ID | 172639 |
Title Proper | Creating Theatre Command to Meet Our Specific Conditions |
Language | ENG |
Author | Kakkar, Harsha |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In India while nature and range of threats from China and Pakistan have changed, the structure of the forces to counter these threats has remained constant. Each Service views its strategic and operational role in isolation. Joint-ness and integration in operations come secondary to individual service assumed roles and goals. This has led to lack of synergy in operations. Apart from being a manpower intensive armed force, there is lack of interoperability between the forces with neither commonality of equipment nor economies of scale. Shortcomings in the current structure also impact force application. Besides this, the current sectoral area of responsibility and existing allocation of forces make force application predictable. The armed forces within themselves have seventeen individual service commands, most of which are neither co-located nor co-purposed. There are seven single service commands facing China as compared to a single Chinese Western Command deployed across. The existing shortcomings mandate that the system be rehauled to bring about better synergy in every aspect spread from training, capability development to operations. |
`In' analytical Note | USI Journal Vol. 150, No.620; Apr-Jun 2020: p.166-178 |
Journal Source | USI Journal 2020-06 150, 620 |
Key Words | National Security Threats ; Theatre Command |