Harinder Singh

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Archive data: Person was Research Fellow at IDSA from April 2009 to January 2011

Joined IDSA
April 2009
Expertise
Counter-terrorism, Operational Readiness and Sustainability Issues
Education
MSc in Defence Studies
Current Project
Military Readiness
Background
Commissioned into the Maratha Light Infantry in 1983, the officer has commanded a Rashtriya Rifles battalion in North Kashmir, and among other tenures served along the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir, and the watershed in East Sikkim. He has tenanted several important staff including tenures with Directorate General of Military Operations (DGMO) and Directorate General of Operational Logistics and Strategic Movement (DGOL & SM) at the Integrated HQ of MoD (Army). He has been an instructor at Indian Military Academy (IMA) Dehradun and Infantry School Mhow. The officer has also held a staff appointment with the United Nations Verification and Enforcement Mission Headquarters (UNAVEM-III & MONUA) in Angola. An alumnus of National Defence Academy (NDA) Kharakwasla and Defence Services Staff College (DSSC) Wellington, he has attended the Higher Command Course at Army War College, Mhow and the international fellows’ program at the Asia Pacific Centre for Security Studies (APCSS), Hawaii, USA. He has been a visiting fellow to the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Singapore.

Research Fellow
Email: harinde41[at]gmail[dot]com,
Phone: +91 11 2671 7983

Publication

Thinking Change in the Armed Forces

History is replete with examples of radical, modest and even failed transformations, thus revealing the fact that the armed forces are intrinsically not flexible enough to accept transformational changes. The prime drivers for change have been the emerging nature of conflict, and the development of cutting edge technologies for war fighting. It is a well known fact that introduction of new ideas and technologies usher in new dynamics and constraints, thus necessitating complementary changes in structures, policies, procedures and practices.

Profiling the Taliban Threat to India

The threat from the Taliban could be in the form of heightened infiltration attempts across the Line of Control or see a new breed of Talibanised Pakistani militants targeting the Indian hinterland or a combination of both.

Fighting the Taliban : Challenges for Pakistan Army

Rise of the Taliban in the frontier provinces of Pakistan portends several challenges to the Pakistan establishment, a fact that has lately raised much alarm and concern amongst the international community and in the region. The speed and vengeance with which several militant groups have rallied under the leadership of Baitullah Mehsud and Mullah Falazullah undoubtedly puts Pakistan’s military on an acid test. The Pakistan Army to date has tackled the problem half heartedly in the troubled region.