The Caravan

Chinks in the Armour

In April last year, as India was in the midst of parliamentary elections that saw Narendra Modi return to power with a bigger majority, the former vice-chief of the army staff Lieutenant General Sarath Chand formally joined the Bharatiya Janata Party. Since many top military officers have joined the ruling party immediately after retirement, another one joining it within a year of hanging up his uniform should not have come as a surprise. But Chand had made news in February 2018, a few months prior to his retirement, when he told the parliamentary standing committee on defence that most of the equipment with the Indian Army was in the vintage category.

“Typically, any modern Armed Forces should have ... one-third of its equipment in the vintage category, one-third in the current category and one-third in the state of the art category,” Chand told the standing committee. “As far as we are concerned, the state today is 68 per cent of our equipment is in the vintage category, with just about 24 per cent in the current, and eight per cent in the state of the art category.”

Chand’s testimony lifted the lid on a problem that has not been solved since. While poor decision-making, dependence on imports and legacy issues are often blamed for the state of the army’s modernisation, the situation has been exacerbated in recent years by inadequate funding provided for modernisation of the equipment by the BJP government. Several reports of the standing committees on defence over the past decade have tried to highlight the issue but the pleas have fallen on deaf years. With a conflict with China looming on the borders, India

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Caravan

The Caravan65 min read
The Sangh’s Fixer
THE COUNTRY’S MOST IMPORTANT politicians and industrialists walked into a brightly lit hall in Chennai on 18 January 2015. Among them were the senior ministers Rajnath Singh, Arun Jaitley, Piyush Goyal, M Venkaiah Naidu and Ravi Shankar Prasad, and t
The Caravan40 min read
Blurred Lines
AS WE TRUNDLED DOWNHILL along the treacherous dirt track, made muddy by rain, I wondered how those routinely negotiating this path did not lose their mental bearings—or a few spinal discs. Our Mizo driver was nonchalant, piloting our pickup truck wit
The Caravan2 min readCrime & Violence
Editor’s Pick
ON 13 JANUARY 1898, the newspaper L’Aurore published an open letter by the novelist Émile Zola to the French president, Félix Faure. Titled “J’accuse…!”—I accuse—the article deplored the antisemitism that had led to the artillery officer Alfred Dreyf

Related