Gen Rustom Nanavatty, the hugely respected
former commander of the northern army, believes the army must know when its
mission has been accomplished in counter-insurgency operations. In his recent
book, Internal Armed Conflict in India,
Nanavatty points out: “(N)o government can, simultaneously, claim a ‘vastly
improved security situation on the ground’, and persist with an unaltered
military presence and unchanged methods in the conduct of military operations.
Continuing with military operations on the same size, scale, pattern and
intensity as before makes a mockery of such claims.”
Why then
does the army remain embroiled in counter-insurgency, denying itself a peace dividend
even after expending blood and treasure in imposing calm? There is little
evidence to support allegations that the army has a vested interest in keeping
the pot boiling in J&K --- such as awards, promotions and loosely monitored
intelligence budgets. The more likely reason, as Hasnain suggests, is that the
army fears that civilian incompetence might fritter away its hard-won gains, reviving
terrorism and requiring the army to do the job all over again.
Hasnain is
on stronger ground in arguing that confining the army to the LoC carries
operational risks because roads leading to the border areas run through the big
towns, making them vulnerable to interdiction. The army has, in fact, already
handed over law and order duties in population centres to the state and central
police. But it insists on retaining AFSPA for dealing with any disruption of
these lifelines.
“To win
army support for relaxing AFSPA, or for partial demilitarisation, the state and
central government must convince the army of their ability to control the state
and maintain security,” says Nanavatty.
The key
question then is: When can the state administration provide acceptable security
in J&K? For two decades Kashmir’s politicians, bureaucrats and security agencies
have ceded centre stage to the army, creating a highly militarised security environment.
The generals will always oppose any dilution of security powers since the army
focuses on hard risks, not ephemeral political benefits. New Delhi, which has always
dealt with J&K more as a security problem than a political one, has no wish
to assume the risks inherent in reducing the army’s profile. The potential downside
--- a resurgence of militancy --- is daunting, while the upside --- six Lok
Sabha seats --- is small change. So the UPA fires the gun from the army’s
shoulder by allowing the generals to “veto” AFSPA. Remember, little heed is
paid to the army in crucial matters like equipment modernisation, operational
preparedness and the need for tri-service command.
Hasnain would
raise eyebrows with his suggestion that the army was assuming political policy.
He writes, “In 2011, we enunciated our own joint politico-military aim for our
commanders --- ‘integrate Jammu and Kashmir with mainstream India, politically,
economically, socially and psychologically.’”
The army
lacks the mandate and resources to execute this broad aim, which clearly
encroaches into the realm of politics and governance. Even so, this is not
political meddling but the response of a goal-oriented military to a policy
vacuum --- it simply steps in and assumes the role. A plethora of civil-military
scholars like Samuel Finer and Amos Perlmutter have documented this phenomenon
extensively. In the scrupulously apolitical Indian Army, this is not cause for
alarm. Yet, a farsighted political leadership would look to create the
political, administrative and security environment needed for reducing the
army’s role in Kashmir.
Hasnain
makes his most questionable argument almost in passing. He says the Rashtriya
Rifles (RR) --- some 40-50,000 soldiers, organised into counter-insurgency
units --- must never be disbanded, though the RR was sanctioned in the
1990s as a temporary force for counter-insurgency. Hasnain wants RR battalions to
be treated as regular army units, since Pakistan’s Frontier Corps militia,
which operates in the tribal areas along the Afghanistan border, are capable of
fighting alongside the Pakistan Army. Adding more and more battalions may have
benefited a 19th century army, but would be a grave disservice to
the modern-day Indian Army. With an unsustainable chunk of the army’s budget already
going on manpower, and with 100,000 additional soldiers being added for defending
the China border, numbers must be pared to leave funds for equipment
modernisation.
Shekar gupta is an alarmist he seems to have a sore grudge against army and he tries to sensationalise and misguide the nation.He is same guy who said that Vk singh was planning a coup and it turned out to be damp squib.Army has fought these terrorists and paid in blood while these journalists attended peace seminars in comfortable surroundings and critisizing the so called human right violations by the army. So ungrateful and shameless.
ReplyDeleteNice read, good and unbiased. Please keep them coming - Anantz
ReplyDeleteShekhar Gupta must first have the enlightenment on the burning scene across the LC. The present situation has been achieved with the supreme sacrifices of soldiers till date. Has Gupta ever been to disturbed areas of Kashmir to understand the gravity? I have my sincere doubts...
ReplyDeleteYou have encapsulated the essence of both the aforementioned articles quite nicely.
ReplyDeleteI'm impressed with your analysis of the same.
Nice piece of journalism.
Shekar Gupta made a fool of himself and the nation when he put Musharaff on such a high pedestial during the agra summit. His analyses, forecast and thinking wud not be more than a laugh if it was not dangerous for the nation...but alas some editors have their egos to massage to stand out different.
ReplyDelete