I/II.
[This last statement could also be read as a transgression into
territory outside the army chief’s domain. General Rawat’s
responsibility is to guard the nation’s physical frontiers from
enemies; it is not to draw red lines for political actors in the
system.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/editorials/general-rushes-in-army-general-bipin-rawat-kashmir-4679921/

General rushes in
Army chief’s remarks on human shield, on the force’s role in J&K,
obfuscate distinctions, are unbecoming of his high office

By: Editorial | Published:May 30, 2017 12:12 am

General Rawat’s responsibility is to guard the nation’s physical
frontiers from enemies; it is not to draw red lines for political
actors in the system.

In an interview, Army Chief General Bipin Rawat has defended and
praised Major Nitin Leetul Gogoi for his decision to tie a Kashmiri
artisan to an army jeep as a human shield and parade him through
several villages, as a warning to stone-pelters. By doing this, and by
his implied support for the short-circuiting of the army’s internal
due process vis a vis Major Gogoi’s actions — the army commended the
major even as a court of inquiry was finalising its probe into the
incident — General Rawat risks hurting the enormous institutional
credibility of the force that he heads. It bears reiteration that
Major Gogoi’s conduct was a violation of the constitutional promise of
due process, and of the fundamental rights enshrined in the
Constitution for every citizen, and that it is the army’s duty to
uphold both. But the army chief treads even further on dangerous
ground.

“This is a proxy war and proxy war is a dirty war… You fight a dirty
war with innovations”, the general said. He went on to suggest that it
would have been easier for the armed forces if the protestors were
firing weapons instead of throwing stones: “Then I could do what I
[want to do]”. General Rawat is understandably concerned about the
difficult challenges that confront his men in Kashmir. But can he
afford to lose sight of a fundamental distinction — between armed
militants and civilian protestors? By not acknowledging or respecting
the difference between the two, or suggesting that there is none,
General Rawat could be accused of potentially redefining the army’s
role and mandate in troubling ways, which could end up reducing the
political space for manoeuvre in the Valley. Unwisely, he dismisses
the possibilities of political engagement in Kashmir: “Has political
initiative not been taken in the past? What was the result, you had
Kargil…”.
***This last statement could also be read as a transgression into
territory outside the army chief’s domain. General Rawat’s
responsibility is to guard the nation’s physical frontiers from
enemies; it is not to draw red lines for political actors in the
system.*** [Emphasis added.]

It is undeniable that the army has been thrust into a crisis in
Kashmir not of its making, one that the political leadership should
have taken the lead to resolve. In these circumstances, General Rawat
must arguably aim to limit the fallout of the army’s exposure to what
is primarily a political problem. His ill-judged statements, however,
send out the impression that the army is fighting the people of
Kashmir. This is particularly unfortunate given the fact that the
Indian Army has done stellar work in its effort to build bonds with
the people of Kashmir, through schools, sports activities and rescue
operations during the 2014 flood, as well as this April, when the
waters rose dangerously in some parts of the Valley. The chief of the
Indian Army cannot sound like an angry retired prime time warrior. He
must, at all times, acknowledge the responsibility — and the
constraint — of his high office.

II.
[(T)here is an ever deeper problem in the Army chief’s words. He said
that he wanted citizens to “be afraid” of the Army. While he said this
in the context of Kashmir, the fact is that once the civilian
population starts fearing the Army, they cease to be part of a
democratic union. Never in the history of State-sponsored oppression –
be it the Holocaust by Nazi Germany, the repression in the Soviet
Union by Josef Stalin, or the cultural revolution by Chairman Mao in
China – has the military ever stood up to despots as an institution.
On the contrary, it has willingly become the instrument of oppression
for the despots in power.]

https://scroll.in/article/839060/dealing-with-protests-in-kashmir-the-army-chief-has-spoken-why-is-the-prime-minister-silent

Dealing with protests in Kashmir: The army chief has spoken. Why is
the prime minister silent?
The democratically-elected civilian leadership needs to clarify
whether Indian citizens should be afraid of their army.

14 hours ago

Saikat Datta

In a recent interview that General Bipin Rawat gave to the news agency
PTI, in which he defended Major Nitin Leetul Gogoi – the officer
accused of using a Kashmiri man as a “human shield” last month – the
chief of Army staff made a series of startling statements that perhaps
no Army chief in India has ever made before.

Rawat said that he wished those pelting stones at security forces in
the Valley “were firing weapons at us” as that would give him, and the
Army, reason to deliver a proportionate response. Rawat said:

“In fact, I wish these people, instead of throwing stones at us, were
firing weapons at us. Then I would have been happy. Then I could do
what I [want to do].”

Then Rawat issued an ominous warning to citizens:

“Adversaries must be afraid of you and at the same time your people
must be afraid of you. We are a friendly Army, but when we are called
to restore law and order, people have to be afraid of us.”

In essence, Rawat argued that citizens must fear the Army otherwise it
would become ineffective as a force.

This was probably the first time a serving Army chief in independent
India was asking its citizens to fear the force.

Rawat’s comments are in line with a shrill public discourse that has
become increasingly common today, especially in television studios
where retired generals, egged on by anchors desperate for people to
watch their channels, scream for war, secure in the knowledge that
they will never have to fight one.

Fanatical nationalism helps sell these channels. Thus, they slickly
package the deaths of India’s young soldiers in conflict zones in
Kashmir and the North East to market themselves and the retired
war-mongering generals they host. The dead soldiers eventually fade
away, forgotten within days by all except their grieving families and
colleagues. Meanwhile, cheering crowds, intoxicated by nationalism,
continue to demand more sacrifices at its altar. And the cycle
continues.

But insurgencies have a strange way of consuming nations, as well as
the generals sent to fight it. These tales are usually forgotten or
deliberately buried because they do not suit the narrative. The
stories of defeat are not glamorous, nor do they lend themselves to
high television ratings – the oxygen that feeds news channels. But
some tales are worth recounting, and they offer a critical reality
check.

(Photo credit: YouTube grab.)
(Photo credit: YouTube grab.)

A failed strategy
In the summer of 2009, the US sent across one of its most
distinguished generals to take charge of American forces in
Afghanistan. General Stanley McChrystal was the hero of the Iraq war,
having successfully run the Joint Special Operations Command, which
was credited with breaking the back of the Iraqi insurgency.

Brought in to take charge of the US’ failing war effort in
Afghanistan, McChrystal immediately embarrassed the Barack Obama
administration by publicly seeking 40,000 more troops to launch a
major offensive in the Hemland province.

Earlier, during his stint in Iraq, he took the battle to the enemy and
was responsible for US forces successfully pushing back insurgents,
leading to the capture of Saddam Hussain and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the
head of the Al Qaeda in Iraq. The media loved him and lionised him by
focusing on his past as a member of the elite Special Forces and
building up an image of him as a cerebral general with frugal habits.

McChrystal went to Afghanistan with every intention to solve the
Afghan problem. But it all ended when a reporter from the Rolling
Stones magazine, who spent a few days with him and his team, put
together a devastating profile of him. In the piece, titled The
Runaway General, McChrystal and his team were found ridiculing the
democratically-elected US government, and taking decisions that were
contrary to the Afghanistan policies of the Obama administration. When
the story broke, McChrystal found that he had lost the confidence of
President Obama, and resigned. He was soon replaced by his main rival,
General David Petraeus.

Michael Hastings, the Rolling Stones reporter, followed his article up
with a book called, The Operators: The Wild and Terrifying Inside
Story of America’s War in Afghanistan. The book criticised how the US
military was fighting the war in Afghanistan, and pointed out that
while McChrystal was a good man and a great military mind, he had come
to believe in the infallibility of his mission. He believed that he
and his team could do no wrong. This essentially led to a point where
he could not recognise a fact staring him in the face: that the
Afghans did not want an occupation force in their land.

Hastings wrote:

“The simple and terrifying reality, forbidden from discussion in
America, was that despite spending $600 billion a year on the
military, despite having the best fighting force the world had ever
known, they were getting their asses kicked by illiterate peasants who
made bombs out of manure and wood.”

This feeling of infallibility also led to the US military leadership’s
failure to recognise that its grand counter-insurgency strategy of
Clear, Hold, Build – included in a Field Manual of the United States
Army on counter-insurgency – had failed miserably in Afghanistan. The
strategy, as the name suggests, involves clearing the territory of
insurgents, holding on to it and finally helping with rebuilding
efforts to earn the support of the local populace for the local
government or counter-insurgents.

The failure of this strategy is now well documented. But the memoirs
or interviews of US Army generals who have served in Afghanistan tend
to gloss over it, or avoid mentioning it altogether. And this is not
the first time generals have chosen to bury their failures.

The infallibility belief
In September 1944, during World War II, allied forces launched their
biggest airborne assault against Germany. Operation Market Garden was
the brainchild of the British Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery who
thought it would swiftly bring about an end to the war.

The idea was to parachute thousands of troops into the Netherlands,
capture some crucial bridges and then cut into the industrial heart of
Germany, thus depriving the Germans of their rifles and tanks. The
operation was a massive failure. Thousands of allied troops parachuted
into the Netherlands, only to be caught and sent to Prisoner of War
camps.

Montgomery never owned up to this military disaster, reducing it to a
few paragraphs in his memoirs. Later, his colleague and subordinate,
Lieutenant General Fredrick Browning, ruefully confessed that allied
troops had “perhaps gone a bridge too far”. It took nearly 20 years
for the truth to come out, when war correspondent Cornelius Ryan
meticulously built up the sequence of events and published them in his
seminal book, A Bridge Too Far.

Civilian leadership’s control
The history of warfare, especially counter-insurgency efforts, is
replete with such examples. The feeling of infallibility amongst the
military and its leaders is inevitable. Soldiers are frequently called
upon to do extremely challenging tasks at great risk to life and limb.
They are given great power for this. At the same time, they are also
placed under great restraint by the democratically-elected civilian
leadership.

The US civil leadership exercised its control over the military not
only in the McChrystal case, but also by recalling General Douglas
MacArthur after he bungled the Korean War by ignoring the direct
orders of his civilian superiors. In the case of Rawat, however,
instead of being silent, as it has been so far, the Indian civilian
leadership would have done well to slap down the Army chief’s
unprecedented statements. However, it has not done so, possibly
because his statements suit their political narrative.

To cut Rawat some slack, the military, trained to fight wars and
suppress insurgencies, is focussed on its job. This narrow focus comes
at the expense of political and humane considerations that play a
major role in resolving or exacerbating any conflict. What India’s
civilian leadership must remember is that finally, conflicts end not
because of the military, but because of the larger political process.
Losing sight of this essential point is not only ignoring the
inevitability of history, but also the fact that violence will never
end with more violence.

Weapons over stones?
Rawat’s statements to PTI are, in many ways, a call for a “free hand”
for the military to brutally suppress any unrest. It is possible that
he did not mean it as such either and only spoke out as a leader who
has to lead his men into battle.

However, by wishing that stone pelters take up weapons, he has just
made a case for more armed militancy in the Kashmir Valley. This is
counter to every tenet of successful counter-insurgency campaigns,
which, throughout history, have sought to reduce violence, not
increase it. Fewer weapons and more stone pelters are a good thing
since stone pelters can be persuaded to return to their daily lives.
However, militants with weapons will only end up killing more people
until the military gets them.

(Photo credit: AFP).
(Photo credit: AFP).
Also, if the thousands of stone pelters do take up arms, the Army will
be facing a war, which will have terrible consequences. Additionally,
will the Army chief make the same argument every time the Army is
called to quell disturbances in other parts of India, be it the Jat
agitation in Haryana or stone-pelters in Gujarat?

But ***there is an ever deeper problem in the Army chief’s words. He
said that he wanted citizens to “be afraid” of the Army. While he said
this in the context of Kashmir, the fact is that once the civilian
population starts fearing the Army, they cease to be part of a
democratic union. Never in the history of State-sponsored oppression –
be it the Holocaust by Nazi Germany, the repression in the Soviet
Union by Josef Stalin, or the cultural revolution by Chairman Mao in
China – has the military ever stood up to despots as an institution.
On the contrary, it has willingly become the instrument of oppression
for the despots in power.*** [Emphasis added.]

The day Indian citizens start fearing the military, as the Army chief
has prescribed, is the day India will truly become a police state. It
is now up to our political masters to decide whether they want such a
future.

Corrections and clarifications: This copy has been updated to
correctly refer to Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery as a member of the
British, not US, forces; and to replace the reference to General Sam
Browne with that of Lieutenant General Fredrick Browning, who was
Montgomery’s colleague.




-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to