Thursday, September 17, 2015

ADM & MORAL : THAN & NOW - FIRST PERSONAL LETTER ADDRESSED TO ALL OFFICERS


THAN & NOW - FIRST PERSONAL LETTER ADDRESSED TO ALL OFFICERS


                                   THAN : 20 FEB 1953






                                        NOW   17  SEP  2015 : 

                     SELF COMES FIRST

             REST ON SUBSEQUENT LIST




SOURCE :
http://www.ndtv.com/topic/one-rank-one-pension


 GENERAL KNOWS VERY WELL THAT IN HIS CASE THOUGH  HE WAS CORRECT HE ALSO  FAILED TO GET JUSTICE FROM  "HON SUPREME COURT". AS A MATTER OF FACT SUPREME COURT EVEN FAILED TO DELIVER THE "JUDGEMENT" & THE GENERAL WAS BROWBEATEN BY THE SHEER BRUTE STRENGTH OF THE INSTITUTION TO WITHDRAW BACK

 GENERAL I FAIL TO UNDERSTAND SINCE WHEN THE

 " GANDHINIAN METHOD" OF SATYAGRAH HAS BECOME  an UNHOLY AGITATION - Vasundhra


Please talk with the soldiers as 'one soldier will talk to another soldier.' 

               NO POLITICS PLEASE


Other Methods Than Agitation To Get One Rank One Pension: VK Singh



Other Methods Than Agitation To Get One Rank One Pension: VK Singh
File Photo: Union Minister and former army chief VK Singh
Guwahati:  Union Minister and former Army chief General Vijay Kumar Singh (retired) today said there were other methods than agitation by retired servicemen to get 'One Rank One Pension' (OROP) fulfilled.

"I feel that there could have been other methodologies than agitation to get OROP... I would have preferred agitation at the last and less intense," said Singh, who is also currently the Minister of State for External Affairs.

Addressing a press conference in Guwahati, he said agitation for implementation of OROP has been going on for the last 43 years and only the NDA government resolved the issue.

"Only some minor perceptional issues have remained. These can be resolved by talking to each other. The Defence Ministry will solve these," Mr Singh said, adding that the doubt over VRS for soldiers has been cleared.....................................................








 




 
 
 
 
 
Havaldaar Major Singh,  & COL PUSHPINDER SINGH  brave warriors! Great military leaders, a million times braver and selfless than many of our spineless and selfish Generals, Air Marshals and Admirals! Shame on the latter. 

Ambition not adequately supported by talent can play havoc. No wonder what the so called chosen hierarchy could not do for 43 years ; a hav and colonel achieved it in less than a month. They were prepared to sacrifice and not seeking reemployment and sewa series of medals

 Col Puspinder Singh aur Havaldaar Major Singh ke jai ho.
 
Till the time we have soldiers like you, India is safe.
 
 
Top Indian military leaders need to learn a lot from you. My heartfelt respect to you Col Puspinder & Major Singh ji. Sat Sri Akal.

 
 
    now message for the fifth column
 
 
 
 
 
Dear Barkha Dutt, Vishnu Som, Arnab Goswami, Mahroof Raza and the esteemed members of the fourth estate [FIFTH COLUMN ] of my Country.
 
 
 


 " You have stayed with our soldiers, enjoyed their unparalleled hospitality, drank their highly subsidised liquor and ate their high quality rations, made your careers by showing their blood and tears and their bodies wrapped smartly in tricolour while... they visit their loved ones for the last time. and yet when they needed your support the most you abandoned them with such disgrace. 

 Please go to a corner of your bedrooms face the wall and hang your head in shame for a minute, may be then you will be able to forgive yourself for what you did because you guys will not be able to redeem yourself in the eyes of a soldier in this life or the next. 

 But when you are marooned in a flood or on a hill top while holidaying or cower yourself in your houses or offices hiding from terrorist bullets then the very soldiers will not think twice to put themselves in harms way to rescue your sorry asses."
 See More

 

 
 
 NOW WE DONT NEED YOU.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
                WE ARE SELF CONTAINED
 
 
 
 
                      GOD  IS  WITH  US
 
 
                         GOD IS VICTORY  







                                               GOD IS VICTORY  












 

OROP : Modi’s Military Faux Pas

SOURCE :
http://www.arabnews.com/columns/news/803216



              Modi’s Military Faux Pas
                                    By
                           Bikram Vohra



 
Tuesday 8 September 2015



My aunt’s husband died on duty when his fighter aircraft crashed in Kalaikunda in 1962. His brother died in a military mountain climbing expedition 10 years later. My closest friend was killed while a test pilot in Bangalore in 1982. He was practicing maneuvers for a group of MPs expected to visit the next day and his jet failed to go into a climb. My father retired as a major general and received the pension of an officer of that rank dated 1979 after 38 years of military service.


He and his three younger brothers all became generals, the only four real brothers in any army in the world to attain that rank in the same corps. Between them they served 150 years in the Indian Army. One of them won the Mahavir Chakra.

All these individuals or their widows as the case may be receive and received totally disparate pensions.

 The IAS & all allied Class 'A'  Services  enjoys the OROP equality.

In 1973 when Indira Gandhi swooped in and happily gave off the fifth star to Sam Manekshaw but ignored Air Chief Marshal P.C. Lal and Admiral Nanda, within two years of the war with Pakistan she scrapped the One Rank One Pension concept.


For 37 years that followed the issue lay frozen and no one did it any reverence. It was in December 2011 that the Koshyari commission comprising 10 MPs, which was asked to make a report did just that.

 Clear, concise and valid.

 Unanimous.


Give the armed forces back the OROP and balance out the pensions as per rank and length of service.

There is no ambiguity about it. It is simply a matter of implementing it.

Prime Minister Modi integrated the OROP into his election promise, mentioned it on glaciers, in meets and rallies and on the INS Vikramaditya. But now it is hanging fire and the excuse is that there are too many interpretations of the elements in OROP.

This is not true.

It is already functional in the IAS so who needs a fresh interpretation?

The second myth is the cost to the exchequer. It is not a crippling amount. On the contrary there is even no need to be concerned about the retrospect angle. Most of the senior ex-servicemen, whose pensions are at the low end of the scale having retired years ago, are, to put it bluntly, dead. A large majority of them are octogenarians. There is no huge mass of ex-soldiers out there seeking this upgrade in their salaries, that is a myth. I have to quote a piece that has mysteriously been sent to me with no byline:

 The IAS crafted the Pension Fixation Formula in such a manner that they are immune to any post-Pay Commission disadvantage to the old retirees.


A few decades ago, the IAS “invented” a secret magic wand to make sure that they get OROP eternally and surreptitiously but others don’t. This is how it was manipulated: The highest pay in the government currently is Rs.80,000 fixed, called the Apex Scale. Only the three defense chiefs and the Cabinet secretary get the higher fixed pay of Rs.90,000. The invention of this concept of “fixed” pay was meant to shield them forever from the ill effects of the formula they devised for others. It was contrived that the pension of the Apex Scale retirees would always be linked to whatever the revised Apex Scale is in future. Since most of the IAS/IFS officers retire in the Apex Scale, this decree eternally ensured OROP for this class.

To meet any murmur to the stratagem, some Apex Scale peanuts were also flung at a few posts in some other services including the defense forces.

Army Commanders and a large number of lieutenant generals and their equivalents in the other two forces were also granted this privileged scale.”

The main thrust has always been to ensure that no senior person gets less than a junior. That is common sense but currently this is not the situation. This lacuna is further exacerbated by the fact that though the law on OROP was settled by the Supreme Court seven years ago in the SPS Vains case, it was applied by the government only to the petitioner’s rank, i.e. major general.


It defies logic because what it means is that every rank in the armed forces must petition the courts separately and seek relief or so the government would want. While retired IPS officers were practically granted OROP when they challenged the pension fixation formula and are now in litigation with government over bit being implemented the IAS cheerfully sail on enjoying the benefit. Herein lies the rub.

Let’s repeat the mantra. If it is valid for the IAS why is it not valid for the armed forces?


Even we take all these issues and place them in cold storage and just seek the re-introduction of the OROP in its plainest form we still find resistance and that is what one cannot understand. By this inordinate delay the government has robbed the armed forces of the satisfaction of being given their just dues. It now looks like a tooth is being pulled out and even if the OROP is reinstated the reluctance that it is served on makes it unpalatable.

When you renege on a promise and finally “surrender” it not only spawns disenchantment but also generates a bitterness that is often translated into more demands. And while a government can think it “safe” to take a liberty with retired service personnel it fails to appreciate that those in service can feel the ripple effect and this is dangerous.

Much of the civilian indifference is bed-rocked in the history of peace. Those not in uniform find it easy to downplay the forces when security is not threatened. It has been nearly half a century since the last all out war. Such a large standing force in a time when weaponry has changed the paradigm produces the foolish notion that such a force is not needed. The truth is not only is it needed but it must be constantly combat ready. Part of that combat readiness is morale and if morale droops then the readiness is compromised.

Equally integral to this state of mind is the comfort derived from knowing that if anything happens to the soldier his family will be looked after. In fact, one of the provisos should be the parity given to war widows in pensions.

 That makes good sense.









































 

ADM & MORAL : PART II - 'Na Cheen ne na Pakistan ne, Apni Fauj ko Barbad kiya Hindustan ne'




A  MUST  READ !! 
 
'Na Cheen ne na Pakistan ne, Apni Fauj ko Barbad kiya Hindustan ne'.


As part of the ongoing agitation by Ex Servicemen (ESM) for One Rank One Pension (OROP), a large number had gathered on the highway bisecting the Bathinda Military Station, which also has the Corps Headquarters, and had intended to enter the station to agitate and hand over a memorandum to the Corps Commander. The gates had been closed thus preventing them from entering. A media photograph showed a very agitated and aggressive police officer confronting the veterans. The whole incident left many veterans worried: what if the police were to use force against the agitating ESMs and this in turn provoked action by serving personnel? What if the gates were opened by the men on duty? The worry is that it could very well happen with grave consequences.

The purpose of the profession of arms has been and will remain the management of organised violence and is inextricably linked with the ultimate question of life and death. The shared uniqueness of the profession moulds its members into the ‘Brotherhood of Arms’ with shared values, beliefs, standards and codes of conduct. The soldier (which includes the sailor and airman) dons the uniform on oath to go by land, sea or air where ordered by his superiors and execute the task allotted even at the cost of his life, if required. Willingness to perform unquestionably, even at the cost of his life, does not come merely because he is paid to do so or simply because his superiors have ordered him to do so. It comes on the foundation of mutual trust and camaraderie between the leader and the led. It also comes on the basis of the time honoured concept of Izzat. Wafadari, Imandari, self esteem, pride in honourable soldiering are constant bywords in the military community – something largely alien to the outside environment. Surely a soldier will not launch himself into battle with a high probability of loss of limb or life merely on verbal words of command unless this rests on unquestioning faith and trust in his superior.  By the same extension at the highest level the armed forces of the country also act on the basis of mutual trust between the political and military leadership. Military leadership strives to ensure mutual trust on the foundations of justice and fair play. No leader worth his salt can be seen to be acting unfairly or in a partisan manner. Over long years of service this concept of justice and fair play is deeply ingrained in a serviceman. He carries it with him on hanging his uniform. This unique culture rests on accepting the spoken word as inviolable. The soldiers angst arises when society at large and the political leadership in particular is perceived to be ignoring and rescinding on the spoken commitment.

Post independence the serviceman has been consistently given an unfair deal; be it the pay commissions, the higher national security policy making apparatus, status and so on. There is a deeply ingrained sense of injustice harboured by the military – both serving and retired. The ongoing agitation for OROP is primarily driven more by the feeling of lack of fair play then merely seeking monetary gains. In other words the soldier feels cheated. This is compounded by the recent politics injected into the controversy with disastrous consequences. The announcements by the UPA and NDA governments for OROP were blatantly politically motivated with electoral gains in mind. The president of the ruling party had committed to the representatives of the ESM that OROP would be announced within 10 days. Even the Prime Minister had made this commitment on more than one occasion. Not honouring these commitments has generated cynicism and mistrust in the forces which is likely to lead to questioning the motives of the political leadership even in operational matters. The Army Chief had made a public announcement on implementation of OROP. So had the former servicemen recently elected and appointed ministers of state. Obviously such commitments were on the assurance of the political establishment. Regrettably all have lost credibility and trust both with the serving and the retired fraternity. More regrettably the Army Chief too has become a victim of our politics. If this is not politicising the armed forces, one fails to see what is politicising the armed forces. In a country where everything from garbage to governance is mired in politics the one institution that was outside its preview appears to have finally been sucked into the quagmire.

In the past the senior leadership would discourage any discussion or comment on issues like pay commission dispensations in the interest of discipline and in keeping with military ethos. The military continued to perform its role with a healthy disdain of the political horse trading and unethical politics played out. No more. It has long been a ploy to refer legitimate demands of the armed forces to the pay commissions and thereafter simply ignore the issue. The 6th Pay Commission was the last straw. It presented the military with blatant down gradation and a patently unfair dispensation. One such issue was of honorary officers being awarded more pension than regular officers holding the same rank. Approved recommendations of the pay commission were distorted while being implemented. Failure to address the large number of issues generated by the 6th Pay Commission finally convinced the military that it had been short-changed and that politics had finally caught up with them. The rank and file does raise these issues and the leadership has no answers. In some recent gatherings and seminars one has heard ESM questioning the senior leadership as to why they do not take a tough collective stand on issues concerning the armed forces, in other words suggesting ‘collective insubordination'. The social media is afloat with irresponsible voices suggesting, if not demanding, that the three Service Chiefs should resign over the OROP issue. A very dangerous trend indeed. Compounding this dangerous trend is the motivated attempts and propaganda to drive a wedge between the officers and the men by suggesting that OROP is primarily for the benefit of the officers with men having little to gain. Such a wedge strikes at the very root of military cohesion besides damaging the vital aspect of mutual trust. We have already seen former Army Commanders joining the protesters at Jantar Mantar. It would be the ultimate shame if the former service chiefs are to do so.

In keeping with the national political culture of horse trading and breaking the opposition by wheeling dealing, the Central Police Organisations were also encouraged to orchestrate demands for OROP which was never an issue till now. Promoting their coverage in the media and suppressing the ESM protests was politics at play.

Then there is the politics of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) which is periodically raked up to gain political capital. The soldier does not ask to be employed in counter insurgency operations. More often than not his employment is brought about by political mishandling and maladministration. In this environment the soldier sees his sacrifices in the counter insurgency operations as being politically driven and not in the national interest thereby raising questions in his mind about the sincerity of the powers that be and generating ideas of being ‘used’ unfairly.
    
The country and the politico – bureaucratic establishment needs to remember that if there in any profession which has a generational link it is the profession of arms. Many of my generation were third or fourth generation soldiers serving not only in the same arm but in the same Regiment as their forefathers. The Army Chief and the former servicemen now ministers of state are generational soldiers. Many servicemen today have at least one close relative retired from the armed forces. There is perhaps no other institution more closely linked between the serving and the retired than the armed forces. The sentiments of the ex servicemen are not confined to them alone, it percolates the serving community as well. Whatever happens at Jantar Mantar or anywhere in the country is instantly conveyed through the social media both to the ESM and the serving community. Anything that humiliates the ESM also hurts the self-esteem of the soldier. Anything that concerns the ESM concerns the serviceman.

An unspoken social contract exists between the Indian Armed Forces and the people of India. At one end of the bargain exists a deep sense of admiration, respect and intrinsic affection for the soldier. At the other end the people expect the Armed Forces to deliver when required, no matter what the demand or cost. The people believe it to be the one institution that has not been affected by the all pervasive moral decline of Indian society. This social contract is vital for the future of the Armed Forces given the indifference or ignorance of matters military by the politico – bureaucratic combine. The soldier’s end of the contract will endure as long as he perceives to be given a fair deal by the powers that be and by civil society at large.

In our context and at the very basic level, the emphasis of society at large to reduced deference, if not indifference, to authority and discipline and enhanced awareness of individual rights with lack of corresponding obligation towards duty and the all pervasive culture of corruption are at odds with what the military emphasises. The Hon’ble Defence Minister recently expressed the view that the country had lost respect for the armed forces or the armed forces relevance had declined as there had not been any war since 1971. This perception needs to be clarified. It is not the nation at large which has lost respect for the armed forces. It’s the totally corrupt lower level functionaries of the government at all levels and across all areas of the soldier’s interaction for his basic problems, which does not do anything without their cut, which has lost respect for the armed forces. In an all pervasive environment of petty graft, seen and experienced before entering the service and when back in the environment on leave, how does a military man reconcile to the core value of ‘Imandari’ the profession demands? It is also the highest level of the government, the politico – bureaucratic elite -  which is perceived to have lost respect for the armed forces in pursuit of their agenda or narrow objectives. If there is any institution left in the country which is respected by the people at large it is the armed forces. After every war the military was downgraded in status, pay and pension by the pay commissions. So much for the respect for or importance of the armed forces which war generates !

A worthy politician had recently derided the death of a soldier by opining that ‘they are paid to die’. Nothing could be more callous or ill informed. The soldier may well ask if he could kill someone and pay his family to go scot free. Paying the soldier alone does not buy his obligation for duty and death. Respecting his dignity, promoting his self esteem and treating him as an important member of society ensures such a commitment. 

Much as the serviceman, and by extension the ex serviceman, abhors the idea of agitating on the streets, undertaking fasts or indulging in collective protests, today he sees these as the only options in an uncaring environment. The recent death of policemen in a terrorist incident saw their families sitting in protest demanding jobs and compensation. Giving a go bye to the laid down rules for ex gratia and other dispensations the political leadership acquiesced. It would be a very sad day if the soldier’s families were to agitate similarly.

Our polity by design and default has proceeded to politicise, downgrade and demoralize its own armed forces and veterans. 


As Bahadur Shah Zafar wrote after 1857 ;’

Na Shah Iran ne na Czar

Roos ne, 
 
Angres ko bardad kiya

kartoos ne'.

 It can now be said

'Na Cheen ne na Pakistan

ne, apne fauj ko barbad kiya

Hindustan ne'.



A dissatisfied military is not in the interest of any nation least of all India which has to contend with multifarious internal and external security issues. The nation at large and the political leadership must be alive to the prevailing sentiments and act appropriately lest the gates of military stations are opened.
 
 
Lt Gen NS Brar, PVSM, AVSM, VSM (Retd)
Former Deputy Chief Integrated Defence Staff and Member Armed Forces Tribunal


--
Vice Admiral D.B.Kapila PVSM AVSM VSM(Retd)
B-123 TRINITY TOWERS
DLF PHASE V GURGAON 122002
INDIA
Phone 0124-4004290

Lt. Gen. R.M. Vohra,PVSM,MVC (Retd.)
B-041, Trinity Towers
DLF City Phase V
GURGAON - 122002(Haryana)
Tel/Fax:0124-4364939
Mob:9958147148









 

ADM & MORAL : PART I - 'Na Cheen ne na Pakistan ne, Apni fauj ko barbad kiya Hindustan ne'





                'Na Cheen ne na Pakistan ne, Apni Fauj ko barbad kiya Hindustan ne'


Generals write to top media personalities "Cause for Serious Concern For the Nation"

(Probably not visualized by the Indian Babucracy and Political Class)

From: Harbhajan Singh

Dear Media Personalities,

One could never imagine that a time would come when our illustrious Armed Forces officers would be writing emails like the one below and giving it a Heading " 'Na Cheen ne na Pakistan ne, Apni fauj ko barbad kiya Hindustan ne'.

Let there be no doubt that such writings as also the agitation for OROP started by the veterans has its genesis in these very officers being extremely frustrated while in service, due to-

inordinately delay and deny all cases put up by the Armed Forces whether they are for weapons, equipment, infrastructure like roads, railway lines and so on; 70% of the time of all the Armed Forces officers working in Delhi is spent on answering infructuous, uninformed, irrelevant queries of the Babus. They are the biggest hurdle in the readiness of the Armed Forces in meeting security challenges. In fact our Armed Forces have never been satisfactorily equipped for any war!!
  •  indignities inflicted on the Armed Forces by the bureaucrats; just one example, invariably issuing Govt letter for foreign tour at the last moment. When finally they issue it, the remark is AAP KA KAAM HO GYA!!! As if a favour is being done.
  • deliberate policy by those who draft, process and get rules and regulations signed by the politicians to do down the status of the Armed Forces;

  • deny equitable pays and pensions and at the same time IAS/IPS etc surreptitiously garnering higher status, pays and allowances such as Non Functional Financial Upgradation Pay(NFFU). And when the Armed Forces ask for the same, flatly denying it to them;
  • Resorting to unabashed litigation against veterans particularly the war wounded. This has angered the veterans and serving the most, perhaps;
  • not having a representative of the Armed Forces in the Pay Commission since its inception;
The frustration leading to anger is full to the brim and that is why yesterdays soldiers and today's veterans resorted to the agitation. An action like "Agitation" has never been in the mind of any soldier, airman or sailor and we loath the very idea!!

The Political Leadership should be wise and without any loss take cognizance of the frustrations amongst the Armed Forces and veterans. Admiral Joshi showed the moral courage to resign. However, such a historic happening is already forgotten what to talk of MOD learning any lessons.

Unless remedial measures are taken, this kind of stand off could lead to dangerous happenings. The pity is that no bureaucrat will be held accountable.

The Govt should immediately set up a high power commission to go in to the causes for the most loyal segment of our society ie the Armed Forces resorting to agitation.

Most serious effect could be the serving personnel being infected, taking the cue and resort to agitation for alleviation of their needs.

Let us realize the gravity of the situation, put our heads
together to identify the causes for this unrest and take remedial measures.

Let not the bureaucracy take the nation to the brink to meet their own agenda and narrow parochial agenda. The Political Leadership on both sides of the isle has been responsible for the present situation and hence should cooperate and carry out required reforms in the functioning of the Ministry of Defence post haste.

Lt Gen Harbhajan Singh (Retd)
Former  Signal Officer-in-Chief -1988-91,

Indian Army.











 

OROP : AN OPEN LETTER TO ALL FORMER CHIEFS OF THE ARMY/NAVY & AR FORCE







   Facebook
 
   
   
 
Anil Kaul posted in Indian Ex Servicemen Movement.
 
   
Anil Kaul
September 17 at 7:11pm
 

AN OPEN LETTER TO ALL FORMER CHIEFS OF THE ARMY/NAVY & AR FORCE

Dear Generals, Air Chief Marshals & Admirals,


My humble submission, 


All of you are today's ex-servicemen, notwithstanding the top most post you held in service. 


In accordance with the policy of UFESM to boycott the golden jubilee functions of the Indo-Pak war of '65 you too should not be attending the same to send the message loud and clear of the unfairness of handling of the OROP CASE by the Govt of India.


This action should make the Supreme commander ask for a presentation which we will gladly organize as per standards of those of former chiefs.

Attending these functions by any ESM irrespective of rank particularly by some of you and certain former C-in-C's is being viewd poorly by your erstwhile rank and file, Remember,


"The men you command next always and everytime."



Col Anil Kaul, VrC














 

ADM & MORAL :'Our Enemy is not Pakistan or China; it is Our Babus'

SOURCE  :http://www.rediff.com/news/interview/our-enemy-is-not-pakistan-or-china-it-is-our-babus/20150910.htm






           'Our Enemy is not Pakistan or China;
                          it is Our Babus'


September 10, 2015 11:45 IST
 
 
'There were tears in my eyes when I parted with my medals. I thought was it for this moment did I become a soldier?'



 





In 2008, Captain H Balakrishnan (retired) of the Indian Navy returned all his medals to the President of India to protest the government's failure to implement the One Rank One Pension scheme.

Captain Balakrishnan joined the National Defence Academy in 1964 and was commissioned as an officer in Indian Navy in 1969. After 23 years of service, he retired in 1991.

Now that the Narendra Modi government has announced its decision to implement OROP, Captain Balakrishnan, left, below), tells Shobha Warrier/Rediff.com that the OROP "is still not complete in letter and spirit."


After 42 years, the government has implemented OROP and the ex-servicemen who were on a fast unto death called it of. As an ex-serviceman, who had given back all his medals, are you satisfied?


I am happy with the government in its acceptance of the definition of One Rank One Pension, which basically implies that those in the same length of service in the same rank will get the same pension irrespective of the day of retirement.


But it doesn't end there. Any future increases in pension will have to be passed on automatically to the retirees. Unfortunately, the government has forgotten the second sentence.


So, the revision will not be automatic and like the government says, it will happen only every five years?


Yes. I will give you an example. Consider five colonels are retiring. One retired in 2015. Another colonel with the same length of service retires in 2016, another retires in 2017, another in 2018 and another in 2019.


The first colonel will get a certain pension and the person retires in 2016 will get more pension as there will be an increment while he is in service and the pension is based on the last pay drawn. The third person will get more pension than the first two, and so on.

Finally, the equalisation will happen after five years. Only then will all five colonels get the same pension. Where is OROP then? It is as simple as that.

There is a more important thing; our entire edifice is built on rank. How can you accept a major general who retired in pre-2006 getting a lesser pension than a lieutenant colonel and major who retired in 2014?

You must have heard Major General Satbir Singh saying that no senior should get a lesser pension than a junior.


But once OROP is implemented, will this not go?

It will happen, but the major general's pension will get adjusted only after five years. In five years, the pay scale of those who are in service will go up. And you will have to wait for another 5 years, to get your pension adjusted to that.

Actually this is a bogey created by the finance ministry babus that it cannot be equalised every year. We did that from 1947 to 1973 when there were no computers.

I also ask the babus and the finance minister to see the one million items that are put on the IRCTC Web site all across India. Does it have any problem? Then what is the problem in equalising the pension for a limited number of people every year?

When two colonels do not get the same pension, you are deviating from the concept of OROP when OROP is one rank one pension. There is a dichotomy in what the defence minister said. He said we accept OROP. If you are accepting OROP, you have to satisfy the two conditions; that same rank same pension for the same period of service, and any future increase in pension will automatically be passed on to the retirees.


This means you are not satisfied with what the government has offered.


I am happy that the government has accepted the concept of One Rank One Pension, but I am not happy with the interpretation. It is typical of babudom.

Our enemy is not Pakistan or China; our enemy is our bureaucracy.


There was OROP from 1947 to 1973 with annual equalisation in pension. Was it Indira Gandhi who was responsible for taking it away?


It was Indira Gandhi and the Congress that is responsible. After winning the war, we were rewarded with our pensions being reduced from 70 per cent to 50 per cent and for the civilians it was increased from 30 per cent to 50 per cent. Additionally, this was done ex parte. They didn't ask the services for their views.



IMAGE: Captain H Balakrishnan (retd) of the Indian Navy. Photograph: Ramesh Damodaran







Why is it that nobody in the services protested when OROP was withdrawn in 1973?

Colonel Hariharan (retired) said that we are equally responsible for what has happened and I agree with this.


I only wish our service chiefs had shown more fight from then till today.

There is a Chetwode Hall (named after Field Marshal Philip Chetwode) in the Indian Military Academy and there is his saying written there; that 'the honour, welfare and safety of your country comes first and the honour, welfare and safety of your men come next, and your own comfort comes last, always last.' I wish our service chiefs had read the second part. Unfortunately, they have not done that.


The Fourth Pay Commission became operational on January 1, 1986. In that, Justice Ratnavel Pandian had introduced the concept of Rank Pay for officers in the army. It had two components, one of which had to be added to the basic pay and another was allowance.

Do you know what the babus did? They cut off the Rank Pay because if you add it to the basic pay, pensions increase, and they didn't want that.

One officer, Major A K Dhanapalan, went to the Kerala high court challenging this and he won the case. The government then appealed to a division bench in the high court and again he won the case in 1992.




'When a flood happens,

when a small child falls

into a well, why do you

need me? Why don't

IAS officers or the

police get into the well?

Why doesn't the chief

secretary go to

Ahmedabad and defend

the city when the Patels

agitated? Why do you

need an army column?

At the drop of a hat,

you want us to come.'
Finally, the case was settled in the Supreme Court in 2012, 26 years after the cheating by the government. By now, many of them have left this world itself. If the government had grace, it should have given it to everybody in the beginning itself. More saddening was recently an officer said he had brought it to the notice of the chiefs but nothing happened.


So, not only the babus but our own chiefs are also responsible. The bureaucrats took advantage of the fact that there was nobody on the other side to fight for us.
Do you know what Lieutenant General P G Kamath (retd) wrote? That the bureaucrats waited for then General (later Field Marshal S F J H) Maneskshaw to retire to release the Third Pay Commission report. They knew if he was there, he would have thumped the table.
Similarly, in 1980, free ration was being given to army people, which the bureaucrats wanted to change, and give money in lieu of rations. Admiral Ronnie Pereira, the much loved naval officer, put his foot down and told Indira Gandhi that he wanted his boys to get something that was inflation-free.
 
You gave back all your medals protesting the non-implementation of OROP. Now that OROP has been implemented, will you accept them back?


I gave them up in Bengaluru in 2008. I don't know whether the medals will be traceable at Rashtrapati Bhavan. Another thing is OROP has not been implemented fully in letter and spirit and gracefully in a manner that is acceptable to ex-servicemen.


When Major General Satbir Singh says accept the medals, I will.


You used the word, gracefully. Is it because those who guarded the borders of the country had to resort to a hunger strike to get what is their due?


Yes, what a lack of grace! We started the protest in 2008. Major General Satbir Singh came to Bengaluru then. More than 65,000 medals were returned to the President.

How did you feel returning your medals?


Very sad. I cried when I parted with my medals, but what to do? We did that in disgust. There was a sense of disgust at babu-dom. I asked myself then was it for this moment that I became a soldier for this country?


You criticise the babus. What about the politicians? Are they not equally responsible?

The Bhishma Pitamah of the strategic community is the late Shri K Subrahmanyan who wrote the Kargil report. He wrote,

'Politicians rule without responsibility, bureaucrats have authority without accountability and military takes on the responsibility without any guidance.'


When a flood happens, when a small child falls into a well, why do you need me? Why don't IAS officers or the police get into the well? Who is responsible for the defence of India? The defence secretary, an IAS officer, not the service chief.

So, why doesn't the chief secretary go to Ahmedabad and defend the city when the Patels agitated? Why do you need an army column? At the drop of a hat, you want us to come.


'The babus never paid Field Marshal Manekshaw a penny till a fortnight before he passed away.'
Do you know how India treated its most famous son, Field Marshal Manekshaw? A Field Marshal never retires and he is entitled for allowance as a Field Marshal till his death. But the babus in the ministry of finance and defence never paid him a penny till a fortnight before he passed away.


When he was in a military hospital, a low functionary of the defence ministry went with a cheque of Rs 1.6 crore (Rs 16 million) as back pay for Sam Manekshaw.
If this is the way you treat your most famous son, how will it be for Major General Satbir Singh and the others?


So your grouse is mainly against the bureaucrats?

They are the main villains, the diabolic schemers. That is because the politicians have abdicated their responsibility.

Let me ask you, how many children of politicians and bureaucrats serve in the Indian armed forces? Naturally, there is no empathy. On the other hand, in Punjab, you will see third and fourth generation of family members in the armed forces.

Secondly, I dare say, with our own resources, we, in the armed forces, live in a very clean and disciplined environment and our children are healthy and go to school whereas the situation is different in the rest of the country.
 Probably, there is a feeling of jealousy.


Do you give Prime Minister Narendra Modi credit for implementing OROP?

Of course, I will give credit to Narendra Modi for accepting the concept of OROP. I am grateful to him. Having said that, I will also say, having accepted the concept of OROP, why don't you implement it in letter and spirit?

There was also a needless inclusion of the word Voluntary Retirement Scheme. There is no VRS in the armed forces; there is only premature retirement and that is done to keep the armed forces young.

My feeling is that (Defence Minister) Manohar Parrikar understood what was explained correctly by Major General Satbir Singh. Again, he is a prisoner of the system. The situation is, those who do not understand warfare and military ethics, sit and judge you.

Lal Bahadur Shastri meant well when he used the term 'Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan.' The others using it, is hypocrisy. When our jawans are on hunger strike at Jantar Mantar and the kisan killing himself, where is Jai Jawan and Jai Kisan?




What do you feel about A K Antony's reaction to OROP?

It is like a devil quoting the scriptures. I would say, India's worst defence ministers were V K Krishna Menon and A K Antony.



Some people feel the armed forces are not appreciative of what the government has done. What do you have to say?

I am sorry to say the Fourth Estate has not educated the public properly. I will give you an example. There were two fasts that were taking place at Jantar Mantar; the relay hunger strike and the fast unto death. What did the media report? Hunger strike called off. No, the relay hunger strike was not called off; only the fast unto death was called off.

'They can write off MAT, Rs 20,000 crore as NFFU and Rs 62,000 crore tax break for your corporate world, but you cannot give Rs 8,000 crore to your soldiers who guard you day and night.'
Similarly, some in the media do not understand the difference between premature retirement and voluntary retirement. If the public feel we are not correct, I will blame the media.

I want to ask, why didn't the media write about the Rs 20,000 crore (Rs 200 billion) loot of the exchequer in the 2006 scheme called Non-Functional Financial Upgrade, which has not been applicable to the armed forces.
If there are 100 officers belonging to the IAS, IPS, IFS, IRS, etc, and if one person goes to the next grade, all the 99 also will be given the same pay as the one fellow who got promoted. That is OROP, if you don't mind.

There was not a whimper in the media about this. It is only the Rs 8,000 crore (Rs 80 billion) for the OROP of the armed forces you talk about and not the Rs 20,000 crore.



Are you hopeful of a graceful solution?

We all live in eternal hope. All that Modi has to do is, tell Arun Jaitley and his finance ministry officials to implement it. He should say, if you find it difficult to implement, we will find some other finance minister as they are the stumbling block.

See, they can write off minimum alternate tax, Rs 20,000 crore as NFFU and Rs 62,000 crore (Rs 620 billion) tax break for your corporate world, but you cannot give Rs 8,000 crore to your soldiers who guard you day and night.

Shobha Warrier / Rediff.com 

 
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