TO MANY Indians, their
country’s strategic position looks alarming. Its two biggest neighbours are
China and Pakistan. It has fought wars with both, and border issues still
fester. Both are nuclear-armed, and are allies with one another to boot. China,
a rising superpower with five times India’s GDP, is quietly encroaching on
India’s traditional sphere of influence, tying a “string of pearls” of
alliances around the subcontinent. Relatively weak but safe behind its nuclear shield,
Pakistan harbours Islamist guerrillas who have repeatedly struck Indian
targets; regional security wonks have long feared that another such incident
might spark a conflagration.
So when four heavily
armed infiltrators attacked an Indian army base on September 18th, killing 18
soldiers before being shot dead themselves, jitters inevitably spread. The base
nestles in mountains close to the “line of control”, as the border between the
Indian and Pakistani-administered parts of the disputed territory of Kashmir is
known. Indian officials reflexively blamed Pakistan; politicians and pundits
vied in demanding a punchy response. “Every Pakistan post through which
infiltration takes place should be reduced to rubble by artillery fire,”
blustered a retired brigadier who now mans a think-tank in New Delhi, India’s
capital.
Yet despite electoral
promises to be tough on Pakistan, the Hindu-nationalist government of Narendra
Modi has trodden as softly as its predecessors. On September 21st it summoned
Pakistan’s envoy for a wrist-slap, citing evidence that the attackers had
indeed slipped across the border, and noting that India has stopped 17 such
incursions since the beginning of the year. Much to the chagrin of India’s
armchair warriors, such polite reprimands are likely to be the limit of India’s
response.
There are good reasons
for this. India gains diplomatic stature by behaving more responsibly than
Pakistan. It is keenly aware of the danger of nuclear escalation, and of the
risks of brinkmanship to its economy. Indian intelligence agencies also
understand that they face an unusual adversary in Pakistan: such is its
political frailty that any Indian belligerence tends to strengthen exactly the
elements in Pakistan’s power structure that are most inimical to India’s own
interests.
But there is another,
less obvious reason for reticence. India is not as strong militarily as the
numbers might suggest. Puzzlingly, given how its international ambitions are
growing along with its economy, and how alarming its strategic position looks,
India has proved strangely unable to build serious military muscle.
India’s armed forces
look good on paper. It fields the world’s second-biggest standing army, after
China, with long fighting experience in a variety of terrains and situations
(see chart). It has topped the list of global arms importers since 2010,
sucking in a formidable array of top-of-the-line weaponry, including Russian
warplanes, Israeli missiles, American transport aircraft and French submarines.
State-owned Indian firms churn out some impressive gear, too, including fighter
jets, cruise missiles and the 40,000-tonne aircraft-carrier under construction
in a shipyard in Kochi, in the south of the country.
Yet there are serious
chinks in India’s armour. Much of its weaponry is, in fact, outdated or ill
maintained. “Our air defence is in a shocking state,” says Ajai Shukla, a
commentator on military affairs. “What’s in place is mostly 1970s vintage, and
it may take ten years to install the fancy new gear.” On paper, India’s air
force is the world’s fourth largest, with around 2,000 aircraft in service. But
an internal report seen in 2014 by IHS Jane’s,
a defence publication, revealed that only 60% were typically fit to fly. A
report earlier this year by a government accounting agency estimated that the
“serviceability” of the 45 MiG 29K jets that are the pride of the Indian navy’s
air arm ranged between 16% and 38%. They were intended to fly from the carrier currently
under construction, which was ordered more than 15 years ago and was meant to
have been launched in 2010. According to the government’s auditors the ship,
after some 1,150 modifications, now looks unlikely to sail before 2023.
Such delays are far from
unusual. India’s army, for instance, has been seeking a new standard assault
rifle since 1982; torn between demands for local production and the temptation
of fancy imports, and between doctrines calling for heavier firepower or more
versatility, it has flip-flopped ever since. India’s air force has spent 16
years perusing fighter aircraft to replace ageing Soviet-era models. By
demanding over-ambitious specifications, bargain prices, hard-to-meet
local-content quotas and so on, it has left foreign manufacturers “banging
heads against the wall”, in the words of one Indian military analyst. Four
years ago France appeared to have clinched a deal to sell 126 of its Rafale
fighters. The order has since been whittled to 36, but is at least about to be
finalised.
India’s military is
also scandal-prone. Corruption has been a problem in the past, and observers
rightly wonder how guerrillas manage to penetrate heavily guarded bases
repeatedly. Lately the Indian public has been treated to legal battles between
generals over promotions, loud disputes over pay and orders for officers to
lose weight. In July a military transport plane vanished into the Bay of Bengal
with 29 people aboard; no trace of it has been found. In August an Australian
newspaper leaked extensive technical details of India’s new French submarines.
The deeper problem with India’s military is
structural. The three services are each reasonably competent, say security
experts; the trouble is that they function as separate fiefdoms. “No service
talks to the others, and the civilians in the Ministry of Defence don’t talk to
them,” says Mr Shukla. Bizarrely, there are no military men inside the ministry
at all. Like India’s other ministries, defence is run by rotating civil
servants and political appointees more focused on ballot boxes than ballistics.
“They seem to think a general practitioner can perform surgery,” says Abhijit
Iyer-Mitra, who has worked as a consultant for the ministry. Despite their
growing brawn, India’s armed forces still lack a brain.
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