Defence
ministership is considered a coveted and glamorous assignment. But the new
incumbent has just 20 months to fulfill a challenging agenda
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 6th Sept 17
Early morning on May 24, 2004, when Pranab
Mukherjee, the surprise defence minister of the surprise United Progressive
Alliance (UPA) government was leaving for his first day in office, this
correspondent buttonholed him between his front door and his car. “What will be
your priorities as defence minister?” I asked.
The Congress Party’s most formidable intellect
pondered for only a moment. “Can you ask me that after three months please?
I’ve been the finance minister, foreign minister and held numerous posts in
government and parliament. But the defence ministry is a mystery to me. It will
take me some time to understand”, he replied.
Nirmala Sitharaman, with only a fraction of
the governmental experience that Mukherjee brought to the defence ministry,
will surely take that long to grasp the technical, financial and administrative
intricacies that make the defence ministership a politician’s most challenging,
coveted, and even glamorous assignment.
Were she a full-term defence minister, Sitharaman, feted for being only
the second woman to hold the job, would have had the
time to understand and reform the ministry according to her priorities. She
could then have addressed issues such as reversing the military’s “self
reliance index” that currently stands at 70 per cent imported equipment and 30
per cent indigenous. However, she has just 20 months, of which the last 12 will
see the government in election mode, leading into the 2019 general elections.
In the short time at her disposal,
Sitharaman will have to come to grips with three separate armed forces,
numbering 14 lakh men and women, steeped in tradition and distrustful of civilians.
There are also the ministry’s five departments, each headed by a secretary –
the departments of defence, defence production, defence finance, research and
development (R&D) and ex-servicemen’s welfare. Getting these to work in
unison would be an achievement for Sitharaman that none of her predecessors
have managed.
Each of these departments patronises and
protects sprawling fiefdoms. R&D includes 50 laboratories of the Defence
R&D Organisation, which controls a budget of Rs 14,818 crore and opposes
equipment import reflexively, even when it is critically needed and an indigenous
solution is not in sight. Defence production feels obliged to feed business to
its 39 ordnance factories and nine defence public sector undertakings (DPSUs),
often at the cost of more efficient private sector producers. In numerous court
rulings, the ironically named department of ex-servicemen’s welfare has been
castigated for lavishing time and public money on litigating endlessly against
retired soldiers who had the temerity to approach the courts for retirement and
medical benefits they feel were due to them.
As BJP spokesperson from 2010-14, and as minister
for commerce and industry since May 2014, Sitharaman has evinced the
discipline, dignity and work ethic that an inherently conservative military
would appreciate. But, winning the military’s loyalty and confidence would require
Sitharaman to do more than just paying lip service to “hamaare bahadur jawan”
(our brave soldiers). She would have to learn the military’s ethos, culture and
to publicly bat for an organisation that feels increasingly marginalised and
underappreciated.
In all this, Sitharaman’s hands would be
tied to some degree. Given the prime minister’s office’s (PMO’s) proclivity to
micromanage governance; and the defence ministry’s reliance on the finance
ministry for the allocation and disbursement of funds and clearances for
procurements, both these organisations retain a veto power on the defence
minister’s initiatives.
For example, Sitharaman is theoretically
responsible for spending the annual defence budget – Rs 3,59,854 crore this
year. Of this, the capital allocation for new equipment is Rs 86,488 crore, a ridiculously
low proportion that Parliament’s defence committee has slammed as inadequate.
Yet, year after year, the defence ministry surrenders large chunks of this
allocation (it returned Rs 7,000 crore last year) because the finance ministry,
which must endorse large procurements, deliberately delays clearances until the
money lapses. Sitharaman must try to remedy this situation.
Defence analysts routinely chorus the
imperative for allocating 3 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to
defence, from the current allocation of 2.14 per cent (or 16.8 per cent of
government spending). Sitharaman would probably realise that, given Prime
Minister Narendra Modi’s focus on job creation and social sector spending,
raising the defence budget substantially is a pipe dream. But she could focus
on improving efficiencies and optimising duplicated structures, besides fully
utilising the existing defence allocations.
Getting such a process underway, and thus
establishing her credentials as a serious reformist, would require Sitharaman
to focus laser-like on creating the structures of tri-service command. Fortunately
for her, the spadework has already been done. The Naresh Chandra Task Force in
2012 recommended appointing a four-star permanent chairman to the Chiefs of Staff
Committee (CoSC), and the integration of the defence ministry with the three service
headquarters. Last year, the Shekatkar Committee made similar recommendations. Last week, Arun Jaitley implemented 65 measures proposed by
Shekatkar, but ducked on the vital tri-service reforms, which, when implemented,
would save Rs 25,000 crore annually, according to the report.
Captains of defence industry wonder what
brief Sitharaman would receive from the prime minister, since that would
determine her direction. If her brief as defence minister were to strengthen
combat capability and fill in equipment voids, acquisition policy reforms are
essential to enable expeditious decision-making. One of her NDA forebears,
Manohar Parrikar, tried hard to simplify procedures, but bureaucratic safe play
ensured that his flagship Defence Procurement Procedure of 2016 remains as
hidebound as its predecessors. Similarly, his Strategic Partner policy – which
sets out procedures for building up Indian private firms as defence specialists
– has been defanged by bureaucrats who want to avoid the exercise of choice and
discretion.
Fortunately for Sitharaman, she will
inherit more capable bureaucrats than her predecessors had to work with. The
new defence secretary, Sanjay Mitra, has a reputation for dynamism unlike his
predecessor, G Mohan Kumar, who spent long years opposing ministry reform. A
new secretary for defence production will also be in place in October, and
Sitharaman would do well to influence this selection.
If Sitharaman’s brief is to quickly galvanize
job creation, she already has templates to work to. Earlier this year, CII
handed Parrikar a list of 30-40 defence contracts languishing in the pipeline,
each worth under Rs 500 crore. If these were pushed through quickly, a range of
Indian defence firms would get work, for which they would step up hiring. Says
one defence entrepreneur, who hopes to win one of these contracts: “If I get
the production order, I will hire 40-50 people right away.”
For Nirmala Sitharaman, whose report card
will be evaluated going into the 2019 elections, short-term objectives and
initiatives will take precedence over long-term structural changes. The lessons
of Doklam are still fresh: operational readiness has to be addressed on
priority. It remains to be seen whether this hardheaded minister with a
reputation for demanding results from her subordinates can get the defence
ministry dinosaur moving.
Why must we depend on a Minister how so ever experienced ? Is the Nation's security to be at the whims and fancies of IAS officers or Army types ,both proven incompetent as usual ? Are we paying to defend the IOF ,DRDO or the people . She doesn't and shouldn't matter. Capability building with efficiency is what matters , Private or Public sector,the cat must catch mice not whether it is IAS , OFB or Jat . Pension payments are grossly excessive , should be on defined contribution basis, Army men if competent should be able to get jobs post retiremnt, if they can't they are not good enough ,period .Every Indian is a soldier not those on the front alone .
ReplyDeleteAjai sir, I am just curious though what did the "The Congress Party’s most formidable intellect" do when he was a defense minister.
ReplyDeleteEyeing to focus on military preparedness, Make in India and welfare of soldiers, 56 years old Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday took over the riegn of south block with unique distinction to become the first full time woman defence minister of the country.
ReplyDeletethe least that the new RM can do is to release a roadmap on where the MOD, DPSU's and armed forces should be in the next 3 5 and 10 years in terms of capabilities and what steps to be taken to fulfil them. at least have a debate in the parliament to make everyone aware what needs to be done.
ReplyDeleteHi Ajai, Why you toned down in full details writings ? UPA Govt RM Mr Pranab and Mam of NDA Govt are mutually exclusive. He was a politician first; and Mam was MNC sector employee first and then joined BJP. Also, the ages of two are akin to Father and Daughter.
ReplyDeleteCongress / UPA regime controlled the Defence Ministry by the Nehru- Gandhi Family; unlike the Atalji or Present Mr PM Modi.
Here the Comparisons ends that sadly you ignored to highlight for reasons best known to you.
Next, why don't you say that Trade Unions and Associations of Defence Employees are a major factor in blackmailed by the All Government due to Vote Banks and the Law/ Judicial system in India.Also, Babus Netas nexus in sidelining the Apolitical and Non- Mandalised Army / Armed Forces are the contribution factors for the meaningful change. Lastly , our own Serving Generals as Decisions makers have not been very aspiring in their Moral Valve-systems per se- the infamous Kargil Housing Scam, Helicopter scam etc have got disrepute by four ex - Chiefs of our elite Armed Forces .Mr PM or Mam Defence Minister cannot change the past 62 years rot in 3 or 5 years.. Regards.
Veteran Colonel Manmeet of Infantry and Military Intelligence