THE Indian
armed forces are a holy cow. We do not question
their expense, nor has there ever been any
parliamentary committee to look into their
budgetary allocation. Why they purchase a
particular type of weapon has been left to the
Defence Ministry. To take one example, the navy
is bent upon buying the Russian aircraft carrier
Gorshkov, even though Moscow has been
periodically raising the sale price, which now
stands at $3.2 billion.
Once in a while a case like the Bofors guns
scandal has shaken the nation, but the
information came from outside and the ruling
party did its best to hush it up. Even the
Italian go-between, Quattrochi, was pursued up
to a point and then allowed to go scot-free,
despite CBI protests, because of his high level
connections.
So our trust in the armed forces has been
implicit since independence and never did we
suspect that some officer could be ideologically
contaminated. All of a sudden, we have been hit
by one case, that of Lieutenant Colonel Srikant
Prasad Purohit. He is the senior serving officer
who has allegedly played a key role in the
Malegaon bombings of September 29. The blasts
took place in mostly Muslim localities, killing
31. As usual the initial suspicion fell on
Muslims. Malegaon is a small weavers’ town near
Nasik in Maharashtra and this is the second time
in two years that the Muslims of this rundown
area have been victims of similar blasts.
Strange that the military intelligence had no
clue that one army officer was involved with
local Hindu extremists. The credit goes to the
Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) that unearthed the
information that those responsible for the crime
were Hindu terrorists. The ATS interrogated Lt
Col Purohit and arrested him after getting
permission from the army.
The question anybody will ask is why military
intelligence failed to discover that a senior
officer was involved. Military intelligence has
a large set up in all the three services and has
its men all over the country. When they fail in
their job of uncovering extremists in their own
ranks, this suggests that they are taking their
job nonchalantly. It is all the more
disconcerting that no such previous case has
come to light since independence. It may well be
an aberration. Yet it is difficult to imagine
that a Purohit has been born only in the last
few years. An in depth and overall probe is
required.
True, in a recent interview Chief of Army Staff
General Deepak Malhotra has revealed that the
army high command is now profiling officers.
This is a knee-jerk reaction. A thorough
profiling of 31,000 officers is simply not
possible and picking up a few at random will not
be fair. What the services have to eliminate is
the suspicion in the minds of people that even
the military is not immune to communal
contamination. For the common man the armed
forces are a bastion of security and protection.
I concede that the military does a credible job
to hire recruits from a society that has all the
ills and convert them into an apolitical force.
But this is a field where the nation cannot
afford to go wrong even in one case.
If anyone has any doubts, they should see the
sad example of our neighbour, Pakistan. Initial
slackness and then General Zia-ul Haq’s effort
to have jihadis in the army has created a
situation in which some 35 per cent of men and
officers are said to be votaries of
fundamentalism. Reports have come in that there
were in the Pakistan army who refused to fight
against the Taliban in the northern areas.
I do not think that a secular India would ever
face such a situation even if the rulers were to
connive with fundamentalists of a particular
community. The armed forces themselves have such
an ethos that they would not allow such a
situation to arise. I know how upset the army
was when a senior officer was taken to the BJP
office in Delhi for a briefing when the Vajpayee
government was in power. The mistaken impression
given to the army high command was that some MPs
wished to be briefed about ongoing operations.
Still, the the worrying point is that many
retired military officers are joining the BJP,
or propagating on its behalf. Indeed, the party
has an association of ex-military men. A few
days ago this association sent out invitations
on the BJP stationery to a press conference
about Assam scheduled to be addressed by a
retired Lieutenant General. This does not come
as a surprise because the BJP has said that
Hindus cannot be terrorists and that the armed
forces are a part of Indian society which has
been horrified by the pusillanimous and
apologetic approach of the UPA government to
terror attacks. In fact, party president Rajnath
Singh has said that the party will bear the
legal costs of those apprehended in the Malegaon
case.
The BJP is playing with fire when it
communalises a case that should be looked into
objectively and the guilty punished severely.
The problem with the party is that it is trying
its best to polarize the country for the purpose
of elections, five of which are in progress in
the states and then for the Lok Sabha, which is
scheduled next March-April. The party is so
power hungry that all other segments of society
and the institutions will have to take steps to
protect themselves.
I do not know why the regimental centres have to
have a temple, mosque and gurdwara on their
premises. These places of worship exist in those
towns and cities where the regimental centres
are located. Those who seek the comfort of
religion are perfectly free to go there. Why
should the army allow religious worship in its
places?
Yet much depends upon political parties. They
cannot disturb the nation’s faith in the ethos
of pluralism. This is our heritage from the
national struggle and this is what we have
enshrined in the constitution. Playing the Hindu
card to counter Muslim funadamentalists is
hitting at the very foundation of India. The
nation even before winning independence said
that it would have a secular polity and that is
what we have been following, although not as
firmly at times as we should. Purohit or persons
like him among Hindus, Sikhs or Muslims are a
symptom of diseased thinking. They are a danger
to the country’s integrity. It’s a pity that for
the sake of votes some political parties are
encouraging them even at the expense of the
country’s unity. My experience says that they
will not go very far.