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Events & Issues
Tackling Naxal Menace
ARMY MUST GET MORE INVOLVED
By Lt Gen Pran Pahwa (Retd)
New Delhi, May 07, 2010
It is paradoxical. The Prime Minister says that the
Naxalites pose the biggest security threat to the country
since Independence. But simultaneously, he announces that the
Army, which has over five decades of experience in fighting
insurgency, will not be used against them as they are our own
misguided people. But the Army is already being used against
our own people in Jammu and Kashmir and some north eastern
States. The explanation given for this contradictory stand is
that the insurgents there are fighting for secession.
It seems to have been overlooked that the Naxalites are
fighting for something even bigger. They want not just a part
of the country but all of it, and that too by violent means.
This may be brushed aside as mere rhetoric and something that
can never happen, but people with an agenda like that are
patient. They give themselves sufficient time (in this case
the deadline is 2050) and single-mindedly pursue their
objective. The purpose of this piece is to stress that the
Naxal insurgency is more than just a law and order problem and
the Army needs to be brought in immediately.
The very thought of the Army being employed in the heartland
of the country is instinctively distasteful for most. It must
be admitted, however, that this writer has been advocating
this course of action for the last four years but has never
found much support. Some people are against the very idea
while the others feel that it is not yet time. Meanwhile, the
insurgency is continuing to expand.
The danger is that if at all this decision is taken in the
future it might be too late because an ideology-driven
movement like the Naxalite insurgency follows a typical growth
pattern. It begins with a small band of people fighting for a
popular cause (like against poor governance and inadequate
development in this case) and conducting hit and run raids
against the government forces. With each success their
popularity increases and more people join them. The group
continues to grow with each victory as it is a normal human
tendency to side with the winner.
It follows therefore that an insurgency must be stamped out by
the police forces in its very initial stages. If the action is
delayed beyond a certain point then a more potent force like
the Army will have to be called in. In this particular case it
appears that the government did not take timely action because
it failed to understand this aspect of the growth trajectory
of the Naxalite insurgency. Consequently, the movement has now
evolved to a level where the insurgents can move around in
large groups and attack police posts, hijack trains and take
government officials hostage with impunity. At this point of
time even the Army may only be able to contain the further
spread of the insurgency and wipe it out completely.
Like all insurgencies, the Naxalite insurgency too is
essentially a political problem and will ultimately have to be
solved politically. At present the insurgents are on a winning
spree and in no mood to negotiate. Their aim, as they have
unabashedly declared, is not development, but to spread the
Maoist ideology throughout the country and finally take over
power at the Centre through violent means. They will be
convinced that they cannot achieve this aim by violent means
and agree for talks only after they have suffered a series of
military defeats by the Army. The government can then
negotiate from a position of strength.
Punjab is often quoted as an example where insurgency was
eliminated predominantly by the police. The government too
appears to have been swayed by that experience while planning
to tackle the Naxalites. But there is very little similarity
between the two. In Punjab, the cause (Khalistan) had little
public support, the movement itself was uncoordinated and
divided among various groups and their senior leaders were all
sitting safely abroad. The insurgency eventually lost focus
and degenerated into a law and order problem. These aspects of
the Naxalite insurgency are quite the opposite and the Punjab
model is therefore misleading.
The police and the paramilitary forces (PMF) have achieved
some successes in the past, specially their Special Forces.
But they do not appear to have dented the insurgency seriously
as it has continued to grow steadily. There are many factors
inhibiting the effective employment of the police and PMF by
themselves. Their senior level leadership, which is from the
IPS, is not sufficiently knowledgeable about combat
operations, their organisational structure does not cater for
coordinated employment of small units over a wide area and the
efficacy of their logistics system in the field is
questionable. The training of most of the troops is also not
up to the required standards. Their record in containing the
Naxalites has therefore not been very encouraging.
It will take some time before the police and the PMF can be
reorganised and restructured to take on the responsibility of
fighting the insurgency by itself. Till then the Army, the PMF
and the police must operate together with the overall planning
being in the hands of the Army which has both the experience
and the staff to launch and coordinate operations over a wide
frontage. Once the PMF and the police are ready, the Army must
gradually step back and hand over the major responsibility to
them. That is what has been done in J&K.
The Army’s reluctance to get involved in the Naxalite problem
beyond providing the police and PMF training and advice is
understandable; not only is it already over-stretched but it
is also facing an acute shortage of officers. It is probably
also afraid that counter-insurgency operations spread across
five States with local politics thrown in will be a messy
affair. And though the Home Minister has declared that he will
get rid of the problem in two to three years, the Army knows
that it will more likely be 10 to 15 years. In spite of this,
if the assessment of the government that the Naxalites pose
the biggest threat to the country at the moment is correct,
then the Army cannot hold back. It must be brought in
immediately to curb the further expansion of the insurgency.
The impression that the Army is inclined to use excessive
force is not correct. It always employs the minimum possible
force in internal security tasks as is evident from the fact
that it has never used tanks, guns or aircraft against
insurgents or rioters in the country. The use of Air Force in
the offensive role is, however, not recommended because the
collateral damage that could be caused may eventually be
counter-productive. Moreover, guerrilla warfare by its very
nature is designed to neutralise the superiority of the
government forces in manpower, equipment and technology. Thus,
while the Air Force may be very effective initially, the
guerrillas will soon develop tactics to evade it.
The government will doubtless face many legal, political and
organisational hurdles (including protests from human rights
activists) in employing the Army against the Naxalites. These
must not be allowed to stand in the way of national security
and ways must be found to overcome them. ---INFA
(Copyright India News & Feature Alliance)
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