Manning system
needs revision
By Pritam
Bhullar
AT present, more than 50 per cent of
the defence budget is spent on manpower. This is because
of the most expensive system of manning that the Army had
adopted a number of years ago. Until the seventies, a
jawan served in the Army for seven years, the period
called, "colour service", after which he was
transferred to reserve for eight years. During this
period, he was liable to be recalled to colour service in
case of a national emergency.
Since most of the soldiers
remained unemployed after they were sent on reserve, the
colour service was increased from seven to 17 years in
the late 70s. By adopting this system, we made everyone
eligible for pension, least realising that even affluent
countries cannot afford this luxury.
The only way to save on
defence budget is to revert to the old system of manning.
After seven years of colour service, the men should be
absorbed in the Central Police Organisations (CPOs) where
they should serve until the prescribed age of
superannuation, that is, up to 60 years. The Army should
have a lien on their service as reservists for a period
of eight years.
The adoption of this
system will result in several advantages, that is, we
will have a younger army, the CPOs will get highly
trained and disciplined manpower, the pension bill will
be cut by more than half. This amount can then be spent
on modernisation of the Army, which is badly suffering at
present.
This system,
notwithstanding its advantages will never be accepted in
India, thanks to our "all powerful"
bureaucrats.
A sad
reflection
Sadly enough, in all our
conflicts since Independence, our adversaries were
better-equipped than us. This also holds good for counter
insurgency operations.
In a disturbing revelation
in The Sunday Island from Colombo, Dayan
Jayatileke, who was a member of the EPRLF-led government
in Sri Lanka in the late-80s says: "It is little
short of incredible that the Indian military high command
thought that a light infantry armed with archaic
self-loading rifles (SLRs) could go after M-16s and
AK-47s. Sri Lankan policemen on their beats in Colombo
were better armed than the IPKF personnel".
Dayan also says that
though RAW had supplied AK-47 rifles to LTTE and other
Tamil militant groups, the Indian Army did not have them.
Lt Gen (retd) A.S. Kalkat, overall commander of the IPKF,
has said that "The elite Indian para commando units
could be equipped with AK-47s only if and when they were
captured from the LTTE".
Another flaw noticed was
that the Indian troops hardly ever used tactical air
power in close support role because there were no MI_24
helicopters. Gen Kalkat told Dayan in Delhi that there
were only five MI-24s in the Indian Army of which he
could get just two after great difficulty. Mr Dayan also
says that the LTTE would not have mauled the IPKF as much
as it did, if the Indian soldier had AK-47 rifle.
Incidentally, we had over
1300 soldiers killed and three times as many wounded in
our "peace keeping" operations in Sri Lanka.
Whom do you blame for this?
Medical
camps
Good civil-military
relations go a long way in making a country strong.
Nothing can win over a person more than restoring him to
good health when he is ailing.
Seeing some of the sick
and suffering poor villagers of the border areas in
Punjab dying due to lack of medicare, the Army
authorities in these areas started free medical aid camps
about a decade ago. Initially, the villagers were
hesitant to come forward for treatment to the camps. But
in a few days these camps became so popular that the
villagers always requested for more of them to be held.
Since then these short
medical camps generally of three days duration each have
become a regular feature and three to four of them are
held for a group of villages every year. Apart from the
medical examination and treatment, minor operations are
also carried out at these camps. Arrangement is also made
for some of the deserving cases for a long term
treatment. While some medicines to the patients are
provided by the Army, the others are arranged from the
civil medical authorities.
In some of the villages,
the Army has adopted schools for providing medical aid to
the children. This includes periodic medical inspection
and treatment of those children who need it.
Granted that the civil
medical authorities also hold occasional eye camps and
family welfare camps. But these are not enough to cover
all the rural population. Despite the limited resources
of the Army Medical Corps (AMC), the formation commanders
in the border areas have made it a point to help the sick
and the old villagers with medicare.
This
feature was published on February 21, 1999
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