http://scroll.in/article/819663/far-from-being-anti-national-it-is-a-patriotic-duty-to-question-the-military

OPINION

Far from being anti-national, it is a patriotic duty to question the military

Not to question the Indian army and to treat it like a holy cow is to
go down the road taken by Pakistan and China.

5 hours ago
Updated an hour ago

On March 16, 1968, US Army soldiers from the Company C of the 1st
Battalion, 20th Infantry Regiment, 11th Brigade of the 23rd (Americal)
Infantry Division dropped in on two villages in South Vietnam, known
as My Lai and My Khe. In the subsequent few hours, these soldiers of
Charlie Company would go on to kill over 500 villagers – men, women,
children and infants. Some of the women were gang-raped and their
bodies mutilated. The massacre, which later came to be called “the
most shocking episode of the Vietnam War” would have been quietly
buried but for an investigative reporter, Seymour Hersh, who got a
tip-off about the story more than 19 months later and pursued the case
until he found the testimony of Lieutenant William Calley Jr. a
platoon leader in Charlie Company.

Hersh, who was a freelancer in 1969, was turned down by all the
prominent publications he approached with his story, none of whom
wanted to question the armed services, especially at a time when the
US was waging a war in Vietnam. The publications did not think it was
“patriotic” to publish such an explosive story, because it would raise
doubts about the military.

The wall of silence surrounding what has come to be known as the My
Lai massacre was finally broken when Hersh managed to sell his story
to the Dispatch News Service, a small news agency, that sent out the
story to 50 newspapers. Within a few days, nearly 30 newspapers had
picked up the story and it went on to become one of the greatest
exposes of one of the largest massacres of civilians carried out by
American troops in the 20th century.

State of war
Much has been written and said after the Director General of Military
Operations announced that the Indian army had “conducted surgical
strikes” at terrorists’ “launch pads along the Line of Control” on
September 29.

The common refrain in all these arguments has been that the military
should never be questioned. Doing so, it has been argued, would be
tantamount to treason. The same argument was used in another case,
when the New York Times went ahead and published a top secret report,
the “Pentagon Papers”, which revealed that the US was losing the war
in Vietnam.

Furious that the report had been leaked, the government went to court
and sought an injunction, which was granted. Both the New York Times
and the Washington Post were barred from publishing the story till the
case was heard by the courts. In 16 days, the case travelled from the
lower courts to the US Supreme Court, and the full bench of all the
nine judges agreed to hear the case.

After hearing arguments from both sides, the US Supreme Court, in one
of its most celebrated judgments in history, ruled by a majority of 6
to 3 that the newspapers had every right to publish the stories, even
though the US was waging a war. In short, the majority judges ruled
that in a democracy, the people had every right to question the
government or the military.

Addressing the patriotic line of argument, put forth by government
lawyers, Justices Hugo L Black, William O Douglas and Thurgood
Marshall wrote in their individual opinion in the judgment that it was
paramount for the free press “…to prevent any part of the Government
from deceiving the people and sending them off to distant lands to die
of foreign fevers and foreign shot and shell.”

If these decisions weren’t exposed or challenged, then it would
irreparably harm democracy, the justices said. “In my view, far from
deserving condemnation for their courageous reporting, The New York
Times, The Washington Post and other newspaper should be commended for
serving the purpose that the Founding Fathers saw so clearly,” wrote
Justice Black. “In revealing the workings of government that led to
the Vietnam war, the newspapers nobly did precisely that which the
founders hoped and trusted they would do.”

The Pentagon Papers judgment, delivered on June 30, 1971, continues to
hold good for journalists in the US even today, and bars the
government from making any attempts to hamper the press from
publishing any classified material that will question decisions taken
by public authorities, especially the military.

The need for the truth, especially in closed communities like the
military, is essential for their well-being. The lack of exposure
leads to practices within the military that finally undermine the
institution. This has been witnessed in Israel, one of the few
democracies that pre-censors any story by the media on the military.
The Yom Kippur war in October 1973 found the Israelis severely wanting
as Egyptian and Syrian forces launched a coordinated attack. Still
high after its resounding success in the Six-Day war, the Israeli
Defence Forces had been lulled into a sense of false confidence.

The lack of deep and insightful questioning by the media or the people
gave the Israelis the false belief that they were invincible. The war
finally ended well for Israel, but the damage had been done by then.
Once again, in September 1982, allies of Israeli Defence Forces in the
civil war in Lebanon carried out massacres in two refugee camps knows
as Sabra and Shatila which, as per some estimates, were in the region
of nearly 3,500 innocent civilians. The Israeli forces watched but
refused to intervene, leading to the horrific massacre of innocent
men, women and children.

National security
In March 2012, a letter written by the then army chief and now
minister of state for external affairs, General VK Singh, to the prime
minister caused a major furore in Parliament. Singh wrote about the
precarious condition of the Indian Army, the depleted stocks of
critical ammunition and the inability to fight a war against China for
more than two days because of lack of critical spares and equipment.

The Parliament’s Standing Committee on Defence, blissfully unaware of
the letter until it was leaked out, was furious. In a meeting with the
defence secretary and the Vice Chief of Army, the MPs demanded to know
the veracity of the Army Chief’s claims. Once confirmed, they demanded
a time-bound action plan from the defence secretary to address the
crippling shortages.

It comes down to individuals holding key positions in the military, in
the end, whose vested interests have often prevailed while invoking
and imposing a ban on information under the guise of national
interest.

In 2005, the then Chief of Naval Staff did not reveal that his wife’s
nephew was involved in a case of leak of secrets from the Naval War
Room. For months a Board of Inquiry investigated the case but it was
only after the relative’s name was revealed in a newspaper report did
he offer to step down. Had the newspaper report not exposed the
relationship, the Chief would have never offered to step down.

India’s chequered military history is replete with such instances.
Originally raised as a colonial army to subjugate Indian citizens as
well as fight the wars of the British Empire, its transition to the
army of an independent republic has not been smooth. This has led to
frequent clashes between the military and its civilian counterparts,
especially over pay and perks and relevance in governance. Therefore,
questioning the military and its claims becomes an essential
requirement to maintain the professionalism and high standards that
are necessary for apolitical organisations. Unless this is
scrupulously followed, Indian armed forces face a real danger of going
down the same path as that followed by their principal adversaries –
the armies of Pakistan and China.

Saikat Datta

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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