Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I really cant tolerate reading on after it starts right of the bat with the usual Army controls all BS.
If the army really does control all why tf did musharraf do the NRO? why did the all power full dictator and all powerful COAS have to cut such a bad deal with civilians?
The first part of the preface is merely opinion which is as in all books, because it's a book. If you can get past that, rest of the book is pretty objective. Tells you it's methodology (for collecting information from the students at the Staff College), people interviewed, citations and so on. Its content is based on what the interviewee's which were Pakistani Army students or Foreign students answered to questions, also tells about the curriculum which is apparently based on a World War II doctrine and a bit outdated for modern warfare.
Great read. Thanks guys ...
One thing I found interesting. I have read in many books - Pakistani and foreign that PA is exceptionally proficent in tactical training but lacks in strategic vision and initiative. A study of Pakistan's wars exposes this problem, again and again. PA needs to address this. It needs to upgrade education and do partneships with Turkish and German military academies both of which excel in strategic and initiative culture.
“Most [of the DS] were good, but some were abhorrent; some were superb, and most were capable and competent tactically… My experience was that instructors who studied in the West were much more open and more prone to critical thought.”
The 2002 Student related an anecdote about an allied officer’s DS who offered the advice that when he beat his wife he should do so gently because women were more fragile than men. Another DS confided to the Lebanese student that the Muslims in Lebanon should “get rid of the 50 percent of the Lebanese population that were Christians,” not realizing (or perhaps not caring) that the Lebanese student was a Christian.
The 2008-2009 Student thought the tension between creative thinking and the use of past solutions was rooted in Pakistani cultural and educational practices that he thought explained how many things actually worked not only in Pakistani society, but at the Staff College. In Pakistan, he explained, everyone’s place in the social hierarchy is precisely defined and well understood. One was obligated to do certain things for the family and larger kinship group. One manifestation of this cultural norm at the Staff College was that every Pakistani student knew the precise graduation order of everyone in his Pakistan Military Academy “batch” [graduating class], and those in senior or junior “batches.” They invariably referred to more senior “batchmates” as “Sir.” Even greater deference was shown to the DS and senior officers. Because of their greater seniority in the Army, he thought their opinions on anything simply could not be openly questioned by more junior Pakistani officers. Thus, creative thinking was subtly discouraged in practice even as it was acknowledged as being desirable by the more cosmopolitan senior officers and DS.
This insight was the key to understanding why chappa was so prized. To disagree with a Staff College-approved solution was like disagreeing with the opinions of a DS or a senior officer. It was more than just a social gaffe; it actually skirted the boundaries of disloyalty to the Army. Anyone who did so made others visibly nervous and uncomfortable. The Student described most learning at the Staff College as “autodidactic” and considered his classmates as poorly educated compared to the Western military officers. Their only higher education was the two-year PMA course that amounted to little more than a junior college education.
Their experiences at PMA prepared them well for the Army, but not very well for higher learning and creative thinking.
The Students attending the Staff College during the first 25 years of the study period also would have agreed with this assessment made by the 1980 Student: “Tactics are basically World War 2 foot infantry tactics and are in sharp contrast to current U.S. and NATO doctrine. Attack is usually for shallow objectives at ratios of 2 to 1. Defense is usually linear and based on the assumption that the enemy will attack at approximately 2 to 1 strength. Artillery is highly centralized and inflexible. The effects of electronic warfare, improved night vision devices, anti-tank GMs, helicopter-lifted infantry and gunship, and various changes in technology are known but have not been allowed to affect tactical doctrine.” Virtually identical comments were made two and three decades later respectively by the 2002 and 2011-2012 Students. The latter joked that he “got a degree in World War II tactics” at the Staff College.
The 1989 Student thought there was an even greater problem in the Pakistan Army than simply poor unit execution of doctrine. He considered that a high percentage of the doctrine taught at the Staff College was “recycled U.S. Army doctrine.” However, unlike in the U.S. Army, which generally views doctrine as a set of guidelines that have to be adapted to every specific case, the Staff College seemed unwilling to tolerate the slightest deviation. This “blind adherence,” he thought, led to rigidity and parochial thinking. Ironically, because this officer had been very open and blunt in his denunciation of cheating, during a major exercise in which he was the intelligence officer of the opposing force, Foxland, he was accused by a DS of usingchappa. On his recommendation, the Foxland forces made a chemical weapon attack on the friendly Blueland unit and “wiped it out.” The sponsor DS thought
chappa must have been used to identify the location of the friendly unit. The Student vigorously denied this and explained that the tactical doctrine of the Pakistan Army was so rigid and predictable that one could easily template a defensive layout by analyzing only a few data points.
The assessment of nearly all Students can be summarized in the comment of the 2012-2013 Student B who considered Tri-Brachial an example of “disjointed operations,” noting that although all three service college classes had been brought together to plan a joint military operation, the focus of the exercise was on individual service orientation lectures with only “lip service” paid to actual joint planning techniques. This officer also noted there were only eight total PAF and PN officers in a class of 382 Pakistani officers, making it theoretically possible for an Army officer at the Staff College never to come in contact in his syndicate room with an officer from any other service until the end of year when the Tri-Brachial exercise was held.
A year later, the 2010-2011 Student A’s Pakistani student sponsor admitted there was too much emphasis on India as the main threat. Even more recently, a Pakistani student admitted to the 2012-2013 Student B, “I don’t know why we hate them so much. We like their music, their movies, and our two languages are nearly the same.” He said others in the class also thought it was time to let go of this irrational enmity and for Pakistan to “move on.”
A portion of the internal security curriculum that year was also devoted to martial law and the provision of military assistance to civil authorities.
Two years later, the 1997 Student was intrigued by the lack of recognition of the importance of military intelligence in counterinsurgency operations. The typical view expressed by his classmates was that ISI performed that function at the strategic level and the Army’s Military Intelligence Directorate did it at the tactical level. Both intelligence organizations, however, were considered by the Pakistani students as “a place where you’d stick people who couldn’t serve competently elsewhere.
Although the Staff College placed marginally more emphasis on internal security operations in the 2007-2008 course, the real turning point came in 2009 when the internal security curriculum expanded to nearly five weeks and almost daily discussion of the subject occurred in the syndicate rooms. This change coincided with the breakdown of a controversial peace agreement struck between the federal government and a militant group known asTehrik-i-Namaz-i- Sharia Muhammadi
, or TNSM, in the Swat Division of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province
The most candid comment about the positive use of militants to gain Pakistani objectives was made during the 2010-2011 course by the Commandant, an ethnic Kashmiri. While summing up the major lessons of a major SCW exercise that year, he made this comment: “We have our own insurgents, and, if need be, we can use them.” The Student initially thought he must have misspoken, but after consulting with other Western students who were similarly surprised to hear such a candid admission, realized he had heard him quite correctly.
Even the war in FATA has been disastrous if you look at it from tactical perspective. Yes, we were inexperienced in the western theatre with little at our disposal but that doesn't justify the lack of out of box thinking by battlefield commanders. Hundreds of lives were lost due to inefficiency, lack of coordination and wrong decisions. School of infantry and Tactics saw some change in curriculum as precious lives were lost mainly because of no prior knowledge of battlefield at all as all the focus was on Eastern Frontier. Happens when you downplay a situation.Look guys it does not need foreign military students at Staff College, Quetta to tell us the training and education our officers is outdated and fails to produce leaders who can react to the fast dynamic of a battle and understand the strategy. The best example I can give is 1965 war. If the same Pakistan Army was led by German or Turkish officer corps you can almost be certain that Pakistan would have liberated Kashmir and won the war.
In hindsight it does not require a Austerlitz to see that if Pakistan threatened the chicken neck that was the Jammu sector India would be face having entire Kashmir being cut off leading to the surrender of the Indian Army there. As this disaster would unfold India would get desperate. If somebody is strangling you and has his hands around your neck what do you do? Yeh kick him where he is most exposed - straight into his testicles which have the neccessary effect of the guy letting you go as he bends over in agony.
So what was Pakistan's exposed testicles? Well Lahore of course. Barely 10 miles from Indian border and flat country inbetween. As we know this is exactly what happened. And what defensive plan did Pakistan have for this - given that it was 99% certain India would retaliate? Non at all.
Yes. This is a Pakistani trait...great at tactics but bad at strategy...Great read. Thanks guys ...
One thing I found interesting. I have read in many books - Pakistani and foreign that PA is exceptionally proficent in tactical training but lacks in strategic vision and initiative. A study of Pakistan's wars exposes this problem, again and again. PA needs to address this. It needs to upgrade education and do partneships with Turkish and German military academies both of which excel in strategic and initiative culture.
I've heard the same from other sources before. I used to be friends with a captain in the army and he talked about the stiff structure and lack of "out of the box" thinking. Seems to be reflective of many Pakistani families. "Elders know best", "30 year old is only a bacha if i am 50" that kind of BS.
Halfway through, so far a good read. The problems highlighted are existent and the lack of critical thinking and chappa culture are prevalent in almost all military schools of Pakistan. His emphasis on out-of-date military doctrines is also a key issue, in the past we have witnessed lack of coordination among the tri-services and even today its limited and can be further exploited as done by most modern militaries around the world. We have developed tactics keeping India and its technological reach and advancement in mind which IMO require refinement, we need to think one step ahead.
Even the war in FATA has been disastrous if you look at it from tactical perspective. Yes, we were inexperienced in the western theatre with little at our disposal but that doesn't justify the lack of out of box thinking by battlefield commanders. Hundreds of lives were lost due to inefficiency, lack of coordination and wrong decisions. School of infantry and Tactics saw some change in curriculum as precious lives were lost mainly because of no prior knowledge of battlefield at all as all the focus was on Eastern Frontier. Happens when you downplay a situation.
In that sense it is the primary nation building institution in Pakistan and underpins the state.