Political parties must do an about-turn from their tradition of saying nothing substantive on defence in their election manifestos
In this season for election manifestos, will the inanity
index hit an all-time high? Political parties have long contented themselves with
boilerplate formulations. The Congress’ 2009 manifesto promised, laughably in
retrospect, “We will maintain the path of high growth with fiscal prudence and
low inflation”; and “We will connect all villages to a broadband network in
three years time”; and “we will give a completely new look to urban governance.”
The defence sections of political manifestos have been
especially uninspiring. Though this relates to the government’s single largest
expenditure, and to our lives and security, no party has ever presented a
substantive plan on national defence. The Congress’ 2009 manifesto ridicules
the BJP for its “stupor in Kargil, surrender in Kandahar and stalemate in
Operation Parakram”, without offering an alternative vision. The BJP’s 2009
manifesto reeks of unconvincing populism --- promising military and police
forces income tax exemption; a separate pay commission, and the implementation
of one-rank-one-pension (recently sanctioned). Naturally, the NDA implemented
none of these from 1998-2004.
In his recently promulgated Vision Statement, Narendra
Modi recognises, “The most important thing for a strong and secure India is a
robust economy.” After this truism, he offers platitudes like “India needs to
cut down its excessive reliance on foreign arms manufacturers and focus its
energies on indigenisation and becoming a manufacturer of technologies and
equipment that can be used by our military.” Defence Minister AK Antony has
long intoned this mantra; what the manifestos need to say is how this goal will
be achieved.
A recent article in the MIT Technology Review
described the greatest technological mobilisation in history, which followed
President John F Kennedy’s stirring 1961 call to America to “commit itself to
achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and
returning him safely to the Earth.” Towards achieving this presidential target,
NASA spent $180 billion in today’s dollars, deployed 400,000 people, and the
resources of 20,000 companies, colleges and government agencies. In meeting
Kennedy’s challenge, NATO solved numerous smaller technological problems, well before
the natural evolutionary schedule of technology. By 1972, a dozen astronauts
had walked on the moon.
Our aspiring leaders too must lay down specific goals to
galvanize indigenous defence, such as: By the end of this decade (a) the Indian
Air Force will field an indigenous medium combat aircraft that is powered by
engines built in India; and the military’s range of light and medium
helicopters will be India-designed and developed; (b) the navy will deploy
indigenous nuclear-powered and conventionally-powered submarines, and one
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier; (c) the army will field an indigenous main
battle tank and infantry combat vehicle, both with indigenous engines; and (d) all
three defence services will develop secure terrestrial and satellite networks that
have minimal foreign components.
Having established technological goals, our aspiring
prime ministers should also earmark the resources needed to accomplish them.
Most politicians simply blank out the lakhs of crores spent on defence; those
who consider themselves strategically educated, demand that a higher percentage
of GDP be allocated. Yet increasing the defence budget from the current 52-year
low of 1.74 per cent of GDP is only a start point for a technology leap. More
crucial would be to mandate spending 10 per cent of the budget on R&D (up
from 6 per cent now); and a cap on revenue expenditure --- 30 per cent for the
navy and air force (32-33 per cent currently), reducing by one per cent
annually till it reaches 25 per cent; and 70 per cent for the manpower intensive
army (currently 82 per cent), reducing by two per cent annually till it reaches
50 per cent. The money thus diverted for equipment modernisation, must be spent
on Indian weaponry.
Lamentably, easy political benefits accrue from
revenue, not capital expenditure. Our aspiring leaders, who cynically cultivate
a “strong-on-defence” image by backing the raising of 100,000 soldiers for the
China border, are raising the salary bill whilst leaving ever less for modernisation.
Instead of spending to build roads to the border (as China has done), which would
allow soldiers to be quickly rushed to respond to a border crisis, a skewed
strategic vision has reversed the logic --- without roads to move quickly on,
more and more soldiers are being pre-positioned on the border, 24x7x365. This
must be reversed.
Manifestos that sets targets and envision funding must
also pledge to rearrange the MoD structures that have demonstrably failed in
defence production. Parties must commit to dismantling the cartel between the
Department of Defence Production (DDP) and its 9 defence public sector
undertakings (DPSUs) and 39 ordnance factories (OFs), which have crowded out the
private sector. While every party talks about “unleashing the vibrancy of the
private sector”, none have explicitly promised to demolish the close structural
links between MoD, DPSUs and OFs. Manifestos should pledge to place DPSUs and
OFs under the Ministry of Heavy Industry, letting the MoD credibly play honest
broker between the public and private sectors.
The DDP, freed from the responsibility of nursing its
ailing DPSU/OF wards, should be charged with arranging the functional
facilities essential for a defence industry. Defence companies require
facilities for testing electronics and radar, and ranges for firing weaponry.
National performance standards and certification are needed in areas like
ballistics. There must be an equitable regime of taxes, import duties and protection
against foreign exchange rate variation (FERV). Finally, political parties must
explicitly recognise that, across the globe, governments have financed and
closely supervised, even micromanaged, the building of defence industries. The
hands-off, take-no-decisions policy of Mr Antony must be deliberately thrown
overboard. Narendra Modi’s and Rahul Gandhi’s manifestos should promise this.
"Parties must commit to dismantling the cartel between the Department of Defence Production (DDP) and its 9 defence public sector undertakings (DPSUs) and 39 ordnance factories (OFs), which have crowded out the private sector".... Not true!!!..... It is to derive reprehensible benefits from imports or to favour certain Private Industries that DPSUs are manipulated...set clear mandates and support PSUs I am sure they will deliver. BEML is a case in point. Though a DPSU, it is the only Indian company making metro cars, having delivered about 600 cars to Delhi metro, entire Bangalore metro and now Jaipur metro.But rather than supporting it to indigenous more components, now it is being made to compete with foreign manufacturers for obvious interests/succumbing to lobbying. Indigenisation costs money and a marginally higher cost initially must be absorbed for long term benefits.
ReplyDeleteDefence PSUs require nurturing for self reliance not manipulation and interference. Private players with foreign tie ups have the motive of only profits...
.. "across the globe, governments have financed and closely supervised, even micromanaged, the building of defence industries."... very true...look at how the Chinese are doing it..
@Ajai sir
ReplyDeletei dont think any political party or coalition from any side will ever say much about any defence related issue or topic other than usual 'we will do this/that'. The
simple reason being i believe the existence of a 'service file' & 'ministry file' for any deal/ procurement for IA/IN/IAF (probably the only country to do so)
Its known that that the 'service file' is prepared by IA/IN/IAF & includes GSQR/ASQR/NSQR but that file is never considered at meeting to finalize a any deal/ procurement. Instead the only file that is considered is the 'ministry file'. (Its said while 'service file' says something 'ministry file' says something else.)
This basically means that whatever the case of need; any party's government will go only by the 'ministry file' since that will allow them full control of all deal/procurement.
In such a case why will any party say anything about such issues of national importance since they know everything in defence is under their control. The party's would have said anything about defence in election manifesto, if their was a possibility that they didnt have something under their control.
this is my opinion
thanks
Joydeep Ghosh
A well thought out piece which brings focus to how a political leader must set tangible targets to his R&D teams.
ReplyDeleteNational interest lays down the parameters for a national grand strategy which utilizes all the components of national power one of which is the security dimension. Identification of national security interests is paramount for national security objectives and a strategy. Only when these exist can we expect to have in place a national defence strategy from which flows the national military strategy and the respective strategies for the land, ground, air, space & cyber components. The constitution is one of the sources embodying our national interest but the other and arguably more vital is the political will which is completely lacking. In such a context learning from better examples the US for instance would be productive. The QDR, DSG, NMS & NSS are all undertaken periodically and while consulting varied actors. While it has its shortcomings it does help generate consensus across all levels of the policy makers, executors, civil society and foreign audiences. India would do well to learn from such an exercise.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting and relevant take. However, the key factor in defence related production is that generally, the manufacturing sector should be buoyant. Further, as Defence contracts cannot be guaranteed in perpetuity, flexible labour laws are required, otherwise, no entrepreneur will want to get into it. And as you can' have defence related manufacturing isolated from non defence applications, it stands to reason that in general, flexible labour laws should be in place for all manufacturing. We also need to get away from this culture of "Jugaad", which has got perverted from "Frugal Engineering" to "Somehow manage". If you want excellent quality weaponry, you need to use excellent quality material and have commensurate engineering and workmanship. Cut-price deals will result in third rate production. Instead of sucking away labour in pseudo social welfare schemes like Nrega, the nation would be better served with higher manufacturing activity, creating more jobs, attracting young people to it, and creating the base for weapons and related development.
ReplyDeleteA great visionary like you with profound knowledge about our armed forces should be our defence minister
ReplyDeletepolitical parties must explicitly recognise that, across the globe, governments have financed and closely supervised, even micromanaged, the building of defence industri
ReplyDeleteCongress Youth Leader in Bangalore Central