By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 3rd July 18
With Jammu & Kashmir (J&K) now under
Governor’s Rule after the Bharatiya Janata Party withdrew support from the
Peoples Democratic Party on June 19, there is the predictable talk about an
unfettered security establishment unleashing “muscular counter-terrorist operations”
to quash growing militancy in the state. To be sure, the army now faces significant challenges. It
must secure the Amarnath Yatra – in which hundreds of thousands of pilgrims
from across India undertake a three-day trek through the wild countryside to a
Hindu shrine 4,000 feet high in the Himalayas. In addition, the security forces
must re-establish their writ over the 16,000 square kilometre Kashmir valley,
where such anger simmers that entire villages mobilise to pelt stones at
security force units engaged in firefights with cornered militants. That does
nothing to save the militants, kills stone-pelters in retaliatory fire, and leads
to superstar funerals for dead militants in which even more youngsters take up
the gun. There is also the continuing task of securing the 776-kilometre Line
of Control (LoC) to prevent Pakistani ingress and militant infiltration, though
that job has been eased since the two militaries agreed on May 29 to restore a
badly frayed ceasefire.
Are there enough
security forces in Kashmir to fulfil these tasks on an open-ended basis?
Pakistani propaganda and Kashmiri human rights organisations, such as the
influential J&K Coalition of Civil Society repeatedly state that India
controls Kashmir by deploying 700,000 securitymen across the state. It is often
alleged that half the Indian Army is based in J&K. It is bewildering why there
has been no rebuttal or clarification of this issue from the central or state
governments, or from the army itself? While sovereign governments need no
permission to deploy their armed forces anywhere on their territory, it is
surely sensible policy to avoid the impression that New Delhi holds Kashmir
with a jackboot on its neck.
While assorted pieces
of information are available in the public domain, there is real ambiguity
around the troop numbers in J&K. There is the question of whether one is
referring to Kashmir alone, where the militancy is focused, or to the entire
state of J&K, which includes Jammu and Ladakh regions in addition to
Kashmir. Then there is the confusion over the various categories of security
forces mobilised to tackle an insurgency – regular army, Rashtriya Rifles, Central
Armed Police Forces (CAPFs), state police forces and intelligence agencies.
Finally, there is the question of whether to include soldiers and policemen
deployed south of Jammu, on the settled international border, which is similar
in many respects to the India-Pakistan border in, say, Punjab or Rajasthan. Let
us try to disaggregate these figures.
There is, first, the Indian
Army itself. It includes the regular army formations that defend the LoC from Pakistani
military intrusion and also form a counter-infiltration grid to prevent militant
ingress and egress. It is known that Kashmir, Jammu and Ladakh are each
defended by two regular infantry divisions, with about 20-30,000 troops in
each. It must be remembered that, of the two divisions stationed in Ladakh,
much of one – 3 Infantry Division – defends the Line of Actual Control (LAC)
with China. Even so, since it also holds the Siachen Glacier, its numbers must
be included in our calculation. However, we must exclude two divisions deployed
on the international boundary between Jammu and Punjab, which man an
uncontested border and have no role in counterinsurgency. That adds up to
150,000 regular army soldiers deployed in J&K.
The other army presence in J&K, the Rashtriya Rifles, consists of 60 battalions, with about a thousand soldiers in each. It is manned by the army, but is a specialised counter-insurgency force, equipped with only light weapons. It is divided equally across the Kashmir and Jammu hinterland, controlling villages but staying out of big towns and cities. Since there is no insurgency in Ladakh, there is no Rashtriya Rifles there. Along with the regular army formations, that takes the number of army soldiers in J&K to 210,000, a little more than one-sixth of the Indian Army’s authorisation of 1,215,049 soldiers. To say that half the army is deployed in J&K is pure delusion.
Graphic: Security
Forces in Jammu & Kashmir
Region
|
Regular
army*
|
Rashtriya
Rifles
|
Total
Army^
|
Central
Armed Police Forces
|
J&K
Police, Armed Police, SPOs
|
Total
Forces
|
Civilian
population#
|
Force
density (per thousand people)
|
Kashmir
|
19 Div (Baramula): 25,000
|
Kilo Force :
15,000
|
80,000
|
CRPF + BSF: 60,000
|
70,000
|
210,000
|
7,370,668
|
28.5
|
28 Div (Kupwara) : 25,000
|
Victor Force: 15,000
|
|||||||
Jammu
|
25 Div (Rajauri): 30,000
|
Delta Force :
10,000
|
80,000
|
CRPF + BSF: 40,000
|
50,000
|
170,000
|
4,754,229
|
36
|
10 Div (Akhnoor) : 20,000
|
Romeo Force: 10,000
|
|||||||
Uniform Force: 10000
|
||||||||
Ladakh
|
3 Div (Leh): 25,000
|
Nil
|
50,000
|
ITBP: 30,000
|
10,000
|
90,000
|
293,489
|
306.5
|
8 Div (Kargil) : 25,000
|
||||||||
150,000
|
60,000
|
210,000
|
130,000
|
130,000
|
470,000
|
12,418,386
|
38
|
* Includes regular army manning the Line of
Control (LoC) and counter-infiltration grid. Excludes 26th and 29th
Infantry Divisions that defend the international boundary south of Jammu, and
are not employed in counter-insurgency tasks
^
Excludes non-combat elements like Border Roads Organisation, logistics depots,
transport units, transit camps, etc.
# Figures from
Census 2011, with 7 per cent added for estimated growth since then, at 1 per
cent annually.
Then there are the
CAPFs, which include the Central Armed Police Force (CRPF), the Border Security
Force (BSF) and the Indo-Tibet Border Police (ITBP). The CRPF and BSF have the
thankless job of working alongside the state police to maintain law and order
in the larger towns and cities of J&K. They number about 60,000 troopers in
Kashmir, about 40,000 in Jammu. Meanwhile some 30,000 ITBP border guards deploy
on the LAC with China in Ladakh. All told, they add up to 130,000 central
policemen.
Finally, the J&K
Police, along with the J&K Armed Police, special police officers (SPOs) and
intelligence agencies, number about 130,000 personnel. Over the years, the
J&K Police has grown in both numbers and capabilities and, today, forms the
cutting edge of counter-insurgency operations. From almost zero capability at
the start of the insurgency in 1989, the J&K Police is arguably today the
most capable state police force in the country.
That adds up to a
total of 470,000 security personnel, including the state police force. Visitors
to Kashmir often remark on the “overwhelming security presence” on the streets,
but what is the reality in the context of international counter-insurgency
norms? The US military’s counterinsurgency doctrine, based on its experience in
Afghanistan and Iraq, recommends a force level of 20 security personnel for
every thousand local people in the operational zone. In both Kashmir and Jammu,
we comfortably surpass that number – with 28.5 and 36 soldiers respectively. One
reason for that is that, in addition to counterinsurgency, troops are also
engaged in protecting a porous border. The figure in Ladakh is off the charts,
because its two districts – Leh and Kargil – are amongst those with India’s lowest
population density.
Violence levels in Kashmir
2016
|
2017
|
2018^
|
||
Militants
killed
|
||||
(a) Infiltrating across LoC
|
35
|
59
|
18
|
|
(b) In the Kashmir valley
|
115
|
154
|
74
|
|
TOTAL
|
150
|
213
|
92
|
|
Security Force fatalities
|
||||
(a) In firing on LoC
|
14
|
18
|
12
|
|
(b) In militant violence
|
49
|
44
|
34
|
|
TOTAL
|
63
|
62
|
46
|
|
Ceasefire violations on LoC
|
228
|
860
|
931
|
|
^ Up to June 30, 2018
It is hard to tell
whether, even with these numbers, the army is succeeding in its aims. The
number of armed militants killed has steadily increased: from 150 in 2016, to
213 in 2017, to 92 already this year. But that could be a consequence of
growing militant numbers, which indicates failure alongside success.
Furthermore, the army is paying a continuing price, with 63 fatalities in 2016,
62 last year and an alarming 46 already this year. If the National Security
Advisor’s so-called “Doval Doctrine” has (sensibly) shifted tack from
confronting Pakistan to implementing a real ceasefire on the LoC, it is worth
considering whether it is also time to cool the temperature inside Kashmir. India’s
preponderance of force can keep the lid on militancy. But, without a political
initiative to address grievances, the pot will continue to simmer.
The article doesn't make any sense. What exactly were you trying to say? Are you taking the line io the separatists? Can you combine the deployment in border and inland and say that the deployment is on higher side
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