Thursday, 11 October 2018

OF TEETH AND TAILS



also accessible at onmanorama. follow the link below
https://english.manoramaonline.com/news/columns/straight-talk/2018/05/05/indian-army-critical-tailfaces-axe.html

A predator’s tail helps it, balance itself, in its chase to get meat between its teeth. Skyscrapers stand tall on foundations, that lie deep within, unseen and unsung. Marketing departments can script success, only if back-offices exist. Organizations likewise, thrive on unglamorous yet inevitable tails.

Indian Army, plans to enhance its “Teeth to Tail Ratio” (T3R), by redeploying” 57,000 personnel in accordance with “Shekatkar Committee Recommendations”. This "redeployment", does NOT envisage moving soldiers from its “tail” to the “teeth”, but by winding up organisations, which the committee feels are dispensable. Inability to execute “obsolescence replacements” and the penchant to suspect anything related to procurements, has already made Army logistics extremely complex, sensitive, difficult and plagued by non-availabilities. The committee, however, is silent on credible, tested and tried alternatives, to the “vanishing” supply chain nodes, abolition of the logistics requirements or how the resultant client clutter could be resolved. This can have serious repercussions in war.
What triggered the proposed restructuring of logistics?
Was it necessitated due to a revised operational doctrine?
Was it to improve logistics reach and stamina?

If revised operational doctrines necessitated change, transformation should have commenced with reengineering of combat organisational structures. Restructuring of services elements should have been a consequence. Information, in the public domain, suggest that restructuring is confined to closure of certain logistic installations, outsourcing of some activities and closure of some departments. 
If, operational relevance defines “Teeth”, then, much of the army, including various headquarters and departments, though not physically involved in combat, is teeth. Services organisations, by virtue of the role assigned, is also teeth. Ruthless manpower cuts have already reduced supply chain units to bare skeletons. With nothing else to cut and under pressure to save manpower, it seems that the committee recommended closures, that too without declaring existing logistics redundant. The current operational logistics requirements would have to be serviced either by organisations created for the purpose or by augmenting existing ones with personnel and infrastructure. Why should an existing organisation, functioning efficiently and much beyond its charted capabilities, be closed, to create another, to do the same job? Change for change sake? If, “contact” with the enemy is the sole determinant, existing “Teeth” has an inherent "Tail". Entire integral logistics elements of combat units are tails that function with no expertise in logistics. All controlling Headquarters in chain, too are “tails”.  Would they too face closure?

Beyond the commonly known, “two fronts”, Army is perpetually committed to counter-insurgency, its “third front”. The geographical dispersion of its deployment is a logistician’s nightmare. Attempts to “copy - paste”, Western T3R” to Indian conditions without serious “what -if” analysis could have disastrous consequences. While Defence Forces offer great opportunities for fiscal conservation, reductions or changes in equipment profile, organisational structures, process and practices must further the “Doctrines of War”, not dilute it. Shekatkar Committee Recommendations, sans credible alternatives, if implemented without serious deliberations, would compromise logistics reach and stamina besides curtailing flexibility and redundancy. The incapacitated teeth may lack a bite.





6 comments:

  1. Very educative and thoughtful subject.

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  2. Sir all the best for your articles and posts

    Warm Regards Ajeet Deshpande

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  3. Thanks.
    The issue unfortunately would become visible only when catastrophe strikes!! Till then window dressing would continue.

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  4. ทำรากฟันเทียมที่ไหนดี Great info! I recently came across your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I don’t know what to say except that I have.

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