Officers constitute less than 5% of the defence services, but the military's objections to the 6th Pay Commission recommendations appear to centre largely on the concerns of officers, particularly issues of status parity with their IAS counterparts. But the crucial military manpower issues actually revolve around the 1.6 million soldiers, sailors and airmen who are grouped under the somewhat dehumanising acronym of PBOR (persons below officer rank). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This year, India has budgeted over Rs 22,000 crore for salaries for its fighting men and women. How much the pay commission will add to this figure is still unclear. In addition, defence pensions will absorb more than Rs 15,500 crore. But the big manpower question "" can India be defended by fewer people "" remains a hot potato. If thought has been given to personnel issues, it is on two other issues: reducing the pension bill, and keeping the fighting forces young.
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The military's plan for meeting both these objectives involves enrolling jawans for shorter service periods, after which they would transfer laterally to other government forces, which would benefit from an inflow of trained and disciplined manpower. The 5th and the 6th Pay Commissions have recommended that India's plethora of central police organisations (CPOs) "" which include the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), the Border Security Force (BSF), the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF), the Indo-Tibet Border Police (ITBP) and others "" take in large numbers of soldiers who have finished seven years in uniform. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
There are huge financial benefits to such a policy. The CPOs and civil defence organisations, numbering some 750,000 men and women, spend Rs 100 crore each year just on recruiting and training. Taking in the 50,000 trained jawans who retire from the military every year would save this amount. Even larger savings would accrue in the defence pensions bill. Instead of receiving pension from the age of 37 onwards (the average age of retirement after 17 years in the military), the jawans would serve for at least another 13 years in the CPOs. That would save the exchequer Rs 700 crore each year, growing cumulatively for 13 years. At the end of that period, pension savings would be Rs 9,100 crore annually. The military would also save the money it spends on resettlement schemes and courses. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
A leavening of trained and battle-hardened soldiers would enormously boost the capabilities of the CPOs, which appear depressingly weak in the face of a growing extremist threat in J&K, and from the Naxals and the north-eastern militant groups. Pakistan, in contrast, has long used ex-servicemen as the backbone of its armed police forces (the Rangers, Scouts and the Frontier Constabulary), which function far more effectively than our CPOs. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
But every sensible idea has at least one government agency opposing it. The 29th report of Parliament's Standing Committee on Defence points out that the Ministry of Home Affairs (MoHA) is resolutely blocking the 5th Pay Commission's sensible suggestion for the CPOs and the military to jointly recruit people who would serve seven years in the military and then sidestep into the CPOs. The MoHA's arguments against this proposal make little sense and add credence to the belief that the CPOs are simply safeguarding the financial windfalls and networks of patronage that are associated with recruitment. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The Standing Committee has comprehensively rebutted each of the MoHA's objections. The first of North Block's objections is that soldiers who have already served seven years in the military would make the CPOs older and greyer. Not so, says the Standing Committee; the average soldier is recruited at 19 years and would be only 26 years old when he finishes seven years of military service. Since the current age cut-off for recruitment into CPOs happens to be 26 years, the soldiers would not just make the cut-off, but also come fully trained. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The MoHA then protested that soldiers are trained killers, used to employing excessive force, whereas the CPOs must function with a softer touch. The Standing Committee dismissed that objection too, pointing out that soldiers are extensively employed in counter-insurgency operations, and have conclusively demonstrated the restraint that such situations involve. Members of the Standing Committee snort that "CPO restraint" seems to occur most frequently when face-to-face with Naxals and militants. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The next objection from the Home Ministry was that military personnel would bring seven years of seniority with them, which would provide them an advantage over direct recruits into the CPOs. Admitting that ex-soldiers would bring their service seniority with them, the Standing Committee noted that direct inductees would be protected, both in salary as well as in promotion vacancies. In any case, the situation would be temporary; eventually all CPO recruits would come through the defence forces. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The CPOs are being shortsighted in getting the MoHA to stonewall a scheme that will greatly improve their manpower pool, and therefore their image and reputation. As the army withdraws from internal security duties in J&K, and as political will grows to confront growing Naxal extremism, CPOs will be called upon to handle increasingly challenging duties. Manning central police forces with ex-military jawans would make them qualitatively superior and save money all around. It is an option that must not be turned down.
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