| V.R. Raghavan is an Advisor at the Delhi Policy Group, New Delhi.
A
randomly selected events from the arrival of the East India
Company to present day
The
writing of histories serves many purposes. They record events,
they explain the rationale of events, and evaluate the causes
and consequences of events. A military history can record
battles or wars as also the cause and effect of technology
on warfare. They can in addition explain military events through
political, economic and social perspectives. A Military History
of India and South Asia is an attempt to read a pattern in
an exciting period. This book however focusses on randomly
selected events through the era, from the arrival of East
India Company to the Indian subcontinent obtaining nuclear
weapons. This period can be described as one in which western
or modern technology and war-fighting methodology confronted
India. The military conquest and colonisation of India by
the British was a consequence of superior technology. That
technology had effectively changed the face of battle and
organisational foundations of war.
Historical
rendition
A reading of this face-off between the Indian way of war in
the 18th Century and another perfected in the wars of Europe
offers grounds for a fascinating historical rendition. As
important as technology and battle tactics, their assimilation
by the Indian soldiery offers another rich field of study
into history. The socio-economic impact of these events into
the agrarian communities of India was not inconsiderable.
The Indian ruling classes who fielded armies on to battlefields
were themselves impacted by this confrontation between two
ways of conducting wars. This period of military history has
been extensively studied and analysed, albeit primarily by
British military writers. Both generals and generalists have
recorded battles, movement of armies and the Indian response,
as for example, of the Mughals, Marathas, Sikhs and southern
rulers like Tipu Sultan.
The
authors of this book have structured it on the well known
and predictable themes of East India Company's operation,
the Mutiny of 1857, the Martial Races debate, and the two
World Wars, before reading into the wars fought by independent
India's military forces. The sequencing and sourcing of material
is based on a wide reach of writings that are widely known.
This straight line and often staccato rendition of history
would have been acceptable, if enough had been offered to
reflect on the meaning of it all. The deeper significance
which should form the basis of historical analysis, is sadly
absent or ineffectively addressed. The rapid and factual rendition
of wars and battles do no more than place facts on paper without
clarifying what the reader is to make out of them.
The
account of military history since 1947 is wholly inadequate
in terms of facts and analysis. The nature of the wars fought
by India and Pakistan can be plumbed in terms of force structures,
economic foundations of military organisation and even as
a geopolitical contest of arms. The Indian military is hugely
involved in counter-insurgency operations for over 50 years.
Apparently this does not count as military history in the
authors' reckoning. India's acknowledged role as one of the
largest source of U.N. peacekeeping operations does not form
part of this reading of military history. The chapter on the
conflict in Sri Lanka is barely able to list the facts and
misses out on the strategy adopted by the two sides in one
of the longest and bloodiest armed conflicts in South Asia.
There is a weak and ineffectual chapter on nuclear issues
which fails to examine the consequences of nuclearisation,
either between India and Pakistan or its impact on the global
proliferation scene.
One
of the major trends in Indian military history has been the
relationship between the leaders and the led. The authors
refer to this in the chapters on the 1857 Mutiny and on the
Indian National Army of Subhash Chandra Bose. Post-1947, there
has been a significant shift in this relationship as reflected
in the egalitarian recruitment and officering pattern in the
armed forces. This book misses a major opportunity to delve
into this important factor which is the backbone of modern
India's military successes.
Interpreting
history
In history studies, there is already a movement for a change
in approach to interpreting history including military history.
It looks at the interdependent nature of history and the linkages
between military, societal, economic and political foundations
of history. The authors refer to this `new military history',
but have chosen not to work their book on such lines. As Stephen
Cohen in his foreword perceptively remarks, "the field
(of history) still awaits that grand synthesis". This
critique notwithstanding, the book may be found useful by
those who wish to take a quick look at the 300-year period
of colonial military history presented as a chronicle of events
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