Strategic Blunders of India
by N S Malik on 01 Aug 2009 9 Comments

At a recent seminar, the various leadership challenges India has to overcome in order to become a superpower were identified. It was rightly asserted that Indian civilization right from Mehrgarh (7000-3000 BC) through the Golden Age (Maurya and Gupta period) to the Sikh Empire had a glorious tradition of administration, scientific innovation and empire building. A nation which had the largest cities in the world, the best sanitation system, people of high calibre and moral values, gave civilisational values to the world, shunning violence and military conquest as the means of glory, and yet protected itself securely. India’s greatness as a nation emerged clearly.


The long period of slavery under foreign rule brought us to a level where after independence the question raised was ‘will India survive as a nation.’ Today, 60 years later, the question being raised is ‘will India become a superpower.’ It was pointed out that India lacks a strategic culture, and has failed to articulate clearly its sense of national interest and national security strategy. To have an impact as a leading world power, a strategic vision and a military tradition that brooks no security lapses tactically and strategically, is paramount.


Sixty years of neglect of security has brought us to the stage where we need to lean on the ‘sole superpower’ to help us put pressure on our neighbour who has proclaimed a strategy of a ‘thousand cuts’ to bleed India. India is incapable of answering the outrageous terrorist attacks on Mumbai, numerous other cities, and mayhem in J&K.  This is all a culmination of the mindset of a paranoid leadership that views the Indian Armed Forces as a threat and fears coups, as in the neighbourhood. The greatest blunder has been the non-inclusion of the armed forces in strategic decision making, thus missing military inputs in our diplomacy.


History is a great teacher if one wants to learn; military history even more so, as most history is based on military victories and defeats. My study of the strategic blunders brings forth the most stupendous stupidity any national leadership can be accused of.


Pandit Nehru was the visionary who set us on this course of neglect of the armed forces. His vision of security was based on the flawed principle of Ahimsa, perhaps reinforced by an erroneous understanding of the freedom struggle, Congress having taken all the credit for it by Gandhi’s non-cooperation movement. It failed to take into account the role of the Azad Hind Fauj and Netaji Subhash Bose’s relentless struggle for India’s freedom. 


This was to deny the greatest son of India his role in forcing the British to quit. The court martial of three officers of the Azad Hind Fauj, Col Shah Nawaz, Maj Prem Sehgal and Capt Gurbax Dhillon at Red Fort in 1945-46 ignited the nation and made the Indian Army uneasy.  Naval mutiny at Bombay and various mutinies by small units at various military stations, such as Karachi, Jabalpur, and daily fisticuffs in Officers messes and verbal duals between British and Indian officers made the British uncomfortable.


The Intelligence input was that if anything happened to the three INA officers under court martial, India would erupt and not a single British man or woman would escape to England.  The result was a hasty decision to leave India, even advancing the date of transfer of power from 30 June 1948 to 15 August 1947. 


This was confirmed by Lord Clement Atlee at Calcutta when he visited India later. He was asked why the British ran away from India when actually there was no real movement for freedom after 1930, except for the British policy of divide and rule, igniting Hindu-Muslim feuds throughout India. His answer was straightforward, ‘we had lost the trust of the Indian Army.’ In answer to the second question as to the impact of the non-cooperation movement on the freedom of India, he is supposed to have sarcastically chewed out the words M-I-N-I-M-A-L.


The new Indian leadership, instead of strengthening the Indian Armed forces, decided to cut them to size, both in strength and standing. The Army’s pay packet was reduced by one-third. Its strength was brought down to 150,000 and later to 75,000 only, as Pandit Nehru told Parliament, ‘we are a peace loving nation, we do not need a large standing army, police will do the job.’


Fortunately for India , further disbandment came to a halt as Kashmir erupted when the Pakistan army attempted to takeover the state with Kabalis and disguised Pak army personnel. 1947-48 saw intense fighting in J&K, where the Indian Army again achieved such firsts as taking tanks to the highest point at the Zojila Pass and opening the Srinagar-Leh Road, failing which Ladakh would have been lost as Gilgit and Skardu were. The Army was on the move and the Pak army running away when our first major strategic blunder took place. India went to the UN, in spite of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and the Army advising against it. The result has been a totally mismanaged J&K policy since.


Recognition of Chinese suzerainty over Tibet in 1950 and withdrawal of our military posts from Lhasa and Yatung brought China to our northern borders and opened another front to guard. That was not the end of this flawed China policy; we hallucinated about Hindi Chini Bhai Bhai and neglected our defence. This resulted in the shameful debacle of 1962, rightly called a ‘Himalayan Blunder.’


But the most shameful act was the acceptance of ceasefire, unilaterally declared by the Chinese, and not preparing to fight back. After all, nations suffer tactical reverses, but they do not necessarily become strategic defeats. The British Army was down and out at Dunkirk and had to evacuate the European mainland, but returned after four years to defeat the Germans. Singapore was lost in 1942, but the British Indian Army went back and defeated the Japanese. Why have we accepted the 1962 debacle as final and never thought of retaking our lost land from the aggressor?


The 1965 war was another blunder that could have turned into a monumental disaster, but for the tenacity of the Indian soldier and the overconfidence of the Pakistani army leadership. In 1958, Pakistan entered into a pact with USA and started receiving arms aid. The only action Nehru took was to get a verbal assurance from the US that these arms would not be used against India. Pray, who were they for then?


It did not dawn on our leadership to upgrade our army arsenal to match Pakistani preparations. Worse was the effect of the 1962 debacle, which woke us up, but diverted all attention to the mountains, neglecting the western front. The result was a mismatch and a weaker than Pakistan army taking to the field against Pakistan’s Patton tanks, 155mm long range guns, and F-86 Sabre and F-104 Star fighters. They were not only far superior to our WWII equipment in performance, but numerically also outnumbered us.


Besides, our intelligence failed to establish even the basic structure of the Pakistan army, with the result that we went in thinking Pakistan had only one armoured division, the main striking force of any army, same as us, when it had two. Fortunately our soldiers fought Pakistan to standstill in the plains area, while our troops in the mountainous terrain of Pir Panjal and Kargil sector captured the important Haji Pir Pass, reopening the Poonch-Uri Road and making Pakistani defenses untenable in these areas.


Alas, at Tashkent our national leadership magnanimously returned the strategic Haji Pir Pass, again closing the link to Uri and allowing Pakistan the freedom to infiltrate J&K through this pass. We won the war on the battlefield, but lost it on the negotiating table.


1971 is a glorious chapter in the annals of Indian military history. We created history by liberating a nation and decisively defeating the Pakistan army on the battlefield, capturing 93,000 PoWs. Alas, we squandered the victory at Shimla where Indira Gandhi fell for the false promises of the smooth talking Z.A. Bhutto.  We won the war on the battlefield, but lost it on the negotiating table.


In 1974, our scientists did India proud by making the N-bomb and demonstrating it at Pokhran. Alas, we fell for the American threat and disassembled all infrastructure for the same; though an alerted Pakistan went all out to acquire the bomb and finally succeeded in making one in 1985, while we remained without one for a much longer period.  Under the threat of the bomb, Pakistan was able to put Punjab on fire and later J&K.  Our stronger armed forces were impotent as a new kind of warfare had surfaced in the subcontinent.  Fortunately in 1998, India got a government that looked to security first, and under the leadership of Atal Bihari Vajpayee we reasserted ourselves at Pokhran II. 


Kargil was to a certain extent an intelligence failure, but righted by the valour of our soldiers and young officers. It is a tribute to the Army officer class that such high rates of casualty among officers shows leadership from the front. Our Shat Shat Shardhanjali to the 527 brave hearts of the Indian Army and Air Force. The nation paid tribute to them on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the Kargil Victory, though government actions left a bitter taste at the end.


The question being asked today is whether Sharm-Al-Sheikh will fall in the same category of strategic blunders as earlier ones. Will we ever learn from our shameful historical blunders?


As a retired soldier I feel saddened when I find the leadership pays no heed to national security. With changing dimensions of warfare, we need to devise new ways and means to be a step ahead of the enemy. But first we must recognize the enemy and his modus operandi. It is no good making diplomatic overtures and resting on assurances that are not worth the paper they are written on. How many times has Pakistan made promises it never kept?


How are the Chinese claiming Arunachal Pradesh? Their intentions are clear; we refuse to see. India is threatened externally and internally, and the democratically elected government is fast asleep. Unless a country is militarily strong, no one will respect it, and all economic gains will be for someone else to enjoy. Let us not repeat the story of the past seven hundred years.


Lt. Gen. N.S. Malik, PVSM, is former Deputy Chief of Army Staff

User Comments Post a Comment
Gen. Malik's writeup makes for disturbing reading.
Ramesh
August 01, 2009
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India never learns from its mistakes. It chose nehru over sardar patel and again manmohan over mr. advani. mms has once again proved that he is the weakest pm and the congress party has history of making strategic blunders for which india is still paying for it and yet people of this country still elect them.
Naina
August 01, 2009
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Miltarism and jingoism is not the answer to Indias problems of insecurity. The RAW unfortunately by its violent interferance and destabilistion in the the sub continant has created a sence of insecurity among her neighbours that has been exploited by Indias enemies . For Indian security more than any thing there has to be stability and friendly relations with her neighbours. Internal security can only be established by good governance and sustainable economy. For instance the creation of the LTTE and arming it has created instability in the area that has made India spend Billions to improve her naval forces for its security in the southern front. This money could have been used to improve the economic conditions of the poor (80% of Indians live on less than Rs 20/day) and in turn secure internal stability.Hegamony and immitating the west and folowing there policyof might is right is not the answer .. When India and China in 1800 accounted for more than 50% of the worlds GDPs they were joined together by the Indic/Buddhist/confucius philosophy. That is the way for India & asia
jan
August 01, 2009
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The complete details and the real impact of the Indian Navy Revolt are still unknown. Most court martials were and are still kept under the wraps for reasons implied in this article.
George Augustine
August 02, 2009
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As long as the Babus dominate the affairs in India you will never have a strong Army. As long as you dont have a strong army your becoming a super power will remain a dream.
Kuldip Singh
August 03, 2009
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The million dollar question.........is India willing and ready to become a superpower and face the tribulations that come with it? I think not.
Arup Roy Chowdhury
August 03, 2009
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I totally agree with the article that India has forgotten all their freedom fighters except Gandhi & Nehru. All of them contributed immensely to the freedom struggle. Are there no other leaders except Ganhi & Nehru ? The policies of Nehru & Gandhi have become obsolute in today's world. We are still reaping the mistakes /blunders committed by the Congress Party even now. Because of them, India was divided. Just for power. In case Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose was there the image of India would have been different. Just see our foreign policy. Even our neighbouring countries do not care about us and do not listen to Inida. India is considered to be a soft target since we do not have any strong policy. See our timid response to the recent beating of Indians in Australia, checking of President Kalam, attitude of Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka. We do not have any strong tactics in our foreign policy. Thia ia due to the the present politicians. They are more interested in filling their pockets than the interest of the common people. They are more interested in making statutues or building private airport or on their security and spending crores of public money. All this can happen i n India only. Even the Courts are powerless to stop these politicians. Parliament is now dominated by useless issues like a programme on TV or about Ambani brothers or their own personal security. There is serious debate on serious issues like price rise. They would not discuss issues like security pf the country, enhancement of power, machinery of the armed forces by providing them night visions, or other modern machinery. They would not discuss on how to modernise the Indian forces or police or para military forces. It is high time that all the security cover need be scrapped and in case they use them they should pay for this services. It is high time that the Court stop these politicians. Politicians tell that they are there to serve the people. Then why do they need security? How much money is spend in the name of security or foreign travels by the Politician or even tours inside India ? They would never reveal these figures. .
Bhaskar Chakrabarti
August 07, 2009
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General Malik has written an excellent piece, but as long as we have ameteurs looking after our security policies, the policy of drift and appeasement will continue. How unfortunate that the Indian Army, which has pulled the chestnuts out of the fire for our bumbling political leaders and bureaucrats repeatedly and has served the nation with such loyalty, continues to be marginalised and remains out of the loop for security formulations.
It is the intelligentia of the nation that needs to wake up, if we want to regain our past glory. Lt Gen Vijay Oberoi; 18 Aug 2009.
LT GEN VIJAY OBEROI
August 18, 2009
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The main draw back in our INDIA is that no regulatory authority is working religously,causing frustration among people in society.The need of Self awereness should arise in human being at all level.
We should review ,analyse and transform the old traditional system which has been formulated according to circumsatnce and need of that time .Now the system,policies,acts,laws in every feild whether it may be Industrial,Agricurtral,Political,Education,Human Resouces,Selection and recruitment in Service,Defence Services, and all infrastructures.must be amended and implemented as per todays need and pace of time as we the technolgy changes with time changes.
Avanindra Yadav
April 16, 2010
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