Indian Army: News and Discussion

EagleOne

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Panel to discuss bullet-proof bunkers on borders

New Delhi: The standing committee on defence in parliament will discuss a proposal on Thursday to provide bullet-proof bunkers to jawans posted on the Indo-Pak border.
The committee members, who travelled in border areas recently, are convinced that without a large number of bullet-proof bunkers, better equipment and infrastructure, future battles will be difficult to fight and win.

Over a dozen members of the committee visited border areas in Jammu and Kashmir in the middle of June. They travelled along the borders in Leh and Uri and also visited Pangong on the Sino-Indian border.

A source told DNA, "Being at a lower height and without cover, Indian troops seem to be vulnerable. Plus, there are gaping holes on the vast Indo-Pak border which need to be plugged. Therefore, not just more bunkers but bullet-proof bunkers are required. Infrastructure is also lacking and the border road organisation needs to become active."

The 30-member all-party committee is headed by Satpal Maharaj of Congress. After the Lok Sabha election, small groups of committee members were formed and sent to borders and defence bases to get a feel of the conditions there.

The first group was hosted by the Srinagar-based 15 Corps. More visits are being planned to north Sikkim along the Sino-Indian border, the North East and Indian Air Force and naval bases.

Jammu and Kashmir Police had recently identified around 25 infiltration routes — 21 along the line of control (LoC) and four along the international border.

Infiltration attempts went up from 342 in 2008 to 485 in 2009. The 700-km LoC has a three-tier fencing put up in 2004, but the border is still porous.

I think this will help the soldiers who are fighting for us ....and will reduse infiltarations
 

Oracle

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Army to induct 'offensive' corps along China border


NEW DELHI: The Indian security establishment is considering the largest-ever upgrade of military capabilities along the China border as it tries to catch up with the militarily advanced neighbour.

Sources told TOI that the defence ministry has proposed the setting up of a Mountain Strike Corps and two Independent Brigades along the China border. The proposed corps would be India's fourth strike corps and the only one dedicated for offensive operations in mountainous terrain.

When contacted, a senior Army official looking after media affairs denied any such move. However, authoritative sources said the Cabinet Committee on Security is set to consider the proposal in the coming weeks. Once approved, the proposal would lead to a massive upgrade in India's military capabilities, and would be a huge step-up of Army presence along the border.

A senior official in the security establishment told TOI that the entire proposal was part of Army leadership's "vision" to catch up with China in military capabilities. The entire effort was "defensive in nature", he said.

Presently, Indian Army is engaged in raising two mountain divisions along the border with the giant neighbour. The proposed strike corps and two independent brigades would be separate from the two divisions being raised, he said.

The Army proposal, now under consideration at the highest levels of the government, envisages an expenditure of Rs 9,500 crore. The cost is primarily for new equipment such as ultra light howitzers and helicopters required for creating these highly mobile units. Units of the strike corps, to be based somewhere in the northeast, would be capable of operating like rapid reaction forces. The strike corps would have two divisions and other support troops, TOI has learnt.

The Army proposal includes raising of an independent brigade in Ladakh, and another brigade in Uttarakhand. Sources within the security establishment have for long been worried about India's military weaknesses before China's intimidating military modernisation. Coupled with a weak infrastructure, India's situation has been worrying to security experts.

After the defeat of 1962, India abandoned infrastructure development along border areas with China for decades.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ps-along-China-border/articleshow/6117418.cms
 
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civfanatic

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Good move my Indian Army.

The Sino-Indian border has historically been a weak spot for us.
 

Yatharth Singh

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CRPF Personnel are Poorly Trained to Operate in Jungle Terrain

CRPF men sitting ducks: Warfare experts

Raipur, June 30
The Chhattisgarh Police and experts on Maoist warfare are blaming the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) for repeatedly falling victim to Maoist guerrillas.

Police sources speaking on the condition of anonymity say that the CRPF personnel are not only poorly trained to operate in jungle terrain but are also reluctant to take on the well-entrenched Maoists.On top of it, the sources say, the CRPF personnel refuse to follow intelligence inputs while launching operations deep in the impregnable forests of Bastar region."A majority of the CRPF men here are exhausted as they have been dumped in this Maoist nerve centre from other conflict zones such as Kashmir without being given any rest," a senior officer and counter-insurgency expert told IANS.

"The Indian government is fighting a war relying on a force that is not ready mentally or physically to take the bull by its horn," said the source who did not want to be identified by name or rank.

"They (CRPF) are ill-trained and ill-equipped and have mentally given up. If the government wants to turn the heat on the Maoists, it must quickly phase out these exhausted CRPF battalions from Chhattisgarh and bring in battalions that have experience of battling insurgency in jungle terrain, such as the Naga and Mizo battalions," the expert said.

A police officer having a record of serving in Maoist bastions for a long period remarked: "Keeping the demoralised CRPF is hurting everyone. This includes the government and strategists and above all the local policemen who want to fight and die as war heroes."

"The big problem in Chhattisgarh now is a big gap in coordination between the CRPF and state police. The CRPF men refuse to use even specific intelligence inputs while going on operations. They flout standard operating procedures such as sneaking into landmine zones without clearing the areas of explosives," the officer said.A police officer in Bastar region said 14 CRPF battalions were now deployed in the state. Thirteen were based in Bastar in the south and one battalion was in the northern district of Surguja bordering Jharkhand. "No matter how many meetings the top officials hold in Raipur and New Delhi, the fact is that only a new and sensible war policy in Chhattisgarh can save the jawans and prevent needless deaths," said another officer .The 40,000 sq km Bastar region, made up of five districts - Narayanpur, Bastar, Kanker, Bijapur and Dantewada - has been the nervecentre of Maoist guerrillas in India since the late 1980s. — IANS

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2010/20100701/nation.htm#12
 

RAM

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Indian Army's New Division To Counter China, 71 Mtn Div, Kicks Off

The Indian Army has activated a new division to counter possible Chinese offensive on the Sino-Indian border.The 71 mountain division in Assam will be under the command of the Tezpur-based 4 Corps.Earlier, the government had approved two divisions in the north-east for conventional operations to bolster preparedness against China.The army is working towards raising troops for these but, as of now, there will be internal movement from within the army to start the 71 division, army sources said. Nine new battalions are needed under the new division.The divisions will mostly have infantry elements, but some armoured assets will also form a part of them at a later stage.

While the 71 division is still organising its infrastructure and cadres, the 56 division with two brigades is in the process of setting up its Orbat (order of battle). Orbat is the command structure, strength, and disposition of personnel, equipment, and units of an armed force during field operations.

A source said: "Re-Orbatting will take place depending on the roles of the brigade."

http://chhindits.blogspot.com/
 

Neil

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Saab offers DRDO underground radar

Saab offers DRDO underground radar
Saturday, July 3, 2010
By Saurabh Joshi

Saab has offered its radar, CARABAS, to the Defense Research and Development Organization's (DRDO) Electronics and Radar Development Establishment (LRDE) for evaluation. The radar can penetrate densely-forested areas and detect mines and Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) buried underground.

The DRDO had been shopping around for a radar that could provide the capability for the detection of threats in heavily-forested and remote areas affected by insurgencies and has selected the CARABAS to explore further possibilities. A radar with such capabilities would be useful in detecting threats in areas where security forces have to operate, patrolling roads and tracks under the canopy of dense foliage and surrounding forests, in difficult terrain.
CARABAS is a Very High Frequency (VHF) Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) that is mounted on aircraft to scan a target area for threats. The radar, which weighs 35 kilograms, can be fitted on rotary wing as well as tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs).

On helicopters and UAVs, the antennas, which are made of Kevlar/carbon, retract when on the ground and unfold in the air. The antenna consists of two High Band dipoles, emitting waves of 140 to 360 MegaHertz (MHz) attached to two Low Band dipoles, with emissions between 25 to 85 Mega Hertz.

The system, when attached to an aircraft, manned or unmanned, scans the area for anomalies. Operational areas have to be regularly scanned for this radar to be most effective, as it detects these anomalies in terms of changes in the area being scanned. Such changes could include the presence of humans, vehicles and even metallic objects like mines and IEDs buried underground.

It's VHF radar is able to penetrate foliage as well as ground surface because of its low wavelength and can detect 'humans, mines and IEDs'. Saab says the radar can detect underground objects down to a depth of 3.4 meters (more than 11 feet) in wet soil, 6 meters (almost 20 feet) in dry soil and 26 meters (around 85 feet) in sand. This is when the radar waves hit the ground at the Brewster Angle, which optimizes their transmission by enabling them to penetrate the ground with no reflection.

With a power consumption of 100 Watts, the radar in foliage mode is capable of surveying 270 square kilometers from a standoff distance of 6 kilometers and an altitude of 2000 meters, enabling it to detect vehicles while emitting Low Band VHF waves. In the same mode, it can also detect human presence, emitting High Band VHF radiation, standing off from a distance of 3 kilometers and is able to survey an area of 45 square kilometers.

In subsurface mode, standing off from a distance of between 150 meters to 3 kilometers, the radar can survey an area of between 2.7 square kilometers to 45 square kilometers from an altitude of 30 meters to 700 meters and can detect buried mines and IEDs.

While the helicopter-mounted radar can detect to an accuracy of between half a meter to 2 meters, depending on the frequency, the UAV-mounted radar can detect concealed human and vehicular presence as well as subsurface metallic objects that have dimensions of less than 3000 square centimeters.

Versions of this airborne radar, already in operation in the Swedish Air Force, where it is configured for deployment on fixed wing aircraft, were first devised in 1990, with a Drag Antenna layout and then upgraded in 1997, to enable a Pushboom Antenna configuration.

Inderjit Sial, Saab's Director – Industrial Cooperation, says the radar is currently undergoing tests on rotary wing aircraft in Sweden. DRDO officials are also expected to visit the country in August to witness the system in operation at a test range, as well as examine the source code of the system, to look for ways to configure it to Indian requirements. Towards the end of this year, the CARABAS will be available for configuration onto a Dhruv Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) in India and be tested in a forested, remote area.

Sial also says the company is willing to manufacture the radar in India, if it is ultimately selected by the DRDO.

http://www.stratpost.com/saab-offers-drdo-underground-radar
 

Agantrope

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Saab offers DRDO underground radar
Saturday, July 3, 2010
By Saurabh Joshi

Saab has offered its radar, CARABAS, to the Defense Research and Development Organization's (DRDO) Electronics and Radar Development Establishment (LRDE) for evaluation. The radar can penetrate densely-forested areas and detect mines and Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) buried underground.

The DRDO had been shopping around for a radar that could provide the capability for the detection of threats in heavily-forested and remote areas affected by insurgencies and has selected the CARABAS to explore further possibilities. A radar with such capabilities would be useful in detecting threats in areas where security forces have to operate, patrolling roads and tracks under the canopy of dense foliage and surrounding forests, in difficult terrain.
CARABAS is a Very High Frequency (VHF) Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) that is mounted on aircraft to scan a target area for threats. The radar, which weighs 35 kilograms, can be fitted on rotary wing as well as tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs).

On helicopters and UAVs, the antennas, which are made of Kevlar/carbon, retract when on the ground and unfold in the air. The antenna consists of two High Band dipoles, emitting waves of 140 to 360 MegaHertz (MHz) attached to two Low Band dipoles, with emissions between 25 to 85 Mega Hertz.

The system, when attached to an aircraft, manned or unmanned, scans the area for anomalies. Operational areas have to be regularly scanned for this radar to be most effective, as it detects these anomalies in terms of changes in the area being scanned. Such changes could include the presence of humans, vehicles and even metallic objects like mines and IEDs buried underground.

It's VHF radar is able to penetrate foliage as well as ground surface because of its low wavelength and can detect 'humans, mines and IEDs'. Saab says the radar can detect underground objects down to a depth of 3.4 meters (more than 11 feet) in wet soil, 6 meters (almost 20 feet) in dry soil and 26 meters (around 85 feet) in sand. This is when the radar waves hit the ground at the Brewster Angle, which optimizes their transmission by enabling them to penetrate the ground with no reflection.

With a power consumption of 100 Watts, the radar in foliage mode is capable of surveying 270 square kilometers from a standoff distance of 6 kilometers and an altitude of 2000 meters, enabling it to detect vehicles while emitting Low Band VHF waves. In the same mode, it can also detect human presence, emitting High Band VHF radiation, standing off from a distance of 3 kilometers and is able to survey an area of 45 square kilometers.

In subsurface mode, standing off from a distance of between 150 meters to 3 kilometers, the radar can survey an area of between 2.7 square kilometers to 45 square kilometers from an altitude of 30 meters to 700 meters and can detect buried mines and IEDs.

While the helicopter-mounted radar can detect to an accuracy of between half a meter to 2 meters, depending on the frequency, the UAV-mounted radar can detect concealed human and vehicular presence as well as subsurface metallic objects that have dimensions of less than 3000 square centimeters.

Versions of this airborne radar, already in operation in the Swedish Air Force, where it is configured for deployment on fixed wing aircraft, were first devised in 1990, with a Drag Antenna layout and then upgraded in 1997, to enable a Pushboom Antenna configuration.

Inderjit Sial, Saab's Director – Industrial Cooperation, says the radar is currently undergoing tests on rotary wing aircraft in Sweden. DRDO officials are also expected to visit the country in August to witness the system in operation at a test range, as well as examine the source code of the system, to look for ways to configure it to Indian requirements. Towards the end of this year, the CARABAS will be available for configuration onto a Dhruv Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) in India and be tested in a forested, remote area.

Sial also says the company is willing to manufacture the radar in India, if it is ultimately selected by the DRDO.

http://www.stratpost.com/saab-offers-drdo-underground-radar
Some oppurtunities come as like grantes like this one. This radar should need to be used and tested in the Maoist area and then we need to used this elsewhere if satisfied
 
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http://www.indianexpress.com/news/govt-orders-radar-to-track-movement-in-thick-forests/641253/ .

Govt orders radar to track movement in thick forests


Up against the daunting task of tracking Maoists in dense forests with no suitable technology available in the global market, the government has directed the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) to develop a foliage-penetration radar that can track movements, camps and even landmines located under thick vegetation.

With radars and technology demonstrators from across the globe failing several rounds of trials, DRDO is working on a three-month deadline to acquire its first technology demonstrator radar from a European firm that would be co-developed and tweaked for Indian conditions. The radar would be fitted on board an Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) and will undergo significant software upgrades to be able to track down movements in thick jungles.

Sources said the first CARABAS ground imaging system, developed by Swedish firm Saab, would be delivered within the next three months and engineers from the two countries will work together to integrate it on board the Indian helicopter.

Indian scientists, sources said, would work on tweaking the radar that is currently being operated from fixed-wing aircraft by Sweden. A DRDO team will be visiting testing facilities in Sweden in August to observe the technology in action and carry out integration tests on the system.

The move comes after several radars and systems, demonstrated to Indian authorities for ground imaging in densely forested areas in recent months, failed to cut the grade. Indian authorities have tested British, Israeli and American systems in the past few months but results have been discouraging.
 

RAM

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India-Nigeria defence cooperation to get boost



New Delhi, July 5 (IANS) The Indian Army vice chief, Lt. Gen. P.C. Bhardwaj, left Monday for a three-day goodwill visit to Nigeria that will further boost the defence cooperation between the two nations.The June 5-7 visit would "further boost the historic and traditional defence relations" India has with with Nigeria, defence spokesperson said."During his three day official visit, he will be meeting senior officials of the Nigerian armed forces and attending the Nigerian Army Day celebrations," the spokesperson added.
During his interaction with senior military officials, Bhardwaj will discuss "issues to enhance military cooperation".
"The visit will further cement the historic ties between India and Nigeria which are based mutual trust and understanding," the spokesperson said.
Defence cooperation has been a vital tool to enhance the relations between India and Nigeria, which share similarities in their struggle against colonialism and in their ethnic diversity and geo-political outlook.
India and Nigeria signed a strategic partnership deal called the "Abuja Declaration" during the visit of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in 2007.
The defence cooperation with Nigeria has existed since 1963 and the Indian armed forces have contributed significantly in laying the foundation of various army training establishments there.
The armed forces of the two nations have been comprehensively cooperating in the field of military training and United Nations peacekeeping training
http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal...fence-cooperation-to-get-boost_100391064.html
 

EagleOne

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Indian Army to Buy China Specific Weaponry

India Defence Online, New Delhi — In order to beef up the security along the Indo-Chinese border and to keep up with the military advancements of its neighbour, The Indian Defence Ministry has proposed the creation of Mountain Strike Corps and two Independent Brigades.

This military augmentation is significant since this will be India's fourth Strike Corps and the only one dedicated for offensive operations in mountainous terrain.

Since this development has been kept under wraps, The Indian Army has not disclosed any details of the creation of the new Strike Corp for the mountainous border area. The Indian Army is already in the process of raising two mountain divisions along the border with China and these are separate from the latest proposal of the Strike corps and two independent brigades.

According to sources, the cost of raising such a Strike Corp and Independent Brigades will be around Rs. 9500 crores since it will involve new equipment such as ultra light howitzers and helicopters for creating these highly mobile units.

The units under the Strike Corps will function like rapid reaction forces and will be based in the north-east region of India. The new Strike Corp will have two divisions and other support troops as well. As for the two independent Brigades they are likely to be set up in Ladakh in the state of Jammu and Kashmir as well as in Uttarakhand state, thereby strategically placing itself along the border region.


http://indiadefenceonline.com/2044/indian-army-to-buy-chine-specific-weaponry/
 

EagleOne

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India Readies for China Fight

Last May, just days before India's general election results were announced, the country's highest policy making body for security matters was convened by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Its mandate: Find ways of enabling India's military to take on an increasingly powerful (and belligerent) China.

At the end of a marathon meeting, the Cabinet Committee on Security initiated a comprehensive, well-funded plan to bolster India's land, air and naval forces to counter China's rising military prowess. The plan is historic, coming after years of dithering by an Indian establishment seemingly paralysed by memories of the country's humiliating defeat at the hands of the Chinese in a brief but brutal war in 1962.
Since the CCS plan was launched, there have been significant and wide-ranging signs that Indian policymakers are finally willing to realistically assess possible military responses to China's rise. One clear example is a new division of troops aimed exclusively at the border region of the two great powers. India is now mid-way through raising two mountain divisions for the north-eastern border area with China, with the two divisions pencilled in to be ready for deployment by the middle of next year.

The goal is to plug existing gaps in India's preparedness along the Arunachal Pradesh-China frontier, and the two divisions, consisting of about 20,000 well-armed troops, will include a squadron of India's armoured spearhead—Soviet-built T-90 tanks and a regiment of artillery. They will be backed by enhanced command, control, communications and intelligence (C4I) capabilities aimed at covering the Tibet region.

But that's certainly not all.

The Indian Air Force has over the past year deployed 36 Su-30MKI, its most advanced multi-role fighter aircraft, to Tezpur in the country's north-east in response to the People's Liberation Army Air Force's seven airbases in Tibet and southern China.

Meanwhile, the Indian Navy is working to counter the growing clout of the PLA Navy. The current thinking at Indian naval headquarters is that China will move to aggressively increase its presence in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) to secure its extended energy supply lines (despite its name, military planners in Beijing don't feel India has ownership of this expanse of water).

As a consequence, the Indian Navy's plans are based on the premise that it needs to be a fully-networked and flexible force capable of meeting any 'out of area' contingency. Successive Indian naval chiefs since 2004 have spoken about the need for the Navy to have 'longer sea legs' by 2020 and to be capable of influencing the outcome of land battles. The importance of the Navy's role was underscored during the 1999 Kargil skirmish between India and Pakistan, when the Indian Navy played a crucial but silent role in blockading Pakistan's sea lanes, putting Islamabad under significant pressure to end the conflict quickly.

Since then, India's naval leadership has been working to break free of its traditional 'continental construct' mindset and start looking at the bigger picture, taking into account the full gamut of geo-strategic and geo-political realities. After all, 90 percent of India's trade by volume and 77 percent by value transits through the IOR.

But trade considerations aside, countering China remains the country's biggest (but officially largely unstated) objective, a fact Beijing no doubt saw as underscored when India held a joint exercise in the area with the US, Australian and Singaporean navies in 2007.

These joint exercises apart, the Indian Navy is working to build and acquire new, varied and potent platforms including an aircraft carrier, nuclear submarines, stealth frigates and long-range maritime reconnaissance planes. By 2014, it hopes to have 160 ships in its fleet, up from its current strength of 136.

But the most surprising revelation to many analysts was India's public admission that it was inducting a Russian Akula-class Type 971 nuclear submarine into its forces, in addition to an indigenously designed and built submarine, earlier called the advanced technology vessel but now officially named the INS Arihant (The Destroyer).

'Together, the two vessels would constitute the third leg of India's sea-based strategic deterrence,' Adm Sureesh Mehta, former chief of the Indian navy, announced at the time—the first time a high-ranking Indian military official had gone on record about the country's plans to have a three-pronged nuclear deterrence.

The induction of the nuclear submarine has brought India closer to securing its nuclear deterrence based on a second, retaliatory strike option that is built on a triad of strategic weapons (the other two options—delivery by an aircraft and mobile, land-based launchers—were already available).

In addition, in recent months, India has also successfully test fired its long range Agni-III strategic missile, capable of hitting targets deep inside China, while the head of India's missile building programme, VK Saraswat, announced in May that India will go one step further by testing the 5,000-kilometre range, nuclear-capable Agni IV missile in 2011.

But there's more to an effective defence force than an offensive capability for a country the size of India. Communication and transport lines are essential, especially in far-flung regions, so 72 tactically important roads are also being built in the tough, mountainous terrain along the China border in the Eastern and the Western sectors. The roads are being built by the quasi-military Border Roads Organisation to enhance connectivity, and come on top of the reopening of three major airstrips in Ladakh (Nyoma, Fukche and Daulat Beg Oldie).

The airstrips are being upgraded to allow medium and heavy-lift transport aircraft such as the Russian-built AN-32 aircraft and soon to be inducted US-made C-130J Hercules transport planes to land. The hope behind these developments is that once the facilities are fully functional (expected to be by the end of next year), these assets will offer India the ability to insert a large number of troops in forward areas at short notice, a capacity that Indian policymakers hope will right the current poor connectivity in the forward areas along the Line of Actual Control.

Indeed, it's this boundary that is the biggest irritant in Sino-India relations, as neither country agrees with the other's perception about where exactly the line should be drawn. India believes that for all China's professed desire to find a peaceful and mutually acceptable solution to the festering boundary issue, the country has not budged from its more than three-decades position, and they note that despite frequent meetings of special representatives of both the countries over the past half decade on the issue, the deadlock has yet to be broken.

Suspicion of China runs deep among Indian analysts. 'China's demonstrated policies of strategic encirclement of India and its use of India's other arch-enemy Pakistan as a proxy for her designs"¦is proof enough that you can never trust Beijing's intentions,' says former Maj. Gen. Sheru Thapliyal, who commanded a frontline division responsible for handling China. 'Until a visible change is demonstrated by China, there's no excuse for any Indian Government to ignore or soft-pedal the imperatives of strong defensive preparations along the India-Tibet Border'.

But such preparations haven't gone unnoticed by China. When news of last May's plans went public, China reacted strongly, with the semi-official Global Times editorializing: 'India's current course can only lead to a rivalry between the two countries. India needs to consider whether or not it can afford the consequences of a potential confrontation with China"¦Any aggressive moves will certainly not aid the development of good relations with China. India should examine its attitude and preconceptions; it will need to adjust if it hopes to cooperate with China and achieve a mutually beneficial outcome.'

This year's annual report by the Indian Defence Ministry stated: 'India remains conscious and alert
about the implications of China's military modernisation. Rapid infrastructure development in the Tibet Autonomous Region and Xinjiang Province has considerably upgraded China's military force projection capability and strategic operational flexibility"¦Necessary steps have been initiated for the upgrading of our infrastructure and force structuring along the northern borders.'

This kind of urgency, lacking for far too long in New Delhi, is a refreshing indication that Indian policymakers are taking the need to prepare for potential conflict with China seriously. China cannot—and should never be—taken lightly. And India should always be mindful of the fact that military preparedness and trying to improve diplomatic relations are not necessarily mutually exclusive.


http://idrw.org/?p=2269
 

EagleOne

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Army gearing up for bilateral exercises with US, Russia

India is readying to match its counter insurgency and anti-terrorism operational prowess with that of the US and Russian Army in two bilateral exercises scheduled for August and October this year.

Army officers said here today that they would host the American special forces in India next month when the special forces of the two countries would practice operations against a simulated insurgency and terrorism scenarios.

The exercise -- in the 'Vajra Prahar' series -- is usually held in India at the Army's Counter Insurgency and Jungle Warfare School at Vairengte in Mizoram.

The annual Indo-US exercise in the 'Vajra Prahar' series is part of the three bilateral army exercises, the other two being 'Shatrujeet' and 'Yudh Abhyas'
 

RAM

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Army to hone anti-terror skills in drills with Big 3



NEW DELHI: The 1.13-million strong Indian Army is gearing up for joint combat exercises with the American and Russian armies, among others, in quick succession to further enhance "interoperability" withthem from August to October.

That's not all. India is also going to hold a military exercise with another big power, China, in the coming months. New Delhi and Beijing are now drawing up schedule for the third edition of their "hand-in-hand" (HiH) exercise, sources say.

Interestingly, the focus of all the three exercises will revolve more around counter-terrorism rather than conventional warfare, underlining the threat irregular warfare has assumed for the world at large.

The Indo-US combat exercise `Vajra Prahar' between the special forces of the two countries will be held at the Belgaum commando school in Karnataka between August and September, while the one with Russia called `Indra' is slated for Chaubatia near Ranikhet, Uttarakhand, from September to October.

While, India has had a long-standing defence relationship with Russia, notching up as it has military imports worth almost $40 billion from Moscow since the 1960s, joint combat exercises between the two have been few and far between.

Conversely, the most visible symbol of the now expansive Indo-US military ties has been the flurry of joint combat exercises -- over 50 in the last seven years -- between the two nations. Incidentally, India had hosted the largest-ever ground combat exercise with US, called `Yudh Abhyas', at Babina in October.

The US, of course, is now also aggressively cornering a major chunk of the lucrative Indian defence market. The largest-ever Indo-US defence deal -- the procurement of 10 C-17 Globemaster-III giant strategic airlift aircraft for IAF for around $3 billion -- is now on the verge of finalisation, as reported by TOI earlier. This deal will overtake the $2.1 billion contract for eight Boeing P-8I long-range maritime reconnaissance aircraft inked last year.

In sharp contrast to US and Russia, India's HiH exercises with China have so far been largely symbolic in nature, with just over 100 soldiers participating from each side. But they are seen to be an important CBM between the two countries which fought a bloody war in 1962.

While the first HiH was conducted at Kunming in China in December 2007, the second one was conducted at Belgaum in December 2008. The third HiH edition will be held in China.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...-in-drills-with-Big-3/articleshow/6135843.cms
 

EagleOne

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Modernise rapidly, armed forces told

New Delhi, July 7 (IANS) The lifespan of weapons systems has shortened in the face of rapid technology advancement, Minister of State for Defence M.M. Pallam Raju said Wednesday, asking the Indian armed forces to keep abreast with the cutting edge transformation.
'The gestation periods ranging from 10-15 years are history and we have to keep abreast with the cutting edge technology in all spheres. This period has to be abridged with the process of focussed interaction between the army, the DRDO (Defence Research and Development Organisation) as well as public and private industry,' Raju said.
The minister was inaugurating a two-day international seminar on 'Missile Technology focusing on a family of Future Anti-Tank Guided Missiles (ATGM)'.
Despite the advent of atomic weapons, Raju said, a conventional conflict between nuclear capable states could not be ruled out.
'The Kargil conflict in 1999 amply highlighted that despite the nuclear dimension, the probability of occurrence of conventional conflict exists.'
Raju underlined the need for regional and global security dialogue. 'The nature of conflict today is determined more by political, social, economic and strategic imbalances than by military factors alone.
'We need to coordinate nationally and globally, and enforce cooperative security as a strategy at the regional and international levels,' he said.
Indian Army Chief General V.K. Singh highlighted the 'pivotal role' played by the armed forces in providing a secure environment to the nation to pursue its economic policies.
He stressed on the need to indigenously develop a family of ATGMs that can be launched from a variety of platforms.
The two-day seminar is organised by the Directorate General Mechanized Forces and the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).
It will provide a forum for the industry to understand the challenges in designing, development and serial production of the ATGMs likely to be introduced in the future.

Indo-Asian News Service
http://www.hindustantimes.com/Modernise-rapidly-armed-forces-told/Article1-568889.aspx
 
Last edited:

nandu

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Indian Army to Buy China Specific Weaponry

New Delhi — In order to beef up the security along the Indo-Chinese border and to keep up with the military advancements of its neighbour, The Indian Defence Ministry has proposed the creation of Mountain Strike Corps and two Independent Brigades.

This military augmentation is significant since this will be India's fourth Strike Corps and the only one dedicated for offensive operations in mountainous terrain.

Since this development has been kept under wraps, The Indian Army has not disclosed any details of the creation of the new Strike Corp for the mountainous border area. The Indian Army is already in the process of raising two mountain divisions along the border with China and these are separate from the latest proposal of the Strike corps and two independent brigades.

According to sources, the cost of raising such a Strike Corp and Independent Brigades will be around Rs. 9500 crores since it will involve new equipment such as ultra light howitzers and helicopters for creating these highly mobile units.

The units under the Strike Corps will function like rapid reaction forces and will be based in the north-east region of India. The new Strike Corp will have two divisions and other support troops as well. As for the two independent Brigades they are likely to be set up in Ladakh in the state of Jammu and Kashmir as well as in Uttarakhand state, thereby strategically placing itself along the border region.

http://indiadefenceonline.com/
 

Ray

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Messages
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To defeat Maoists, grasp the ground reality

The belief that development can run concurrently with military operation is naïve. In an unpredictable and turbulent environment where destruction, mayhem and murder are the rule rather than the exception, the environment is hardly conducive to sustained development. It's time to grasp the ground reality!

The Maoists skate on thin ice — driven by an esoteric abstract — ideology. It appears convoluted to the lettered, let alone a tribal. It is too recondite an abstract to be sustainable under relentless military pressure. Had Maoism been fired by tangible, evocative, emotive issues like religion and ethnicity, may be it could've struggled on.

All tribals are not Maoists. Their deprivations, exploited through sophistry to harbinger salvation, draw them to the Maoist fold. The majority possibly enlist or support because of strong personal reasons or herd mentality.

Many well-intentioned people have opined that peace is attainable through dialogue and development is the sole panacea to the Maoist problem that too being undertaken concurrent with the military operations.

The idea, though well intentioned, is a non-starter. Maoists avow overthrowing the republic by force, rejecting democratic processes. Would they join in dialogue? Or would it be stratagem to seize breathing space to rest, refit and reorganise to return as a more menacing force than ever before? Historically, insurgents do not enter dialogue unless they are made to realise the futility of their effort eg North-East or Kashmir insurgencies. The Maoists are yet to reach that state, currently riding a new high after the Sildah and Dantewada attacks. Will they abdicate their growing ascendancy?

The argument is patently bogus that the state is waging war and the hapless Maoists are merely reciprocating. Isn't violence their means to achieve their aim? The Constitution mandates the States and the Centre maintain law and order. Maoists mandated to unleash murder and mayhem? There lies the subtle antithesis that eludes Maoist camp followers.

The belief that development can run concurrently with military operation is naïve. In an unpredictable and turbulent environment where destruction, mayhem and murder are the rule rather than the exception, the environment is hardly conducive to sustained development. The communication towers and schools were representatives of development and were razed to the ground. The net result was tremendous loss to the exchequer, and a colossal waste in effort and labour, lending to a confidence deficit in the Government.

However, concurrently feasible is the rejuvenating, albeit locally, of the State administration that has totally collapsed. Demotivated and surly administrators on punishment posting are hardly the ones to deliver. They should give way to those with integrity and courage, are deprivation ready and who can deliver. The basic necessities, including educating the tribal in trade and skills to keep them gainfully employed and schemes like the NREGS should be vigorously, fairly, transparently pursued to bring succour. Successfully implemented, it would wean away the tribal from the Maoists and provide the much needed, currently non-existent, intelligence. The main bone of contention is forest resource contractors and mining conglomerates raping the environment and destroying the tradition way of life. They must be reined in. They must be mandated to protect the environment and be sensitive to tribal customs and traditional way of life. Co-opted, they should provide tribal employment and contribute generously to welfare schemes. Failing to do so, should invite the penalty of losing their licence. This will demonstrate that the administration is just, unbiased and sincerely concerned about the tribal and would affirmatively disprove Maoist propaganda.

As far as winning the hearts and minds, rehabilitation of surrendered Maoists is a major aspect of counter-insurgency operations. It must be just and fair. Absorbing them in the police or the paramilitary is erroneous. Disillusioned with the Government rehabilitation, they may return to the Maoist fold. In such an eventuality, the end-state would be the Government 'presenting' a better trained individual, who is aware of the Government's counter-insurgency policy, mode of operations, the weapon systems, the state of training, morale and motivation, the hierarchy and their prowess and weaknesses and so on. The surrendered insurgent gone sour could additionally take a weapon along as a trophy of homecoming! Hence, the rehabilitation should focus solely on training surrendered insurgents in skills or trade that permit eking a decent and profitable existence. Ideally, they should be rehabilitated far from their roots so that they are not in a position to either influence anyone or get influenced by their erstwhile comrade. Rare would be a case returning to the deprivations of the jungle abandoning a new and profitable life!

That said, how does the nation enforce its writ?

Prima facie, there is no indication of any tenacity of purpose except orally.

Successful operations depend on making sound decisions, which subsequently develop into plans to be executed by subordinate staff and commanders.

Effective decision-making takes account of all aspects of operational planning such as deliberate planning prior to operations (contingency planning), responsive planning during operations and the concurrent planning of future operations.

This philosophy recognises that a conflict includes constant changes, uncertainty and time constraints and an adversary who will not necessarily behave as predicted. It acknowledges that prior to operations, detailed and thorough analysis must be conducted to develop the best possible plan and a range of contingency plans. However, it also acknowledges that developing the 'best plan' is often unrealistic.

The development and conduct of operations depends on an integral and continuous aspect known the Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield and planning consists of four steps:

# Mission analysis: This assists in identifying the mission and tasks essential to the successful outcome of the plan. This results in a clear statement of the commander's mission and intent.

# Course of action development: Involves identifying a range of COAs. COAs are broad courses or options open to the commander to accomplish the mission. The number of COAs developed depends on the time made available in the commander's guidance.

# Course of action analysis: Involves planning each feasible COA, beyond engagement, through to its intended end-state. The results of COA analysis surfaces COAs with clear advantages and disadvantages.

# Decision and execution: The commander compares the strengths and weaknesses of each modified COA, and decides which COA will be developed into a plan and executed. The products of this step are the plan of action, contingency plans and supporting plans and orders.

The purpose of the IPB is to update the commander and staff with the situation as it develops, to identify opposition vulnerabilities and opportunities to defeat them, and to anticipate and identify likely and dangerous enemy actions. IPB recognises that part of the nature of conflict is uncertainty and that decisions must be made despite incomplete information. Importantly, IPB focusses information-gathering sources on proving or disproving those assumptions and, which COA the threat has adopted.

If that is how operations are organised, has Operation Green Hunt been organised in a military manner or as an ad hoc police mode of conducting local law and order issues?

The mission is to destroy Maoism. However, the approach of the States and the Centre are divergent. The Centre perceives it as a law and order problem (with the Centre as a facilitator) and hence it is the States' responsibility. The States believe it's a joint mission. The Maoists are not against any State or States per se, and instead is focussing on overthrowing the republic by violence. The manifestation of the republic is the Centre and therefore, it is an insurgency. If it is an insurgency, then the Centre is avoiding involvement in an uncertain long haul and is passing the buck to the States. Abdicating responsibility could be construed as dereliction of duty.

The Home Ministry must have vetted the COAs available to it. Apparently, it appears flawed. The Maoist attacks in Sildah and Dantewada indicate that each feasible COA, beyond engagement, was not thought through to its intended end-state; or else in Sildah, would there have been the bizarre deployment next to a market (to suit political needs) or send untrained CRPF men into Maoist territory? Apparently, neither the Home Ministry nor the CRPF fathoms the tenets of counter-insurgency. If they did, they would have baulked before sending the adhoc party into Dantewada. The breathless proclamation that 45-day training, a week's or a pre-induction being more than adequate to beard the lion in his den signifies ignorance! It takes years to convert a young soldier into a soldier and many years more to equip him with experience to be a counter-insurgent machine!

If COAs were thought through, then the Dantewada operation would not have pivoted on bases. It aimed at clearing/dominating a certain area and then falling back on the base. This has lent credence by the Dantewada DIG's rather astounding assertion that an area 'cleared' soon becomes 'infested' by Maoists, requiring 'sanitisation'. This statement suggests that there is an awareness deficit in how counter-insurgency is conducted. Counter-insurgency is no kabaddi match, where having struck, one scurries back to base and safety. Counter-insurgency involves domination of insurgent areas and isolating the population from Maoist influence. Equally beyond belief is an officer's claim that CRPF's 7.62 SLRs were no match for the Maoists' AK 47. It suggests that the CRPF is yet to understand tactics and its effect of weaponry, let alone counter-insurgency. Weapons are no philosopher's stone granting immortality. Immortality has a chance if augmented with minor tactics. Adroit use of ground with effective use of the weapon is but axiomatic. Both are complementary in defeating insurgents and for one's own survival. The lathicharge and rubber-bullet psyche hardly does for counter-insurgency. Further, unlike in police actions, numbers are not important. Unit cohesiveness, and training as a sub-unit, is what is material for efficient effectiveness. The cavalier launching of the rag-tag sub-unit of A company (45 men), C company (12 men) and G company (15 men) of the 62nd Battalion CRPF, operating out of Chintalnar base flouts all canons of counter-insurgency and was a ripe prescription for disaster to happen, and it happened. In short, missions against Maoists, which is a full-blown insurgency and not a law and order problem, must be addressed as an insurgency. It is incumbent of the Centre to involve itself more robustly. The perception collision between the States and the Centre has led to a muddle-headed chaos, compounded with the inapt and unworkable police psyche underscoring the disastrous outcomes so far.

The Centre's responsibility to quell the insurgency would vector, as per form, on the Army's participation. Notwithstanding, what is reckonable is whether there is surplus manpower for tasking and if the overuse of service weapons and equipment reducing the service life is acceptable. Given the Ministry of Defence's paranoia of scandals, without any replacement or modernisation in the offing, it is moot point. It is the Government's call if counter-insurgency is supreme over defence of the nation.

It has been stated that the Army will not be used, exception being Special Force units. It remains indistinct as far as the mode of employment that has been envisaged. Are they to be used for what is known as man-hunting which involves capturing or killing important insurgents dubbed as high-value targets? To employ the SF in direct military operations would mean squandering a potent force for what regular forces can accomplish.

Since one cannot forsake operational readiness against external aggression, the option is to gear up the CRPF and authentically and sincerely train them for effective counter-insurgency rather than using them merely to slot voids in numbers with units of untrained personnel and enter the comfort zone. The strategy should aim at 'brainwashing' the CRPF of its police mentality and convert them into a military-like mindset to address counter-insurgency efficiently.

Understandable is the Centre's infuriation at the Maoists' unbridled march, showing up the Centre as bumblingly impotent. Strategy requires understanding ground realities — the strengths and weaknesses — rather than being spurred by infuriation and bruised egos. Ground realities have been given the go by or else there is no rationale that in Sildah, the personnel were located in a market, and in Dantewada, in one stroke, 76 men perished like flies! And to believe the audacious claim that the personnel were fully trained and counter-insurgency capable! The CRPF was kitted for counter-insurgency if the weapons captured by the Maoist is any indicator. It was just that they were untrained. Historically, such a large force has never perished in an insurgent ambush. In all probability, they were resting not having taken the mandated precautions and were caught off guard. And to believe that on a mission to flush out insurgents they camped the night in a Maoist-friendly village! This type of languorous mindset must be ruthlessly obliterated and substituted by an aggressive, proactive, confident, no nonsense derring-do.

If the State and Central Forces lack training and numbers, then how will the Maoists be tackled?

First of all, what is essential is the confidence and knowledge to undertake the task. Apparently, the forces require time to achieve this state. In the interim, since there is no dearth of ex-servicemen with adequate counter-insurgency experience, such officers and men could be inducted in the various units and headquarters employed against the Maoists on the lines of US advisors with the Army of the Republic of Vietnam. No egos would be bruised since CRPF commanders would be nominally in command. Such advisors would be the core group for operational planning, off and on the job training and for advice while conducting counter-insurgency. This would give a fillip to CRPF's self-confidence and expertise in counter-insurgency.

The Maoists are well funded through extortion and the largesse from sympathisers within and outside the country. They are well-stocked in arms with Nepal and Myanmar as conduits. Their training regimen, shown on television, indicates professionalism. It will be a long haul. There is no scope for laxity or being lackadaisical, more so as the initiative is with the Maoists. Initiative has to be wrested from them.

The area under Maoist influence is immense. Given the resources with the Government a single operation addressing all areas is impracticable. Concentration of force and economy of effort is the keystone. Specific areas have to be addressed with maximum resources, while containing areas elsewhere. An initial success is a paramount prerequisite to restore the confidence of the force and avenging the recent mauling at Sildah and Dantewada. Success shall visit once there is the radical metamorphosis in the mindset and mode of execution of operations. The police's modus operandi of base-based operation to return and hunker down has to give way to dominating the area and isolating the population from Maoist influence. Base-bound operations are self-annulling. Operations through a grid of posts are the gospel. Clearing an area of Maoists, the posts sited are tactically and administratively sound and mutually supporting to dominate that area through patrols, raids and ambushes. They should be co-located next to villages. Such co-location enhances local confidence as also isolates the Maoist influence being militarily proactive. Their proximity prevents moral and material support to the Maoists. Co-locating posts near villages assists population surveillance and categorising them as pro-Government, fence-sitters and pro-insurgents. The latter would be kept in check, while pro-Government elements could assist as 'eyes and ears'. Population rosters would control movement of population wherein excessive visitation outside the village would trigger motive determination. Likewise, visitors from outside the village would be monitored and bona fides ascertained. Discrete check of the village's foodgrain, material stock and sowing of fields could indicate stocking or sowing greater than the village's legitimate requirement. It would be an indicator of planned assistance to the Maoists. This could be negated with intensified patrolling and night curfews. Hence, the Government's writ would be established to some extent and influence of the Maoists checked. Intensive civic action and participating in local festivals by the post personnel would, by a long chalk, promote pro-Government sympathies.

On the aspect of inducting the Indian Air Force, logistic support will be a boon. Yet, the same aspect that harries the Army ie the overuse of service equipment without any sight of replacement will be worrisome. The US's Foliage Penetration, Reconnaissance, Surveillance, Tracking, Engagement Radar programme is trying to develop a low-frequency radar to track dismounted personnel under foliage. Therefore, given the yearning for deploying unmanned aerial vehicles, one hopes that the IAF UAVs are equally sophisticated and are in situ and not in the experimental stage.

Satellite surveillance, ground penetration radars, acoustic sensors, IR break beam, seismic sensors, ground surveillance radars, pressure transducers, tethered, guided, free floating balloons could prove positive force multipliers.

Technology is a great boon. In the final analysis, it is the man behind the machine who will change the environment in favour of the Government. Aimless employment of technology will not yield the desired result.

Offensive air support against the Maoists has to be seen beyond the comfort zone. The Maoists will not be based in open terrain. They will use close country under forest canopy cover, ravines and re-entrants. This type of terrain does not lend for effective offensive air support.

No insurgency can flourish without astute leadership, personnel, stores, weapons and equipment. Therefore, the aim should be to eliminate the leadership — a difficult task, prevent fresh recruitment, destroy their weapons through raids and ambushes, seal the routes for replenishment and ensure isolating local support, both moral and material. This is what holds the key.

If insurgency comes, why is the political will and correct employment of trained and motivated force still far behind?

[url=
 

Ray

The Chairman
Professional
Joined
Apr 17, 2009
Messages
43,132
Likes
23,835
To defeat Maoists, grasp the ground reality

The belief that development can run concurrently with military operation is naïve. In an unpredictable and turbulent environment where destruction, mayhem and murder are the rule rather than the exception, the environment is hardly conducive to sustained development. It's time to grasp the ground reality!

The Maoists skate on thin ice — driven by an esoteric abstract — ideology. It appears convoluted to the lettered, let alone a tribal. It is too recondite an abstract to be sustainable under relentless military pressure. Had Maoism been fired by tangible, evocative, emotive issues like religion and ethnicity, may be it could've struggled on.

All tribals are not Maoists. Their deprivations, exploited through sophistry to harbinger salvation, draw them to the Maoist fold. The majority possibly enlist or support because of strong personal reasons or herd mentality.

Many well-intentioned people have opined that peace is attainable through dialogue and development is the sole panacea to the Maoist problem that too being undertaken concurrent with the military operations.

The idea, though well intentioned, is a non-starter. Maoists avow overthrowing the republic by force, rejecting democratic processes. Would they join in dialogue? Or would it be stratagem to seize breathing space to rest, refit and reorganise to return as a more menacing force than ever before? Historically, insurgents do not enter dialogue unless they are made to realise the futility of their effort eg North-East or Kashmir insurgencies. The Maoists are yet to reach that state, currently riding a new high after the Sildah and Dantewada attacks. Will they abdicate their growing ascendancy?

The argument is patently bogus that the state is waging war and the hapless Maoists are merely reciprocating. Isn't violence their means to achieve their aim? The Constitution mandates the States and the Centre maintain law and order. Maoists mandated to unleash murder and mayhem? There lies the subtle antithesis that eludes Maoist camp followers.

The belief that development can run concurrently with military operation is naïve. In an unpredictable and turbulent environment where destruction, mayhem and murder are the rule rather than the exception, the environment is hardly conducive to sustained development. The communication towers and schools were representatives of development and were razed to the ground. The net result was tremendous loss to the exchequer, and a colossal waste in effort and labour, lending to a confidence deficit in the Government.

However, concurrently feasible is the rejuvenating, albeit locally, of the State administration that has totally collapsed. Demotivated and surly administrators on punishment posting are hardly the ones to deliver. They should give way to those with integrity and courage, are deprivation ready and who can deliver. The basic necessities, including educating the tribal in trade and skills to keep them gainfully employed and schemes like the NREGS should be vigorously, fairly, transparently pursued to bring succour. Successfully implemented, it would wean away the tribal from the Maoists and provide the much needed, currently non-existent, intelligence. The main bone of contention is forest resource contractors and mining conglomerates raping the environment and destroying the tradition way of life. They must be reined in. They must be mandated to protect the environment and be sensitive to tribal customs and traditional way of life. Co-opted, they should provide tribal employment and contribute generously to welfare schemes. Failing to do so, should invite the penalty of losing their licence. This will demonstrate that the administration is just, unbiased and sincerely concerned about the tribal and would affirmatively disprove Maoist propaganda.

As far as winning the hearts and minds, rehabilitation of surrendered Maoists is a major aspect of counter-insurgency operations. It must be just and fair. Absorbing them in the police or the paramilitary is erroneous. Disillusioned with the Government rehabilitation, they may return to the Maoist fold. In such an eventuality, the end-state would be the Government 'presenting' a better trained individual, who is aware of the Government's counter-insurgency policy, mode of operations, the weapon systems, the state of training, morale and motivation, the hierarchy and their prowess and weaknesses and so on. The surrendered insurgent gone sour could additionally take a weapon along as a trophy of homecoming! Hence, the rehabilitation should focus solely on training surrendered insurgents in skills or trade that permit eking a decent and profitable existence. Ideally, they should be rehabilitated far from their roots so that they are not in a position to either influence anyone or get influenced by their erstwhile comrade. Rare would be a case returning to the deprivations of the jungle abandoning a new and profitable life!

That said, how does the nation enforce its writ?

Prima facie, there is no indication of any tenacity of purpose except orally.

Successful operations depend on making sound decisions, which subsequently develop into plans to be executed by subordinate staff and commanders.

Effective decision-making takes account of all aspects of operational planning such as deliberate planning prior to operations (contingency planning), responsive planning during operations and the concurrent planning of future operations.

This philosophy recognises that a conflict includes constant changes, uncertainty and time constraints and an adversary who will not necessarily behave as predicted. It acknowledges that prior to operations, detailed and thorough analysis must be conducted to develop the best possible plan and a range of contingency plans. However, it also acknowledges that developing the 'best plan' is often unrealistic.

The development and conduct of operations depends on an integral and continuous aspect known the Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield and planning consists of four steps:

# Mission analysis: This assists in identifying the mission and tasks essential to the successful outcome of the plan. This results in a clear statement of the commander's mission and intent.

# Course of action development: Involves identifying a range of COAs. COAs are broad courses or options open to the commander to accomplish the mission. The number of COAs developed depends on the time made available in the commander's guidance.

# Course of action analysis: Involves planning each feasible COA, beyond engagement, through to its intended end-state. The results of COA analysis surfaces COAs with clear advantages and disadvantages.

# Decision and execution: The commander compares the strengths and weaknesses of each modified COA, and decides which COA will be developed into a plan and executed. The products of this step are the plan of action, contingency plans and supporting plans and orders.

The purpose of the IPB is to update the commander and staff with the situation as it develops, to identify opposition vulnerabilities and opportunities to defeat them, and to anticipate and identify likely and dangerous enemy actions. IPB recognises that part of the nature of conflict is uncertainty and that decisions must be made despite incomplete information. Importantly, IPB focusses information-gathering sources on proving or disproving those assumptions and, which COA the threat has adopted.

If that is how operations are organised, has Operation Green Hunt been organised in a military manner or as an ad hoc police mode of conducting local law and order issues?

The mission is to destroy Maoism. However, the approach of the States and the Centre are divergent. The Centre perceives it as a law and order problem (with the Centre as a facilitator) and hence it is the States' responsibility. The States believe it's a joint mission. The Maoists are not against any State or States per se, and instead is focussing on overthrowing the republic by violence. The manifestation of the republic is the Centre and therefore, it is an insurgency. If it is an insurgency, then the Centre is avoiding involvement in an uncertain long haul and is passing the buck to the States. Abdicating responsibility could be construed as dereliction of duty.

The Home Ministry must have vetted the COAs available to it. Apparently, it appears flawed. The Maoist attacks in Sildah and Dantewada indicate that each feasible COA, beyond engagement, was not thought through to its intended end-state; or else in Sildah, would there have been the bizarre deployment next to a market (to suit political needs) or send untrained CRPF men into Maoist territory? Apparently, neither the Home Ministry nor the CRPF fathoms the tenets of counter-insurgency. If they did, they would have baulked before sending the adhoc party into Dantewada. The breathless proclamation that 45-day training, a week's or a pre-induction being more than adequate to beard the lion in his den signifies ignorance! It takes years to convert a young soldier into a soldier and many years more to equip him with experience to be a counter-insurgent machine!

If COAs were thought through, then the Dantewada operation would not have pivoted on bases. It aimed at clearing/dominating a certain area and then falling back on the base. This has lent credence by the Dantewada DIG's rather astounding assertion that an area 'cleared' soon becomes 'infested' by Maoists, requiring 'sanitisation'. This statement suggests that there is an awareness deficit in how counter-insurgency is conducted. Counter-insurgency is no kabaddi match, where having struck, one scurries back to base and safety. Counter-insurgency involves domination of insurgent areas and isolating the population from Maoist influence. Equally beyond belief is an officer's claim that CRPF's 7.62 SLRs were no match for the Maoists' AK 47. It suggests that the CRPF is yet to understand tactics and its effect of weaponry, let alone counter-insurgency. Weapons are no philosopher's stone granting immortality. Immortality has a chance if augmented with minor tactics. Adroit use of ground with effective use of the weapon is but axiomatic. Both are complementary in defeating insurgents and for one's own survival. The lathicharge and rubber-bullet psyche hardly does for counter-insurgency. Further, unlike in police actions, numbers are not important. Unit cohesiveness, and training as a sub-unit, is what is material for efficient effectiveness. The cavalier launching of the rag-tag sub-unit of A company (45 men), C company (12 men) and G company (15 men) of the 62nd Battalion CRPF, operating out of Chintalnar base flouts all canons of counter-insurgency and was a ripe prescription for disaster to happen, and it happened. In short, missions against Maoists, which is a full-blown insurgency and not a law and order problem, must be addressed as an insurgency. It is incumbent of the Centre to involve itself more robustly. The perception collision between the States and the Centre has led to a muddle-headed chaos, compounded with the inapt and unworkable police psyche underscoring the disastrous outcomes so far.

The Centre's responsibility to quell the insurgency would vector, as per form, on the Army's participation. Notwithstanding, what is reckonable is whether there is surplus manpower for tasking and if the overuse of service weapons and equipment reducing the service life is acceptable. Given the Ministry of Defence's paranoia of scandals, without any replacement or modernisation in the offing, it is moot point. It is the Government's call if counter-insurgency is supreme over defence of the nation.

It has been stated that the Army will not be used, exception being Special Force units. It remains indistinct as far as the mode of employment that has been envisaged. Are they to be used for what is known as man-hunting which involves capturing or killing important insurgents dubbed as high-value targets? To employ the SF in direct military operations would mean squandering a potent force for what regular forces can accomplish.

Since one cannot forsake operational readiness against external aggression, the option is to gear up the CRPF and authentically and sincerely train them for effective counter-insurgency rather than using them merely to slot voids in numbers with units of untrained personnel and enter the comfort zone. The strategy should aim at 'brainwashing' the CRPF of its police mentality and convert them into a military-like mindset to address counter-insurgency efficiently.

Understandable is the Centre's infuriation at the Maoists' unbridled march, showing up the Centre as bumblingly impotent. Strategy requires understanding ground realities — the strengths and weaknesses — rather than being spurred by infuriation and bruised egos. Ground realities have been given the go by or else there is no rationale that in Sildah, the personnel were located in a market, and in Dantewada, in one stroke, 76 men perished like flies! And to believe the audacious claim that the personnel were fully trained and counter-insurgency capable! The CRPF was kitted for counter-insurgency if the weapons captured by the Maoist is any indicator. It was just that they were untrained. Historically, such a large force has never perished in an insurgent ambush. In all probability, they were resting not having taken the mandated precautions and were caught off guard. And to believe that on a mission to flush out insurgents they camped the night in a Maoist-friendly village! This type of languorous mindset must be ruthlessly obliterated and substituted by an aggressive, proactive, confident, no nonsense derring-do.

If the State and Central Forces lack training and numbers, then how will the Maoists be tackled?

First of all, what is essential is the confidence and knowledge to undertake the task. Apparently, the forces require time to achieve this state. In the interim, since there is no dearth of ex-servicemen with adequate counter-insurgency experience, such officers and men could be inducted in the various units and headquarters employed against the Maoists on the lines of US advisors with the Army of the Republic of Vietnam. No egos would be bruised since CRPF commanders would be nominally in command. Such advisors would be the core group for operational planning, off and on the job training and for advice while conducting counter-insurgency. This would give a fillip to CRPF's self-confidence and expertise in counter-insurgency.

The Maoists are well funded through extortion and the largesse from sympathisers within and outside the country. They are well-stocked in arms with Nepal and Myanmar as conduits. Their training regimen, shown on television, indicates professionalism. It will be a long haul. There is no scope for laxity or being lackadaisical, more so as the initiative is with the Maoists. Initiative has to be wrested from them.

The area under Maoist influence is immense. Given the resources with the Government a single operation addressing all areas is impracticable. Concentration of force and economy of effort is the keystone. Specific areas have to be addressed with maximum resources, while containing areas elsewhere. An initial success is a paramount prerequisite to restore the confidence of the force and avenging the recent mauling at Sildah and Dantewada. Success shall visit once there is the radical metamorphosis in the mindset and mode of execution of operations. The police's modus operandi of base-based operation to return and hunker down has to give way to dominating the area and isolating the population from Maoist influence. Base-bound operations are self-annulling. Operations through a grid of posts are the gospel. Clearing an area of Maoists, the posts sited are tactically and administratively sound and mutually supporting to dominate that area through patrols, raids and ambushes. They should be co-located next to villages. Such co-location enhances local confidence as also isolates the Maoist influence being militarily proactive. Their proximity prevents moral and material support to the Maoists. Co-locating posts near villages assists population surveillance and categorising them as pro-Government, fence-sitters and pro-insurgents. The latter would be kept in check, while pro-Government elements could assist as 'eyes and ears'. Population rosters would control movement of population wherein excessive visitation outside the village would trigger motive determination. Likewise, visitors from outside the village would be monitored and bona fides ascertained. Discrete check of the village's foodgrain, material stock and sowing of fields could indicate stocking or sowing greater than the village's legitimate requirement. It would be an indicator of planned assistance to the Maoists. This could be negated with intensified patrolling and night curfews. Hence, the Government's writ would be established to some extent and influence of the Maoists checked. Intensive civic action and participating in local festivals by the post personnel would, by a long chalk, promote pro-Government sympathies.

On the aspect of inducting the Indian Air Force, logistic support will be a boon. Yet, the same aspect that harries the Army ie the overuse of service equipment without any sight of replacement will be worrisome. The US's Foliage Penetration, Reconnaissance, Surveillance, Tracking, Engagement Radar programme is trying to develop a low-frequency radar to track dismounted personnel under foliage. Therefore, given the yearning for deploying unmanned aerial vehicles, one hopes that the IAF UAVs are equally sophisticated and are in situ and not in the experimental stage.

Satellite surveillance, ground penetration radars, acoustic sensors, IR break beam, seismic sensors, ground surveillance radars, pressure transducers, tethered, guided, free floating balloons could prove positive force multipliers.

Technology is a great boon. In the final analysis, it is the man behind the machine who will change the environment in favour of the Government. Aimless employment of technology will not yield the desired result.

Offensive air support against the Maoists has to be seen beyond the comfort zone. The Maoists will not be based in open terrain. They will use close country under forest canopy cover, ravines and re-entrants. This type of terrain does not lend for effective offensive air support.

No insurgency can flourish without astute leadership, personnel, stores, weapons and equipment. Therefore, the aim should be to eliminate the leadership — a difficult task, prevent fresh recruitment, destroy their weapons through raids and ambushes, seal the routes for replenishment and ensure isolating local support, both moral and material. This is what holds the key.

If insurgency comes, why is the political will and correct employment of trained and motivated force still far behind?
 

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