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Thread: Military Doctrines: Next steps

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    Military Doctrines: Next steps

    Military Doctrines: Next steps

    Ali Ahmed

    August 16, 2010

    The press release on the latest doctrine issued informs that, “The joint doctrine for air-land operations would serve as the cornerstone document for use of military power in a joint warfare scenario when the Army's infantry, armoured and artillery strengths are used alongside Air Force's fire power. It establishes the framework of concepts and principles to understand the approach to planning and conduct of air-land operation in a conventional war scenario.” Not being in the open domain, it can be taken as no more than what the press statement alludes to: the application of air power in a land campaign. Is this advance enough?

    In the absence of a CDS, this recent release at best represents a minimal consensus between the two Services in integrating air power with land power. Another document integrating air power in naval operations is in the offing. What is missing is a joint approach to war-fighting between the Services. A joint doctrine dating to 2006 exists; but the silence that has surrounded it since and the fact that an additional, if supplementary, joint doctrine was felt necessary reflects on its credibility. Clearly, there is scope for doctrinal integration.

    The Services have been doctrinally fecund over the past decade. The Army has arrived at ‘Cold Start’ which envisages early launch of limited offensives. These can be built upon by strike corps depending on the political decision on the nature of the war. Envisioning a strategic role for itself, the Air Force’s bid is for gaining air dominance at the earliest. This is, in order thereafter, to pursue a strategic infrastructure busting and military attrition campaign. This relegates its support for land forces to a supplementary role. For its part, the Navy, addressing a wider canvas and willing maritime-mindedness in the nation, has expansively named its doctrine, ‘India’s Maritime Doctrine’.

    The doctrines are primarily prompted by the structural factor in terms of changes in the regional security situation and learning there from. The impact of Kargil and Operation Parakram have been to energise Limited War thinking and the Cold Start doctrine respectively. Also deepening of strategic culture through growing national power indices, expansion in the strategic community and changes in the political landscape including cultural nationalism have been influential. Lastly, bureaucratic politics surrounding expanding defence budgets and the need to keep the respective Service relevant in the nuclear age are also impelling factors.

    The consequence of these pulls and pushes is that the Services are bidding to pursue ‘parallel wars’. While campaigns, though interdependent, can be relatively distinct from each other, separate Service-specific ‘parallel’ wars are difficult to concede in principle.

    Firstly, this amounts to suboptimal use of military power. Synergy that raises the whole to a level higher than the sum of its parts would be missing. Mere co-ordination would not suffice. Secondly, against a nuclear armed opponent, even if action of each Service is individually below assessed nuclear thresholds, the cumulative impact of the three both physically and psychologically could yet trigger off a nuclear threshold. Besides, levels of diplomatic coercion and covert intelligence operations also need factoring in. Thirdly, political control would be difficult since each Service will vie for the lead role in the multiple campaigns.

    With the integrating document missing, it is only political aims and the limiting parameters set in the run up or at the outset of a war that would bring about a unity of effort. While conceding that military doctrine formulation is a specialised activity, it can no longer be done in individual bureaucracies respectively or by the military independently. The sphere of autonomy of the military having been considerably attenuated by nuclearisation, there is a case for greater political oversight and bureaucratic participation.

    The political aim may be to reduce the Pakistan Army’s potential to control the Pakistani state post-hostilities and any influence over the future peace. The other possible aim that usually finds mention is capture of territory. The latter is not discussed here since it appears to be a holdover from the previous century.

    Piecing together the commentary on ‘Cold Start’ so far, the strategy apparently comprises launching of pivot corps limited offensives supplemented with strike corps resources. This would be done along with the Air Force wresting the initiative in the air in the early stages of the war. This phase would set the stage for punishment administered by the strike corps and by the Air Force. A combination of posturing, employment of strike corps, and application of operational level degradation fire assaults would force enemy strategic reserves into the open for the Air Force, in combination with the land forces, to degrade them. A clear aim and method emerges.

    The political level consideration on the aim needs to be, one, whether the Pakistan Army will ride away into the sunset without a nuclear bang, and, two, if this attempt at compellence, virtually amounting to regime change, would not instead get a worse alternative into the saddle in Pakistan.

    On the methods, there needs to be an outlining of parameters of limitation. Though a ‘short, sharp’ high-intensity war is projected by the Services, it is also the sales pitch for the option of war. The Services do not have an explicit Limited War doctrine. The limitation will be dependent on the political aim set and the parameters given by the political leadership when in sight of conflict. The Services believe that, as in Kargil, they are flexible enough to deliver within set limits.

    Three problems however arise. One is ad hocism that may attend decision making with crisis as the backdrop. The second is the problem with compellence strategy, which involves keeping the promise of more punishment to come to get the rational, military decision maker in Pakistan to oblige on stated demands. In this is inherent the escalatory dynamic. Besides, what the war does to the internal political complexion in Pakistan is uncertain. The cases of Germany in WWI and Japan in WWII and Iraq in Iraq War II are instructive. The third is gauging how much punishment administered is ‘enough’ to remain short of nuclear thresholds. This cannot be dependent solely on bomb damage assessments internal to the military.

    That India has managed warfighting credibly earlier resulted in its martial triumphs, 1971 and Kargil. This was in both the circumstances: of availability of time and in face of shortage of it. Therefore, there is no denying that it can be done again. The question is: Need it be so?

    The next round may be taken on the run, as the term ‘Cold Start’ implies. Additionally, examples of shortfalls of integration also exist alongside, such as the 1965 War and in operations short of war like the IPKF episode. Institutionally, the national security bureaucracy has made considerable progress since the Kargil Committee Report. Doctrine formulation would generate and reflect a ‘whole of government’ approach, as was intended. The fear of militarization of governmental thinking, holding back next steps, need not necessarily happen. Instead, the military prong would be suitably ensconced in a wider grand strategy. What needs to be done?

    Firstly, greater doctrinal involvement of the MoD, in conjunction with the NSCS and the MEA, and not forgetting the R&AW is necessary. An opportunity is the five-year review of the Joint Doctrine 2006, possibly due next year and therefore considerations on which can be expected to be underway. Such an exercise deserves wider participation.

    Secondly, a separate joint Limited War doctrine needs to be brought out on the only kind of war feasible in the nuclear age. A written document on what the concept means in the Indian context will be useful in intimating the adversary of our thought content. This will help build a common understanding since limitation is a shared aim between nuclear armed adversaries.

    Institutionally, the next step is clearly the creation of a CDS. The inescapable doctrinal implication of this post is the integration of conventional and nuclear doctrine. We must be prepared for enemy nuclear first use contesting our view that nuclear weapons are only ‘political weapons’. In the event, the double-hatted COSC or NSA would be found wanting as substitutes for a CDS. Next, unity of effort cannot be brought about by the Defence Secretary. He would be handling and answering for the sinews of defence. Third, receiving institutionally-informed military advice from three sources, in the form of three Chiefs of Staff, is not good enough. A COSC, also representing his Service, cannot also pitch in as a single point source. A happy circumstance of good interpersonal relations can be no compensation. Culmination of the post-Kargil restructuring is necessary. This cannot be a bottom-up exercise, which first awaits a consensus among the Services, or as is projected, between political parties.
    Military Doctrines: Next steps | Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses
    This article is about two years old. Times when many of us were banging our heads over CS. However, the author is advocating the relevance or rather, the indispensibility of a Chief of Defence Staff, something that's alien to the Indian Armed Forces till date and something that our bureaucrats and politicians look at as an imminent threat, short of a Military Coup. Would request for the views of our foreign military professionals on this and what their analysis say in this regard.
    Last edited by Deltacamelately; 15 Jun 12, at 16:53.
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    You need a CDS to club over the Bird Chief. The birds don't have the numbers nor the throw weight to do the kind of damage they envisioned and by the time they're done (compare to the damage needed to be done by NATO over in Kosovo and by Operation DESERT STORM), 40+ days, the deciding action on the ground would have already been fought.
    Chimo

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    Military Professional Deltacamelately's Avatar
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    Sir,

    Are you meaning "who won the airial war?"

    I was asking with reference to jointmanship.
    And on the sixth day, God created the Field Artillery...

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    It took a determined US Congress and visionary SECDEFs to force joint warfare through and even then, we still have turf wars at the expense of each other. Dedicated CAS platforms are disappearing off the USAF's procurement wish list.

    So you do need someone at the top with the vision and the determination to see this jointness through.
    Chimo

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    Does the Indian Army need CAS more than it needs the InAF to deny the PAF the ability to do CAS missions against it? What role exactly does the army want the air force to play? How critical is this role to army operations? Assuming the army can get some modern tube artillery to back up its SMERCH units and can get its hands on more attack helicopters India might be better served [in most instances] by developing its own ability to provide the supporting fires it will need within the depth of the battle assigned to the army. The possession of SMERCH rockets means the army is fighting to a depth of up to 80km. When those rockets are in the air they are a hazard to aircraft (as are artillery shells). A good example being the USMC. Though a much smaller force it is integrated and trains to work together on the tactical level. With in the army area what can the air force offer? Interdiction might be a better role for example, pounding a Pakistani unit before it can shoot at an Indian unit is more effective than bombing them to make them stop shooting.

    When CAS is needed, does the army want it as an on-call asset to supplement conventional fires, a flying 9-1-1 force to deliver emergency support to at-risk units, a force dedicated to hammering fortified positions with PGM's? A fighter bomber carrying 1 ton PGM's is death on bunkers ad strong points but is less effective against tanks in the open. Conversely the same plane loaded with rockets and cluster bombs is very effective at blunting penetrations and attacks but is not so good against strong points or danger close missions. Loading a plane to do multiple missions may leave the plane unable to provide the required amount of support of any one type. What can the army do to help the air force with SEAD missions, is that even an army concern? How are the pilots getting and giving information to the units on the ground? Will the forward air controllers be air force or army?

    Lots of questions that need to be answered.

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    Quote Originally Posted by zraver View Post
    Does the Indian Army need CAS more than it needs the InAF to deny the PAF the ability to do CAS missions against it? What role exactly does the army want the air force to play? How critical is this role to army operations? Assuming the army can get some modern tube artillery to back up its SMERCH units and can get its hands on more attack helicopters India might be better served [in most instances] by developing its own ability to provide the supporting fires it will need within the depth of the battle assigned to the army. The possession of SMERCH rockets means the army is fighting to a depth of up to 80km. When those rockets are in the air they are a hazard to aircraft (as are artillery shells). A good example being the USMC. Though a much smaller force it is integrated and trains to work together on the tactical level. With in the army area what can the air force offer? Interdiction might be a better role for example, pounding a Pakistani unit before it can shoot at an Indian unit is more effective than bombing them to make them stop shooting.

    When CAS is needed, does the army want it as an on-call asset to supplement conventional fires, a flying 9-1-1 force to deliver emergency support to at-risk units, a force dedicated to hammering fortified positions with PGM's? A fighter bomber carrying 1 ton PGM's is death on bunkers ad strong points but is less effective against tanks in the open. Conversely the same plane loaded with rockets and cluster bombs is very effective at blunting penetrations and attacks but is not so good against strong points or danger close missions. Loading a plane to do multiple missions may leave the plane unable to provide the required amount of support of any one type. What can the army do to help the air force with SEAD missions, is that even an army concern? How are the pilots getting and giving information to the units on the ground? Will the forward air controllers be air force or army?

    Lots of questions that need to be answered.
    Z,

    Your questions invariably leads to yet another question - Can the above be accomplished without having a dedicated Chief of Staff?
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    I will go further. Can the above be ANSWERED without having a dedicated CDS?
    Chimo

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    Quote Originally Posted by Deltacamelately View Post
    Z,

    Your questions invariably leads to yet another question - Can the above be accomplished without having a dedicated Chief of Staff?
    a chief of staff system or a joint chiefs of staff arrangement?

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    Quote Originally Posted by zraver View Post
    a chief of staff system or a joint chiefs of staff arrangement?
    A Chief of Defence Staff to whom all the three Service Heads will be be answerable, with real basis.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Deltacamelately View Post
    A Chief of Defence Staff to whom all the three Service Heads will be be answerable, with real basis.
    That would certainly help but has its own draw backs. A joint chiefs of staff arrangement has served the US fairly well.

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    Quote Originally Posted by zraver View Post
    That would certainly help but has its own draw backs. A joint chiefs of staff arrangement has served the US fairly well.
    Could you please eleborate on this? Specially on the operational part/decission making arrangement?
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    Quote Originally Posted by Deltacamelately View Post
    Could you please eleborate on this? Specially on the operational part/decission making arrangement?
    Way above my pay grade and I am not sure the JCS has operational control. IIRC the JCS determines doctrine and need and serves as the bridge between the civilian leadership and the military commands, but operation control is given to a theater commander who serves as an overall CinC of all services in that theater.

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