India’s
Military Conflicts and Diplomacy: An Inside View of Decision Making
By General V.P. Malik (Retired)
HarperCollins Publishers, India
300 Pages
Rs
699/-
After his important
debut book on the Kargil conflict, which he had personally overseen as chief of
the Indian Army, General VP Malik has now opened another small window into the functioning
of government with what he titles an “inside view of decision making” during
several strategic crises. Malik personally played a role in each incident that
he describes, having occupied key appointments in the military operations
directorate during his long and distinguished military career. In describing
these events, he provides useful primary source inputs for historians and sets
an example for high government officials who are too often held back from
documenting events by out-dated notions of secrecy.
Malik’s
book provides vignettes into India’s misconceived intervention in Sri Lanka in the
late 1980s, which eventually took more than a thousand soldiers’ lives; the
more successful intervention in the Maldives in 1988, when Indian paratroopers
were landed in Male to neutralize an attempted coup; and the multinational
operation led by Indian peacekeepers in Sierra Leone in 2000 to rescue comrades
who had been held hostage by armed rebels. A long and interesting chapter adds
fresh detail and insights to Malik’s earlier book on the Kargil conflict of
1999.
The author
writes in the simple, straightforward prose of a professional soldier, without
obfuscation or rhetorical flourishes. There is none of the self-obsession that
permeated the recent book by another army chief, General VK Singh. The author
simply recounts events as they happened without disassociating himself from setbacks,
or suggesting that he was the driving force behind every success.
The
exception to this is when the author apportions responsibility for the glaring
intelligence failure at Kargil, which left the door open for hundreds of
Pakistani soldiers to cross the Line of Control (LoC) and occupy Indian
defences overlooking Kargil, Dras and Batalik that had been vacated for the winter.
Malik notes that the civilian intelligence agencies had provided no warning,
but he glosses over the fact that this was, first and foremost, a military
intelligence and operational failure. This will disappoint the many who believe
that the army should have apportioned blame all the way up to the corps
commander in Srinagar, rather than merely making a scapegoat of the local
brigade commander at Kargil.
Malik is characteristically
restrained while recounting his few disagreements with his civilian masters. At
the height of the fighting in Kargil, when India accepted Pakistani Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif’s offer to send his foreign minister, Sartaj Aziz, to New Delhi, Malik
worried that a mixed message might go out to his soldiers, who were engaged in
bitter hand-to-hand fighting in Kargil. His solution was to send out a cable to
all the formations involved in the fighting, which is a case study for his clarity
on the military and political dimensions of the conflict. Clausewitz would have
approved.
Malik
conveys a sense of the army’s frustration, when the Pakistan Army flatly denied
that its soldiers had crossed the Line of Control, even as the Indian Army was
recovering identity cards and documents from Pakistani bodies in Kargil, which
clearly identified them as soldiers, not militants. Bizarrely, after the
Pakistani director general of military operations (DGMO) refused to accept this
in his phone conversations with his counterpart, the Indian DGMO, General
Nirmal Vij, eventually took his fax number and faxed the documents to him.
Interestingly,
Malik makes a powerful case that Nawaz Sharif was not the dupe that he has
successfully portrayed since then, but was fully aware of Operation Badr, as
General Musharraf codenamed the Kargil plan.
Operation
Cactus, India’s intervention in the Maldives after Sri Lankan Tamil mercenaries
attempted a coup against President Abdul Gayoom, is often hailed as a case
study for the notion of Indian power projection. However, Malik’s gung-ho
eyewitness account --- he travelled to Male with the paratroopers --- does not evoke
the impression of a highly professional national reserve force responding to a
crisis. The Agra-based parachute brigade had no Rapid Response Force that the
could quickly deploy (a shortcoming that has been rectified since), as a result
of which Indian paratroopers landed in Male a full 14 hours after President
Gayoom’s early-morning SOS.
Fortunately,
the operation went off flawlessly. Even as order was restored in Male, an
Indian warship, INS Godavari, rescued that country’s education minister, Ahmed
Mujuthaba, his Swiss wife and his mother-in-law from the Tamil mercenaries who
had taken them hostage. Malik recounts that Rajiv Gandhi, after being informed
about the success, congratulated the naval chief, Admiral JG Nadkarni, with the
quip, “Good job, Admiral, but I doubt if Ahmed Mujuthaba will forgive the
Indian Navy for rescuing his mother-in-law!”
Like
service chiefs before him, Malik highlights the disconnect between military
leaders and the national political leadership, particularly in the realm of
nuclear weaponry and strategy. Noting that “the military tends to be excluded
from the nuclear decision-making process”, Malik prescribes the early
appointment of a chief of defence staff or tri-service chief.
In this
consistently interesting book, the reader’s interest flags only in the longish
sections on diplomacy, and on relations with neighbouring countries like
Myanmar and Nepal. Nevertheless, Malik has conveyed important lessons, albeit
in short story style, that our defence planners must heed.
Dear Shukla,
ReplyDeleteWhat is going on about the entire Rafale and FGFA acquisition?
First FGFA was crappy, now Rafale is horribly costly.
Will IAF still go ahead or think again?
Prasun thinks its all hoopla and no substance. What do you think?
This business of running down Ge. VK Singh.
ReplyDeleteI do not know. The General may be a psycho case.
The pertinent questions however are : Were we buying Tatra Trucks at a significantly higher price?
If so why?
Who were the beneficiaries?
The general was tarred and feathered- something I found distasteful. What happened to the various people who - in high places- were looting the exchequer.
With scams like Adarsh etc I am inclined to believe the worst about portions of our Babudom.
The Dharna at New Delhi by AAP- to paraphrase le Duc de La is Rouchefeld is not a nuisance it is a revolution- our version of Tahrir Square and it won't go away!
Dear Sir,
ReplyDeleteThank you for the review. Could you please tag your book review articles with a label specifically for this purpose?
Reading the book...fascinating...at Operation Cactus now. :)
ReplyDeleteNegotiate to... own... cede country's land... infiltrators...
ReplyDelete