By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 19th Aug 16
An army
officer corps already factionalised along the lines of regiments and arms, is
now embarrassed by infighting amongst their chiefs. General Dalbir Singh, the
current chief of army staff (COAS), has submitted an affidavit to the Supreme
Court accusing a predecessor, General VK Singh, of attempting to scuttle his
promotion with "mysterious design, mala fide intent and to arbitrarily
punish" him for professionally invalid reasons. Making this allegation sensational
is the fact that VK Singh is currently a union minister in the Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP) led government.
The
confrontation between Generals Singh and Singh is not new. Its roots lie in VK
Singh’s tenure as army chief, when he battled the defence ministry, even
dragging it to the Supreme Court in an attempt to have his date of birth
amended by one year, thereby gaining an additional year as army chief. In an
elaborate conspiracy theory created at that time, and filed as a separate writ
petition in the apex court by a group suspected of links to VK Singh, it was
alleged that a previous army chief, General JJ Singh, had “fixed” VK Singh’s
date of birth incorrectly to have him retire a year early, so that he would be
succeeded as army chief by an alleged JJ Singh protégé, General Bikram Singh.
Adding a
communal dimension to this unsavoury wrangling, the writ petition painted this
as a Sikh conspiracy, alleging the involvement of the then prime minister
Manmohan Singh, other Sikh luminaries and even the Shiromani Gurdwara
Prabandhak Committee. Both JJ Singh and Bikram Singh are Sikhs.
This battle
to change his date of birth went badly for VK Singh. The Supreme Court
dismissed his petition, as also the linked petition alleging a Sikh conspiracy
to fashion a Sikh “line of succession”. However, VK Singh struck back. Before handing
over the top job to Bikram Singh on June 1, 2012, VK Singh issued a “show cause
notice” to Dalbir Singh, who he considered close to Bikram Singh, blaming him
for a rogue intelligence operation by a unit under his command.
As army
chief, Bikram Singh wasted no time clearing Dalbir Singh of that charge, making
him eligible to take over one of the six field armies --- essential for
becoming army chief. On June 15, 2012, fifteen days after Bikram Singh took
over as chief, Dalbir Singh was appointed to command the eastern army.
This,
however, was challenged by another senior general. Lieutenant General Ravi
Dastane petitioned that, on May 31, 2012 --- the day VK Singh, and
another army commander, Lt Gen Shankar Ghosh, retired, the top two eligible
lieutenant generals --- Lt Gen Sanjiv Chachra and Dastane himself --- should
have been appointed army commanders. Dalbir Singh, while senior to both Chachra
and Dastane, was ineligible because of his “show cause notice” issued by VK
Singh.
However, while elevating Chachra to command the western
army, the defence ministry left the second vacancy unfilled, pending a decision
on Dalbir Singh’s “show cause notice”, which was dismissed on June 8. Dastane’s
petition before the Supreme Court argues that it was improper to effectively
“reserve” an army commander’s vacancy for Dalbir Singh till his case had been
decided.
Dalbir Singh’s controversial affidavit to the Supreme Court this
week relates to Dastane’s petition. He had submitted a similar petition in 2012
to the Armed Forces Tribunal (AFT), which rejected Dastane’s plea. Now, as
earlier, Dalbir Singh argues that VK Singh unfairly targeted him, with “a
motivated, biased, arbitrary and malicious intent”.
Amongst
defence watchers, as also amongst the veteran community, there is consternation
at the growing tendency of senior military officers to wash dirty linen in
public and to litigate over adverse promotion decisions. The military’s steep
promotion pyramid, in which only one officer out of a hundred makes it to the
rank of lieutenant generals, ensures that many good officers are superseded
simply because of a lack of vacancies in higher ranks. This was always the
case; what has now changed dramatically is the readiness of superseded officers
to represent against adverse promotion decisions, and even approach court.
This
tendency is exacerbated by the example set by top generals. In 2010, when VK
Singh took over as army chief, he announced that his foremost priority was to
rebuild the army’s “internal health”. Ironically, he ended up deeply dividing the
army. The fallout is being observed even today.
Fortunately,
the political leadership, including the current Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
led government, has remained above the fray. After the United Progressive
Alliance named Dalbir Singh as the next army chief in early 2014, the BJP
accused it of “undue haste”. Yet, the BJP upheld his appointment after it
formed the government, even though VK Singh, now a minister, exercised
influence in the new power structure.
Ajay Shukla, I Think The COAS has not spoken earlier on this issue. The case is by Gen Dastane He is entitled to file his reply. Infighting/manipulations at Top has been there since 60s. That has taken its toll and is showing in present health of Army
ReplyDeleteCan the Generals do their basic task of looking after the Army and not set a wrong precedence by accusing each other in uniform.As Chief Gen Dalbir Singh should ensure that its serving and retired persons get a fair deal in 7th Pay Commission. Gen VK Singh(Retd) must ensure that as rep of Govt, he puts things in correct perspective in front of the Govt.They must see the Order of Precedence of Govt of India and not equate a DIG of Police Forces with a Brigadier.....he is much below him ( even below a Colonel) though many in police and para military forces have started wearing ranks on their shoulders of senior ranks.
ReplyDeleteThis infighting in the Armed Forces will lead us nowhere. Let's unite and do our job with alacrity......Col JP Singh(Retd)
Immature and bad examples of leadership.
ReplyDeleteMaybe govt should reduce the number of star officers by half in the armed forces.
for a change the civilians are not involved. its the army officers embarrassing themselves. as the sword arm of the Indian state, it is sad that they indulge in such shenanigans. a sign of the times, i suppose !
ReplyDelete& what do armour officers do ?
ReplyDeletefile promotion cases in courts & get kicked by courts ?
There is a need to restructure the army/other two services as under
ReplyDelete1.Rationalise the Rank structure.Reduce the JCO to one only.
2.Remove the Col rank.At one time officers used to be directly promoted to Brigadier rank.The Brigadier Rank should be made one star General.
3.Restructure the badges of Rank.make it such that at no time is an army/service officer shown as less than that of the equivalent police.
4.The warrant of precedence need to be changed suitably.
Ramani