Many of India’s national security inadequacies stem from the absence of a wholesome national security vision. Analyse (200 words)
Refer – The Hindu
Enrich the answer from other sources, if the question demands.
IAS Parliament 6 years
KEY POINTS
Inadequacies
· Neighbourhood policy – India’s neighbourhood policy holds a clear absence of vision on how to balance, engage and work with the many great powers in the regional and the broader international scene.
· For example, surgical strikes in Pakistan and doklam standoff in China, hardly made any significant gains in reality.
· Defence preparedness – India spends close to $50 billion annually on defence and yet might still be ill-equipped to fight the wars of the modern age, especially in the neighbourhood.
· India also suffers from almost non-functional higher defence organization and the defence policy doesn’t hold any political oversight or vision.
· Defence management – There is little conversation between the armed forces and the political class, and even lesser conversation among the various arms of the forces.
· Institutional lacuna – In India, talk of appointing a Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) has died down and the key post of military adviser in the National Security Council Secretariat (NSCS) remains vacant.
· The NSC almost never meets and the National Security Advisory Board, initially set up to seek ‘outside expertise’ on strategic matters, has become a space for retired officials.
Road to future
· Many of India’s national security inadequacies stem from the absence of a wholesome national security/defence vision.
· To address such a problem, India should have an overall national security document from which the various agencies and the arms of the armed forces draw their mandate.
· It should also enable them to create their own respective and joint doctrines which would then translate into operational doctrines for tactical engagement.
· In the absence of this, national strategy is broadly a function of ad hocism and personal preferences.
Sahitya 6 years
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IAS Parliament 6 years
Introduction could have been better. Try to prioritize points. Keep writing.