Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Indian Defence Needs Lean Mean Fighting Machine
Geopolitics
|April 2017
Some time ago, the Prime Minister expressed the view that our armed forces should be driven by technology and not by an increase in numbers. LT GEN VINOD BHATIA points out where and how the numbers could be reduced to make our forces lean and mean.

While addressing the Combined Commanders Conference in December 2015 onboard INS Vikramaditya, broad areas for military reforms to include manpower rationalization, defence planning, restructuring higher defence organisation, joint warfare, and defence procurement. His directions challenged the established structures, systems and organisations of India’s military and the mindset of senior military leaders. India is probably one of the two mega nations in the world which is adding to its military might by resorting to manpower accretions. The other nation being the US where the Trump administration has approved a 70,000 or 11 per cent accretion to the army and marines indicating a shift from the way they plan to meet future security challenges. On the other hand, post the September 4, 2015 military parade where China demonstrated its military might, President Xi Jinping surprised the PLA by declaring cuts of 300,000 troops.
It is an established fact that nations always prepare and fight the last war. To assume that the Armed Forces are not prepared to combat future security challenges will be incorrect. However, the concepts, doctrines, capabilities and capacities required may not be adequate. The resistance to structural and systematic changes remains a major weakness. The armed forces are mandated to ensure the territorial integrity of our nation, which also implies securing our borders, 3488 km of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) along the India-China border, 772 km of the Line of control (LC) in J&K and 126 km of the Actual Ground Position Line (AGPL) in Siachen Glacier in addition to a 7516 km long coast line. India’s unsettled and porous borders manned by the army lie at altitudes of 4500 meters and above with woefully inadequate infrastructure and extreme climatic conditions demanding
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 2017-Ausgabe von Geopolitics.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Geopolitics

Geopolitics
AXIOM-4 AND BEYOND: ALL SET FOR GAGANYAAN MISSION
Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla's successful return from space and his subsequent return to India have set the ball rolling for the Indian human spaceflight programme, with the Gaganyaan manned mission scheduled to lift off in 2027
11 mins
September 2025

Geopolitics
INDIA'S CHINA CALCULUS AND THE POK QUESTION
India's strategic necessity in dealing with China and Pakistan is to compartmentalise challenges without diluting resolve. Improving relations with China should be an investment in bandwidth to settle the western question, and formalising the LoC as the international border with Pakistan remains the least risky path.
9 mins
September 2025

Geopolitics
HYPE VERSUS REALITY: THE INDO-US MILITARY RELATIONS
All the tall talks about a \"defining relationship\" between India and the United States notwithstanding, the fact remains that in the eyes of officialdom in Washington, India does not fit into the strategic interests of the United States in the way Australia, Japan, and South Korea do in Asia.
10 mins
September 2025

Geopolitics
THE SU 57 CONUNDRUM
Revolutionising Su-57! Why India Is The Only Country That Can Boost The Fortunes Of Russia's Stealth Fighter
5 mins
September 2025

Geopolitics
FORGING AN IMPENETRABLE SKY SHIELD
The Sudarshan Chakra represents the beginning of India's air defence evolution. As threats continue evolving, the system must adapt and expand to maintain effectiveness through continuous technology development, regular system updates, and periodic capability assessments
11 mins
September 2025

Geopolitics
THE UNMANNED VANGUARD
The utility of Unmanned Ground Vehicles makes them a vital addition for the Indian armed forces, but their pace of adoption needs to be accelerated.
10 mins
September 2025

Geopolitics
HOW INDIA GOT ITS WAY ON KISHANGANGA
Retired civil servant, Subash Chandra Garg, 1983 batch Indian Administrative Service officer from the Rajasthan cadre, has released his seventh book—No Minister!
11 mins
September 2025

Geopolitics
RESHAPING COMMUNICATIONS
Software-Defined Radios are indispensable on the modern battlefield and are being inducted in large numbers by the Indian armed forces,
8 mins
September 2025

Geopolitics
SHIELDING INDIA'S LIFELINES
From energy grids, pipelines, hospitals, data centres, airports, rail hubs, cultural and religious sites, military bases, to nuclear plants, India's critical infrastructure is the new target of visible and invisible enemies, seeking to paralyse the arteries of the nation. The Sudarshan Chakra Mission seeks to blend mythological inspiration with modern science in creating not only a military shield but a comprehensive national protection grid to confront the increasingly asymmetric forms of modern warfare head-on.
12 mins
September 2025

Geopolitics
A MISSILE WITH A MESSAGE
India's Agni-5 missile represents a critical development in the country's strategic defence capabilities, as it is a direct response to the complex security environment India is currently facing and reflects significant advancements in missile technology
9 mins
September 2025
Translate
Change font size