THE
SILENCE OF THE
GENERALS
Everything in life
has a foil, an exact opposite which by contrast gives meaning to an object or
idea. Thus a hero has an anti-hero, a thesis has its antithesis, an action a
reaction, a yang has a yin, a point is contrasted with a counter-point, and so
on. In the context of the post Pulwama- Balakot period no one even noticed the
total silence on the part of our retired military top brass till the foil was
provided on the 8th of March by Admiral( retired) Ram Das when he
publicly protested against the politicisation of the armed forces by sundry
political parties and asked the Election Commission to prohibit it. His
solitary cry in the wilderness suddenly brought into sharp focus, by contrast,
the mute quiescence of the rest of his distinguished fraternity- the retired
generals, air marshals, admirals. To be sure, there was a surfeit of them in
the TV studios, expounding on tactics, strategy, compellance, but not a single
voice condemning the contemptible appropriation of the armed forces by petty
politicians, the merchandising of their valour and discipline for votes, the
End Of Reason Sale initiated by the Prime Minister himself at Churu in
Rajasthan barely hours after the Pulwama attack.
Never before in the
history of this country has the politician made such cynical use of the
soldier, even a dead one. Images of the dead CRPF jawans are used as a backdrop
on the stage for a political rally, a former Chief Minister openly counts his
Parliament seats along with the dead soldiers, a captured pilot is used to
build up an election pitch, even the Prime Minister cannot resist making a
ghastly pun on the word “pilot” to buttress his warrior credentials. The sins
of the Rafale deal are visited upon the Air Force by casting doubts on the MIGs
and Sukhois ( and their pilots). The President of a BJP state unit has the
temerity to don an army uniform while campaigning for votes. One former Congress
Minister even took credit for Wing Commander Abhinandan’s skills and bravery by
saying that he was recruited and “matured” during the term of his govt.! The
Defence Minister robs the Airforce of its due credit by stating that the air
strike was “not a military operation.”
And it was not just
the politician that made mercenary use of the military. The media revealed
every bit of information that Abhinandan steadfastly refused to give to his
captors, TV anchors bayed for the blood of our own soldiers by hysterically
creating an eco-system of war mongering, anyone advising caution and restraint
was shouted down by these toilet seat warriors. The BCCI decided to send the
Indian cricket team for the ODI in Ranchi wearing army caps, a hollow symbolism-
it would have done better by donating a few of its thousands of crores of
rupees to the families of those who had died to sustain the TRPs, votes and
entry fees. Any part of a military uniform is a hallowed object and it should
not be used to score brownie points.
Which begs the
question- given this mass disrespect and discourtesy for the armed forces, why
did senior military voices not speak out in protest and anguish? It is, of
course, understandable that serving officers could not raise their voices, but
what ailed the thousands of the retired ones? It is not that they have not
protested or been publicly critical of the government before- just a couple of
years ago they were out on the streets and holding candle light marches on the
Boat Club lawns in Delhi to press for OROP. Pensions are important but the
abominations released after Pulwama and Balakot are much more vital to the
military’s dignity, pride and essence. Even more, they are dangerous, for they
portray the armed forces as dispensable fodder for the politician and TV
anchors, dead or alive. In the words of the American diplomat George F Keenan,
what the ruling party and government is seeking to do is to raise war mongering
to “ the status of a vast ( national) addiction”: this would be unwise at any
time, but is positively diabolical when there is an election to win. For the
price of war is always paid by the soldier, not the pontificating elite or the
avaricious politician.
Yet, no one spoke up. The only voice we have
heard so far is that of Admiral (retd) Ram Das, though in his letter he claims
to speak for other, nameless colleagues. But this is not a time to shelter
behind anonymity. These colleagues must come out and be counted, seen and
heard. Individual voices tend to get lost, so they must band together into a
collective, a pressure group, a segment of civil society that draws red lines
which even the govt. and media should not cross. In this they can learn much
from a part of the civil administration the military generally looks down upon-
the IAS and other central govt. services. The latter have formed a group of
hundred odd retired Secretary level officers which has, from time to time,
conveyed to the union government and the Prime Minister its apprehensions,
disapproval and distress at some of its more deleterious and damaging policies
and conduct. These communications have been released to the press and public
and every single officer has appended his or her name to them. The govt. may
disregard these missives but the public will take note of them. The retired
Generals need to do something similar. A conscience is worthless if it will not
speak up, a name or rank commands no respect if it will not stand up and be
counted.