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Bangalore, December 19,
2007 (DefenceIndia News Service)
Asserting that the Army
was ready and relevant to face any challenge,
ex Chief of army staff, Gen. Joginder Jaswant Singh
insisted that said the Army must not be asked to downsize
or right size at the present juncture.
While speaking to a newspaper
in Banglore on Tuesday Gen. Singh said the challenges
facing the country necessitated a manpower-intensive
army.
On the question of manpower
cutback, the Gen. Singh agreed that a reduction in manpower
was one sure way of effecting substantial savings in
the Armys share of the defence budget (Rs. 45,685
crore in 2007-08), savings which could then be channeled
into modernising the large force, there was also the
realisation this was currently an almost impossible
task.
Increasingly asked to
take part in internal security duties, which by their
very nature were infantry/manpower intensive operations,
the Army had been unable to make any reductions in manpower
levels. And being unable to transform itself into a
leaner Army, modernisation lagged behind, the funds
just not being sufficient enough.
Supporting that the Army
required to modernise and a sure way of doing so was
to become a leaner, meaner army, earmarking more of
the allocation of funds from the defence budget to modernisation,
Gen. Singh explained why India currently needed a large
force. We have a large number of unresolved boundary
issues.
Once these are resolved
we can talk of right sizing. Also, armies around the
world, including the U.S. forces and their allies in
Iraq and Afghanistan, have realised that even the most
modern of technology has its limitations against irregular
or asymmetrical warfare.
While at present as much
as 70 per cent of the Armys budget went towards
the costs of maintaining the large force, with only
the remaining allocated for modernisation, Gen. Singh
said the ideal situation would be closer to a 50:50
spread. The Armys inventory should be made
up of 40 per cent of modern equipment, 30 per cent of
equipment of current vintage and 30 per cent of obsolete
equipment which would get periodically phased out.
In its attempt to modernise,
Gen. Singh said, the Army was looking to upgrade and
enhance the effectiveness of existing systems and also
at acquiring new equipment and systems that were relevant
to Indias future challenges.
We are looking to
acquire smart munitions, unmanned aerial vehicles, battle
radars, surveillance radars, sensors, fire and forget
missiles, more tanks, better artillery, communication
systems, upgrading personal equipment and a variety
of force multipliers. We are also keen on exploiting
to its fullest extent information technology, including
the concept of C4ISR (Command, Control, Communications,
Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance).
Commenting on the Armys
readiness Gen. Singh said the Army had analysed the
challenges and threats which could confront the country.
Operational readiness in all matters is a must.
With this in mind we have conceptualised a doctrine.
Our training is according to this doctrine, and our
manpower is well trained, well led and motivated.
Reiterating the Armys
policy of an iron fist in a velvet glove in their operations
against terrorists in parts of the North East and Jammu
and Kashmir, Gen. Singh said the people in those regions
were tired of the violence and terrorism, and had realised
that terrorists had no credible ideology but were living
by extortion, arson, kidnapping and other such activities.
Support for them had come down in recent times.
(The Hindu)
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