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General Joginder Jaswant Singh
assumed charge of the Indian Army, as the 22nd Chief of Army
Staff, on 31 January 2005. He is an alumnus of the National
Defence Academy and was commissioned into the 9 Maratha Light
Infantry on 02 August 1964. He received the colour of the
Battalion from President (Late) Dr. Zakir Hussain at the Investiture
Parade in 1968.
Hailing from a family of warriors,
he is a third generation soldier. Born on 17 September 1945
in Bahawalpur (now in Pakistan), his family migrated to India
(Patiala, Punjab) after partition in 1947. His
grandfather served in the 1/67 Punjab Regiment during the
First World War in Mesopotamia and Kut-al-Amara - both in
present day Iraq - along with the 103rd, 105th, 110th, 114th
and 117th Mahrattas. These five battalions subsequently joined
the Maratha Light Infantry, the same regiment General Singh
was commissioned into 50 years later. His father, Colonel
Jaswant Singh Marwah, served in the Electrical &
Mechanical Engineers from 1943 to 1973 and is also a veteran
of the Second World War.
During his tenure with the 7th
and 9th Maratha LI and also while on higher command &
staff appointments, General Singh has served in Jammu &
Kashmir, Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim and Joshimath
in Uttranchal Pradesh. He was awarded the Vishisht Seva Medal
during his command tenure of the 9 Maratha Light Infantry
in Arunachal Pradesh. He later commanded the 5th Maratha LI
at Hyderabad in the rank of Colonel. A consistent front runner,
he was the youngest and one of the
first in his batch to attend Staff College, Senior Command,
Higher Command and National Defence College courses. He has
contributed articles for regimental and other professional
journals and his thesis on 'Sino-Indian Border Dispute' and
'Strategy to Boost Defence Exports' have been highly acclaimed.
He has the honour of being India's first Defence Attaché
to Algeria (1987 - 1990).
After returning from Algeria,
General Singh successfully commanded the 79th (Independent)
Mountain Brigade in the Baramula Sector, Jammu & Kashmir,
during the peak of insurgency there in 1991-92. During this
tenure, he was gravely wounded in action leading from the
front, in a fierce engagement with terrorists infiltrating
across the Line of Control (LoC). For that operation, he received
the War Wound Medal and was awarded the Chief of Army Staff's
Commendation. He was nominated to attend the prestigious National
Defence College (NDC) course in 1993. He was posted as Deputy
Director General Operational Logistics in Army HQ after the
NDC Course and later commanded the 9th Infantry
Division from 1996 to 1998.
General Singh was then selected
for a key appointment as the Additional Director General Military
Operations (ADGMO) at Army HQ, Military Operations Directorate.
During his tenure as ADGMO, he
contributed positively towards evolving India's policy on
the Sino-Indian border issue and visited Beijing as part of
the Joint Working Group. He was also part of the Ministry
of Defence team for talks with Pakistan on the Siachen and
Sir Creek issue in 1998. He also visited Sierra Leone with
the Defence Minister, where an Indian contingent carried out
successful operations as part of the UN Mission. As the ADGMO,
he became the Indian Army's public face during the 1999 Kargil
conflict. He was decorated with the Ati Vishisht Seva Medal
in recognition of his services in the planning and execution
of the war.
General Singh assumed command
of the elite 1 'Strike' Corps at Mathura. He successfully
coordinated the corps level exercise - Poorna Vijay - in May
2001 in the deserts of Rajasthan. He subsequently led 1
Corps during Operation Parakram - the military standoff against
Pakistan - from December 2001 to December 2002. He was then
appointed as the General Officer Commanding-in-Chief of the
Army Training Command in January 2003, where he was credited
with drafting a new doctrine for the Indian Army. He was instrumental
in giving the Command a distinctly discernable and widely
appreciated thrust towards modernisation. After his stint
at ARTRAC he stated, "Every assignment has its own importance,
but the one at ARTRAC, the think-tank of the Army, has been
quite different as it plays a crucial role in preparing the
Army for future challenges in a constantly changing battlefield
milieu. The responsibility involved development of new concepts
and doctrines at the strategic and operational levels for
the emerging security environment, besides framing of the
training policy and providing training support to the Army
in all its facets." He was awarded the Param Vishisht
Seva Medal (PVSM) on 26 January 2004 for his distinguished
services of the highest order.
General Singh took over as the
GOC-in-C Western Command on 01 February 2004 and his tenure
at this elite Command, provided an opportunity to put into
practice the concepts & doctrines evolved at ARTRAC and
he refined operational planning by co-opting the battle winning
role of Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) and provided
focused direction based on the recently released 'Doctrine
for the Indian Army' having earlier been its architect. He
simultaneously gave training a visionary direction in conjunction
with principles of synergetic cohesiveness at all levels.
His tenure at Western Command also saw a quantum leap in the
implementation of the Ex-servicemen Contributory Health Scheme
(ECHS). He was also appointed as Honorary Aide-de-Camp (ADC)
to the President of India on 01 February 2004.
On assuming the office of the
Chief of Army Staff on 01 February 2005, General Singh stated
in a message, "We stand poised at a critical juncture
in the timeline of history. Having left behind us the
vagaries of the past, we purposefully stride towards economic
growth, social harmony, peace and prosperity. Simultaneously
and seamlessly, we are also making the transition to a highly
motivated and modern Army, driven by the engines of high technology
and Revolution in Military Affairs. I assure our countrymen
that the Army will remain at the service of the nation, at
all times, ready and eager to take on
any challenge with determination and resolve to emerge victorious."
He is widely considered to be a thinking soldier and is a
through professional.
Affectionately known as General
JJ within army circles, he was appointed Colonel of the Maratha
Light Infantry on 10 October 2001. He is an ace shooter and
plays basketball, squash and golf. He is also a
keen mountaineer who has trained under the late Tenzing Norgay
at Himalayan Mountaineering Institute, Darjeeling. He is married
to Mrs Anupama Singh and they have a son and a daughter. He
is fluent in both Arabic and French, the widely spoken languages
in Algeria.
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