Next Defence Budget – Will Enlarging Threats Be Considered?
by Prakash Katoch
Defence Budget 2018-2019 will be unveiled in a few weeks from now. What will be allocated to the Armed Forces is awaited with much trepidation considering that successive defence budgets under the present government have been poor, presently pegged at an incredible low of 1.5 percent of the GDP. One major reason why the hierarchy remains lackadaisical towards defence is absence of a national security strategy (NSS) and a comprehensive defence review (CDR), towards which the government has made no move despite being in office since May 2014. It affects holistic procurement planning as well resulting in haphazard purchases. How can the Niti Aayog, which has taken on defence planning, work out a 15-year span Long-Term Integrated Procurement Plan (LTIPP) without a NSS and a CDR? Besides, NSS is multi-faceted, not relating to military security alone; for example if we had the NSS in place, perhaps the drift of Maldives, Nepal and Sri Lanka into the gravitational pull of China could have been systematically met. The second major reason is the lack of military professionals in the MoD and higher defence set up, where again the government remains straight jacketed in the time wrap of the bureaucracy.
Next is the inadequate pre-budgeting process, in that, the three Services project their demands to the HQ Integrated Staff, which forwards the compiled demand to MoD. After some minor tinkering, MoD sends it to the Ministry of Finance. The Finance Minister puts arbitrary cap on defence allocations, without considering operational necessities. Nothing could be more warped in meeting national security requirements. In the US, a Congressional Committee is formed to which all Theatre Commanders and Commander Special Operations Command (SOCOM) make pre-budget presentations; covering what their present operational capabilities are and given funds requested what their future operational capability would be. It is then the Congressional Committee that projects budget requirement to the Congress. There is no reason we can’t have similar system especially when Parliament’s Standing Committee on Defence is headed by a two-star military veteran. Let this committee project the budget requirements to the government in writing with operational justifications.
The LTIPP for period 2012-2027 that stood approved by the Defence Acquisition Council headed by the Defence Minister, as also the 12th Five Year Plan, were based on a defence budget allocation at 3% of GDP. But the allocation of defence has always been much below that. Defence allocations must also be seen in the backdrop of the capability gap between the our military and the PLA, CAG reports pointing out that equipment provided by DRDO is sub standard and provisioned at excessive costs, enormous amount of money and time spent on R&D without even consultation of the user (military) and some even without MoD sanction, as also obsolescence weapons, weapon systems and equipment that the Services are holding. New raisings and modernization too needs to be catered for. A recent editorial in a national daily cites, among other reason, professional misgivings over persistent shortages of weapons and systems – combat aircraft, submarines and artillery pieces head the list that trickles down to a reliable rifle, safe helmet and body armour.
Remember the letter from Gen VK Singh, then Army Chief (now MoS (External Affairs)) to then PM in 2012 created uproar, but focused on the leak rather than the massive shortages. Many such letters have been written by many Service Chiefs and Chairman Chiefs of Staff Committee in the past. Yet the voids are permitted to grow because of vested interests that capitalize on creating criticalness to facilitate imports for individual and collective benefits in the face of emergencies. For same reason military professionals are not inducted into MoD, and as users in DRDO-DPSUs-OF other than odd perfunctory post whereas the need is for them to be in the planning / design, management, policy formulation and decision making levels.
On the issue of surrendering of defence budget, a former Vice Chief of Army Staff who had a close friend in MoD (Finance) was told by the latter that they have to give a quarterly report as to how much money ‘can’ possibly be surrendered from the defence budget, MoD being the only union ministry that has been surrendering funds barring odd year when complete funds were utilized. Jaswant Singh, when Defence Minister, had mooted the idea of carrying forward unspent defence budget to the next financial year. This was also recommended in various reports by the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Defence but the idea was given the quiet burial. The recent reform announced ‘Roll On’ plan for fresh acquisitions to overcome ‘surrendering’ funds at the end of every FY is misnomer, as it still leaves loopholes.
It may be recalled that defence allocation for FY 2015-2016 and FY 2016-2017 were same Rs 2,46,727 cr. Media was quick in calling the allotment of Rs 2,74,114 cr for FY 2017-2018 as a 6.2% hike. But it was naïve to not view this defence allocation in backdrop of the rupee depreciation and yearly inflation rates of defence procurement. It may be noted that defence allocation of Rs 2,46,727 cr in fiscal 2015-2016 also stood at $40 billion, while Rs 2,46,727 cr in last fiscal (2016-2017) went below $40 billion in actual terms.
Aside from the crying need for military modernization and making up critical deficiencies, operational requirements indicate why India needs annual defence allocation of 3% of GDP. The year gone by has seen expanding China-Pak nexus resulting in heightening proxy war against India. China’s PLA has made strategic lodgment in Gilgit-Baltistan and in Pakistan with the CPEC and Gwadar port. Nepal, Maldives and Sri Lanka have opened their arms to China. China supports Pakistani radicals at the UN, continues aggressive moves even after the Doklam standoff, and its state media threatens China can destabilize of our northeast if India pressurizes Pakistan in Kashmir. The strategic environment in the Indian Ocean Region is changing rapidly with some 18 Chinese naval bases including at Djibouti (already established), Gwadar, Hambantota and now Jiwani. It is time our policy makers take cumulative critical deficiencies of the Armed Forces, the need for modernization and adverse strategic fallout of a ‘hollowed’ defence more seriously. Playing blind man’s bluff and lackadaisical approach to defence at the cost of ignoring operational and geopolitical realities endangers national security.
Prakash Katoch was a Lieutenant General from Special Forces and post retirement has published over 1300 articles on international affairs, geopolitics, military, security, technical and topical issues besides authoring two books. Views expressed are his own
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