Chief of the Army Staff (India) explained

Post:Chief
Body:the Army Staff
Flag:Flag COAS.svg
Flagcaption:Flag of the Chief of the Army Staff
Incumbent:General Upendra Dwivedi
Incumbentsince:30 June 2024
Status:Professional head of land forces branch of the Indian Armed Forces.
Member Of:Defence Acquisition Council
Defence Planning Committee
National Security Council
Reports To: President of India
Prime Minister of India
Minister of Defence
Chief of Defence Staff
Seat:Integrated HQ of MoD (Army), South Block, Central Secretariat, New Delhi
Appointer:Appointments Committee of the Cabinet (ACC)
President of India
Constituting Instrument:Army Act, 1950 (Act No. 46 of 1950)
Precursor:Chief of the Army Staff and Commander-in-Chief, Indian Army
First:General Rob Lockhart
Abbreviation:COAS
Deputy: Vice Chief of the Army Staff (VCOAS)
Salary: monthly[1] [2]

The Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) is a statutory office held by the professional head of the Indian Army (IA), the land forces branch of the Indian Armed Forces.[3] Customarily held by a four-star general officer, the COAS is the senior-most operational officer of the IA, tasked with the roles of overseeing the overall functioning of the force during peace and wartime, committing to the preparation and maintenance of the force's operational effectiveness and defending the nation's territorial integrity and sovereignty.

Being a permanent member of the Chiefs of Staff Committee (COSC) and the National Security Council (NSC), the COAS also bears the responsibility of advising the nation's civilian leadership i.e., the Government of India on all matters privy to the IA.

Statutorily, the COAS ranks 12th-overall in the Indian order of precedence, and is the IA's status-equivalent of the Chief of Defence Staff, the Chief of the Naval Staff and the Chief of the Air Staff - all three positions of which are also occupied by four-star officers from the armed forces.[4]

Description

Roles and responsibilities

Seated at the Integrated Headquarters of Ministry of Defence (Army) (IHQ of MoD (Army)), stationed in New Delhi, the COAS is the senior-most operational officer of the IA, and is tasked with the following:

In addition to these responsibilities, the COAS is also a permanent member of:

The office's eminence in the aforementioned groups thus grants the appointee with the role to advise the Minister of Defence (Raksha Mantri or RM) on the affairs related to the IA's functioning and the promotion of an comprehensive integrated planning policy with respect to the affairs of tri-service integration, doctrinal strategy, capability development, defence acquisition and infrastructure.[11] [12]

Structure

As the professional head of the force, the COAS is assisted by one subordinate officer and three principal staff officers, namely:

Promotion

Beginning in the pre-independence era, the office of COAS has customarily been held by a four-star general.[14] The move to appoint a new designate to the position usually begins three months before the change-of-command, wherein the Ministry of Defence (MoD) reviews the résumés of the IA's sole Vice Chief of Army Staff (VCOAS) and five General Officer Commanding-in-Chiefs (of the force's five combatant commands) - all of whom are lieutenant generals, before making a decision.[15] Appointments to the position are made by the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet (ACC) - comprising the Prime Minister and the Minister of Defence, upon recommendation from the IHQ of MoD (Army); appointees to the office are automatically deemed promoted to the rank of general.[16]

Notably, for the first two decades following India's independence, the C-in-C and the successor COAS were the only four-star officers in the Indian Armed Forces, while the chiefs of the Indian Navy (IN) and Indian Air Force (IAF) were headed by three-star vice admirals and air marshals, respectively; the first chiefs to be promoted to four-star ranks of admiral and air chief marshal occurred in 1968 and 1966, respectively.[17]

Since 1950, the senior-most lieutenant generals in the IA's command cadre have customarily been appointed as COAS, nevertheless, this tradition has been broken twice, first in 1983 - when then-prime minister Indira Gandhi chose to appoint then-Lieutenant General A. K. Vaidya to supersede one senior officer, and in 2016 - when prime minister Narendra Modi chose to appoint then-Lieutenant General Bipin Rawat to supersede two senior officers.

Tenure

According to the IA's Army Rules, 1954 - a COAS-appointee reaches superannuation upon the completion of three years in the position or at the age of 62, whichever is earlier.[18] However, an appointee may also be dismissed from office by the President of India before the conclusion of the tenure under Section 18-19 of the Army Act, 1950 and Article 310 of the Constitution.[19]

Additionally, the appointee is eligible for an extension in tenure beyond the age of superannuation, as defined by Rule 16 A (4) Army Rules, 1954.[20] However, extensions to serving appointees have been rare, and have only been granted twice since 1947; first in June 1972 to General S. H. F. J. Manekshaw, who received a six-month extension which allowed him to serve until January 1973; and in May 2024 to General Manoj Pande, who received a one-month extension which allowed to serve until June 2024.[20] [21]

Previously, in the event of an abrupt stoppage during the incumbent's tenure - by termination, resignation or sudden demise, the senior-most lieutenant-general in IA's command cadre has customarily been appointed as the successor; this situation has occurred twice in the past: first in 1962 - when then-Lieutenant General J. N. Chaudhuri was appointed after the resignation of then-incumbent General Pran Nath Thapar, and again in 1993 - when then-Lieutenant General Shankar Roychowdhury was appointed after the sudden demise of then-incumbent General B. C. Joshi.[22]

Additionally, a COAS-appointee is also eligible to be selected for the position of Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), in accordance with the Army (Amendment) Regulations, 2022 - which prescribes that the designated nominee, in this case the COAS, must be under the age of 62 at the time of appointment as CDS; as of 2024, General Bipin Rawat has been the sole COAS-appointee to be appointed to the position of CDS.[23] [24]

History

Pre-independence era (1748–1947)

The position's initial roots finds its origins in the 18th century, when the East India Company (EIC) - a British-origin trade establishment and the then-de facto administrative organization of the Indian subcontinent, established the position of Commander-in-Chief, India (C-in-C) in 1748 to head its three Presidency Armies, namely the Bengal Army, the Bombay Army and the Madras Army.[25] Following the 1857-58 Indian rebellion against EIC rule, the control of the Presidency Armies were transferred directly to the British Crown, which succeeded the EIC as the official ruling-cum-governing entity of India. In 1895, the three armies were merged to form a unified British Indian Army (BIA), under the direct control of the C-in-C.[26] Following the Kitchener Reforms in 1903, up until the establishment of India's independence in 1947, the C-in-C functioned as the supreme commander of the armed forces in the subcontinent, liaising directly with the Governor-General of India over the administrative affairs of the stationed military.

Dominion-era (1947–1950)

Following independence and the subsequent partition of the subcontinent, the BIA was bifurcated into two new entities: the modern-day Indian Army (IA) - responsible for the Dominion of India, and the newly-formed Pakistan Army (PA) - responsible for the Dominion of Pakistan. However, the post of C-in-C was trifurcated into three positions: the C-in-C Indian Army, the C-in-C Pakistan Army and the Supreme Commander India and Pakistan.

Following independence, the IA retained GHQ India, New Delhi - headed by General Sir Rob Lockhart as the first post-independence C-in-C, while the PA established its headquarters at GHQ Pakistan, Rawalpindi - headed by General Frank Messervy (later succeeded by General Sir Douglas Gracey) as its inaugural C-in-C. Nevertheless, the two forces were directed under the auspices of the Supreme Commander's Headquarters (Supreme HQ), headed by Field Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck, the Supreme Commander. In January 1948, the position of Supreme Commander was abolished and bifurcated into the positions of Commander British Forces in India and the Commander British Forces in Pakistan, located at Bombay and Karachi, respectively, and with the responsibility of overseeing the repatriation of British military units to the United Kingdom.[27] In June 1948, the title of C-in-C was modified with the prefix Chief of the Army Staff, and re-designated as Chief of the Army Staff and Commander-in-Chief, Indian Army (COAS & C-in-C). [28]

In January 1949, upon the impending retirement of General Sir Roy Bucher - the IA's second C-in-C, the Government of India considered the decision to appoint a native Indian general officer to the position; up until then, Indian officers had only achieved the positions associated with the three-star rank of lieutenant general. Three lieutenant-generals were shortlisted as candidates for the position, namely:

Ultimately, Cariappa was chosen to succeed Bucher, which he did on 15 January 1949, with the substantive rank of a four-star general - which thus made him the first Indian-origin general and first native chief of the Indian Army; the day of his appointment has been commemorated annually ever since as Army Day.[29] Shrinagesh, nevertheless, later served as COAS from 1955 to 1957.[30]

Republic-era (1950–present)

In 1955, the designation of the position was shortened to simply to Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) through the Commanders-In-Chief (Change in Designation) Act, 1955; as a result of the Act, the tenure of the then-serving C-in-C - General Rajendrasinhji Jadeja, continued under the new designation.[31]

In January 1973, General S. H. F. J. Manekshaw, the Indian Army's seventh COAS, was promoted to the five-star rank of field marshal, in recognition of his leadership during the 1971 Indo-Pakistani War - which made him the only-serving COAS to have ever been promoted to the rank.[32] K. M. Cariappa, the second C-in-C of the Indian Army too was promoted to field marshal thirteen years later, in January 1986; however, unlike Manekshaw, he had superannuated at the rank of general in 1953 and had been in retirement for thirty-three years before his elevation. To note, although a field marshal is nominally the highest-ranking officer in the IA, the rank is all but titular with no operational duties attached, which leaves the COAS as the highest operationally-active officer in the IA.[33]

Appointees

The undermentioned table chronicles the appointees to the office of Commander-in-Chief, Indian Army (C-in-C) and the successor office of Chief of Army Staff (COAS), beginning from August 1947 to the present-day.[34] Ranks and honours are as at the completion of their tenure:

Chief of the Army Staff (1955–present)

See also

Former command offices

Other offices of the Indian Armed Forces

History

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Report of the 7th Central Pay Commission of India. Seventh Central Pay Commission, Government of India. https://web.archive.org/web/20151120092637/http://7cpc.india.gov.in/pdf/sevencpcreport.pdf. 20 November 2015. dead. August 13, 2017.
  2. Web site: 7th Pay Commission cleared: What is the Pay Commission? How does it affect salaries?. June 29, 2016. Biswas. Shreya. India Today. September 24, 2017.
  3. Web site: Chief of the Army Staff. indianarmy.nic.in.
  4. Web site: PRESIDENT'S SECRETARIAT. www.mha.gov.in. 26 July 1979.
  5. Web site: The Civil and the Military in India. www.theindiaforum.in. 12 February 2020.
  6. Web site: Gen Upendra Dwivedi becomes chief of 1.3 million-strong Army. www.deccanherald.com. 30 June 2024.
  7. Web site: Army capable of safeguarding security of country: Army chief. 8 June 2013.
  8. Web site: Stand with Army, threat to territorial integrity will be fought with equal force: Ladakh MP. timesofindia.indiatimes.com. 24 June 2020.
  9. Web site: Indian Armed Forces. knowindia.india.gov.in.
  10. Web site: The Army Act, 1950.
  11. Web site: Civil-military relations in Independent India. www.orfonline.org. 15 August 2022.
  12. Web site: CDS Rawat to face hurdles & sabotage unless rules are rewritten. www.orfonline.org. 2 January 2020.
  13. Web site: Deputy Chief of Army Staff (DCOAS) . indianarmy.nic.in . 12 January 2022.
  14. Web site: India to now get chief of defence staff, will be a 4-star general. timesofindia.indiatimes.com. 25 December 2019.
  15. Web site: In Bucking Army Seniority, Modi Takes a Leaf from Pakistani Playbook. thewire.in. 20 December 2016.
  16. Web site: Due process followed in selection and appointment of Army chief, say defence ministry sources. timesofindia.indiatimes.com. 18 January 2016.
  17. News: Part I-Section 4: Ministry of Defence (Navy Branch) . 245 . 23 March 1968. The Gazette of India.
  18. Web site: Army Rules, 1954. www.mod.gov.in.
  19. Web site: Article 310 in Constitution of India. indiankanoon.org.
  20. Web site: In an Unusual Move, Govt Extends Army Chief General Pande's Tenure by One Month. thewire.in. 27 May 2024.
  21. Web site: Domestic, Regional Implications of Pakistani Army Chief's Term Extension. thewire.in. 23 August 2019.
  22. Web site: India's army chief is dead. www.upi.com. 18 November 1994.
  23. Web site: 24 December 2019. Cabinet approves creation of the post of Chief of Defence Staff in the rank of four star General. 2019-12-25. Press Information Bureau, Government of India.
  24. Web site: MINISTRY OF DEFENCE (Department of Defence) NOTIFICATION. assettype.com.
  25. Book: Jackson, Major Donovan . India's Army . 1940 . Low, Marston . London . 1–8 .
  26. Web site: Southern Command History. Indianarmy.nic.in. 4 January 2010.
  27. Web site: Press Communique - 12 November 1947 (Page 3). Press Information Bureau of India - Archive. 10 November 1947. 19 July 2020.
  28. Web site: Press Communique. Press Information Bureau of India - Archive. 21 June 1948. 18 June 2023.
  29. Web site: Selection of Army Chief. spsindia.in.
  30. Web site: Army generals surprise late chief's wife on her 99th birthday. www.hindustantimes.com. 15 August 2014.
  31. Web site: The Commanders-In-Chief (Change in Designation) Act, 1955. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20111111144149/http://vakilno1.com/bareacts/laws/The-Commanders-In-Chief-Change-in-Designation-Act-1955.html. 11 November 2011. 18 October 2011. VakilNo1.com. dmy-all.
  32. News: 2 January 1973 . Part I-Section 4: Ministry of Defence (Army Branch) . https://web.archive.org/web/20230206082639/https://egazette.nic.in/WriteReadData/1973/E-1306-1973-0001-57777.pdf . 6 February 2023 . The Gazette of India-Extraordinary . 1.
  33. Web site: Rank for Indian Army . atharvafoundation.in.
  34. Web site: Official Indian Army Web Portal . Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) . www.indianarmy.nic.in . 18 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210718121307/https://indianarmy.nic.in/site/FormTemplete/frmTemp1PTC2C.aspx?MnId=KlXwOige5RfLtzzoCqAdnQ%3D%3D&ParentID=03FzZ1bcM4iK4xVqplbx8w%3D%3D&flag=8CKP966uzg96kLov0aWdfQ%3D%3D . 18 July 2021.