National Security Architecture Reforms & Theatre Commands : Discussions

Car Flag of CDS :
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Peak Cap of CDS :
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Shoulder Rank Badges of CDS :
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Belt Buckle of CDS :
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Buttons on Working Dress of CDS :
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India will work out its own model of theatre commands: CDS Rawat

Rajat Pandit | TNN | Updated: Jan 2, 2020, 8:45 IST
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NEW DELHI: India will work out its own mechanisms for theatre commands, says the chief of defence staff (CDS) General Bipin Rawat, in the backdrop of the urgent need to build an integrated land-air-sea war-fighting machinery for a greater combat punch despite the ongoing fund crunch for military modernisation.

“There are methods of doing ‘theaterisation’. We don’t have to copy from western methods or others. We can have our own systems. We will jointly work out mechanisms…I think it will work,” said Gen Rawat, after taking the tri-service guard of honour at South Block on Wednesday. Though Gen Rawat did not spell out the details, sources said he has been tasked by the government to initiate and spearhead doctrinal and transformational changes as well as prepare a roadmap for the first new theatre command to be set up in four to five years.

This, of course, will take some doing because the Army, Navy and IAF zealously guard their turfs. India’s only theatre or geographical command in the strategically-located Andaman and Nicobar archipelago, which places all the assets and manpower of the three services under one operational commander, has largely failed to realise its potential due to inter-service rivalry, general politico-bureaucratic apathy and funding problems since it was set up in 2001.

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The PMO and defence establishment have discussed the need to have integrated commands over the last few years. There was even a proposal to establish theatre commands in the shape of one or two (one each for west and east of Nepal) for the “northern borders” with China, a western command for Pakistan, a counter-insurgency operations command and one southern or two peninsular commands for the maritime borders. A strategic air command, in turn, could be handled by the IAF.

But the IAF had strongly opposed the move, stressing it would be operationally unwise to divide the country’s “limited air assets” among different theatre commands. The force, after all, has just 30 fighter squadrons when at least 42 are needed for requisite deterrence against any collusive threat from Pakistan and China.

Similar is the case with other critical platforms like AWACS (airborne warning and control systems) and mid-air refuelling aircraft. “The entire country should be treated as one theatre. We have shown through ‘Gagan Shakti’ and other exercises that the IAF can swiftly switch its assets from the western to eastern front, and vice-versa, if the need arises,” said a senior IAF officer.

But the dominant opinion in the defence establishment is that the time has come for India — which has as many as 17 single-service commands — to move towards integrated commands to save resources and prepare for wars of the future.

Gen Rawat, on his part, said, “The task is cut out for the CDS to integrate the three services and enhance their capabilities through teamwork. We must ensure the 1+1+1 combine of the three services adds up to 5 or 7, and not 3. Synergy is needed. The whole should be more than the sum of the parts.” He added he would strive to achieve jointness in operations, planning, procurements, logistics, transport, training and the like within the three-year deadline set by the government.

India will work out its own model of theatre commands: CDS Rawat | India News - Times of India
 
Gen Rawat is on the roll already, we seem to be getting and equivalent to NORAD :

Integrated Air Defence Command And Consolidation of Logistics and Support Arms of India’s Services Soon

By Chandrashekhar Bhattacharyya - January 2, 2020
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Earlier today, India’s first Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Gen Bipin Rawat, issued directives for the creation of an ‘Integrated Air Defence Command’ under the Headquarters of the Integrated Defence Staff (IDS), which he now heads. Gen. Rawat directed that the proposal to create the Air Defence Command be ready by June 30, 2020. The new Air Defence Command will bring the Indian Army’s (IA’s) Air Defence, the Indian Navy’s (IN’s) Coastal Air Defence and the Indian Air Force’s (IAF’s) Air Defence units under a single umbrella while creating an environment for close cooperation and conduct during operational exercises and in times of conflict.

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India’s indigenous radar technology has been progressing rapidly in recent years and domestically developed systems are being adopted by all three services. This is expected to make it much easier to integrate air defence radars operated by the three services given that these systems are easily interoperable.

The CDS also set out priorities for execution of synergy between the three services by June 30 and December 31, 2020. As per an Indian Ministry of Defence (MoD) release, the areas identified for jointness and synergy among the Services include the creation of common logistics support structures in stations where two or more Armed Services have their presence. In such stations, the logistics and support arms of the three Services (such as the IA’s Army Service Corps, Ordnance, Electronics and Mechanical Engineers/EME and their counterparts in the IAF and the IN) will be integrated in a phased manner.

Gen. Rawat in his meeting also called upon a ‘collegiate system of functioning’, wherein all three services and the Indian Coast Guard (ICG) must be consulted with their views collated in a time bound manner. MoD further stated, that decisions will however be taken to ensure the optimisation of resources and efforts will be made to reduce infructuous ceremonial activities, which are manpower intensive. Gen. Rawat, on his part, stressed that all must work towards accomplishing the desired results while offering healthy views and ideas

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Integrated Air Defence Command And Consolidation of Logistics and Support Arms of India’s Services Soon
 
PM’s Military Plainspeak

Team SNG; Jan 9, 2020
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Prime Minister Narendra Modi surprised even the most cynical national security analyst by not just appointing a Chief of Defence Staff end of last year but going a step further by creating a Department of Military Affairs (DMA) under the Ministry of Defence to coordinate and integrate the three armed forces to improve their combat efficiency and optimise resources.

At a dinner he hosted for the military top brass on 31st December, the Prime Minister was blunt in his message to the uniformed leadership: Prepare the forces for future combat and reduce the obsession over ‘ceremonials, pomp and pageantry.’ According to multiple attendees at the dinner, the Prime Minister exhorted the brass to make sure that the military reduces wastage, avoids duplication in acquisitions and makes the forces technologically dependent rather than be manpower-intensive, wherever possible. The time has come, he told four- and three stars, to fully transform the military now that it has got an opportunity to largely control its decision-making, keeping the civilian bureaucracy at bay. The ball, the Prime Minister apparently said, is in the military’s court now.

PM’s Military Plainspeak – Strategic News Global