Let us look at the substantive portions of the 126-page
section of the report that was released online by Neville Maxwell, who was the
Delhi correspondent of the Times of London during the war. For one, the report
squarely attributes the debacle to an unsound military plan. It goes on to
blame the then army leadership, the intelligence apparatus, the bureaucrats in
the ministries of defence and external affairs, and the political class, not
necessarily in that order, for the humiliating defeat at the hands of the
Chinese. The army leadership, for overruling the field commanders; the
intelligence chief, for assuming, erroneously, that the Chinese would not
resort to use of force; and the then prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru’s
leadership, for pushing for a ‘Forward Policy’ of establishing military
outposts in areas claimed by China and launching aggressive patrols without the
necessary army wherewithal.
The report notes, among other things, the following:
* The government who politically must have been keen to
recover territory advocated a cautious policy whilst Army HQ dictated a policy
that was clearly militarily unsound.
* The Chief of Army Staff did not present the correct
military assessment to the political leadership on the forward policy in spite
of the fact that the military intelligence believed that China would retaliate
against any move by India to reclaim territory.
* A meeting was held in the Prime Minister’s Office on 2
November 1961 which was attended among others by the defence minister, the
foreign secretary, the Chief of Army Staff and the director Intelligence Bureau
(DIB). It appears that the DIB was of the opinion that the Chinese would not
react to our establishing new posts and that they were not likely to use force
against any of our posts even if they were in a position to do so.
The Ministry of Defence has sought to take refuge under the
pretext that the inquiry committee report remains top secret because of the
extremely sensitive nature of its contents “which are of current operational
value.” Some scholars have debunked the government’s claim, saying that
declassification of the report would not hinder or jeopardise in any manner the
contemporary political and military attitudes and affairs. On the contrary,
they have argued, it was necessary in the interest of generating an open and
honest debate in the country about the circumstances leading up to the war so
that the right lessons could be drawn. It has been pointed out that the
government ought to take the nation into confidence and encourage a critical
analysis of what went wrong and how to avoid a repetition in the future. As a
newspaper editorial said, “There needs, instead, be a thorough reading of the
report and the manner of its eventual public availability for a tutorial on
India’s inexplicably ostrich-like approach to archival material. If today we
are reacting to the report as if it were still 1963, given the lack of clarity
on military assessment of operational details, it reflects the state’s
reluctance to allow access to material essential for proper history writing,
the kind of history without which there cannot be coherent and informed public
debate.”
The release of a section of the report is a wake-up call of
sorts for the Indian political and military leadership. To quote a former
diplomat Hardeep S Puri, “The contents of the report point to three extremely
disturbing trends that were in evidence in the 1960s. Some of these have
continuing relevance even 52 years later. These merit a full national debate in
order to prevent the recurrence of a 1962-type fiasco. They relate to a
continuing civil-military disconnect, serious gaps in training and provisioning
of equipment, inadequate or flawed intelligence which contributed to bizarre
decision-making at the army headquarters and by the political leadership in the
ministries of defence and external affairs, and at the PMO.”
India would do well to reappraise its civil – military
relations unless, of course, it wants to go down the path that George Santayana
so eloquently warned against: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned
to repeat it.”
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