**MORAL COURAGE**
To all those Yes Man, and blind followers of any one, here is what
Morale Courage means, and from none other than Late FM Manekshaw. I was
fortunate to listen to him at more than one occasion. I am pasting the excerpts
from his speech the portion about Morale Courage. Each word of his speech was
worth million dollars, and exceptional orator and a wonderful soldier. I wish we
could be just shadow of him: Please read it.
What is moral courage?
Moral courage is the ability to distinguish right from wrong and
having done so, say so when asked, irrespective of what your superiors might think or what
your colleagues or your subordinates might want. A ‘yes man’ is a dangerous man.
He may rise very high, he might even become the Managing Director of a company.
He may do anything but he can never make a leader because he will be used by
his superiors, disliked by his colleagues and despised by his subordinates. So
shallow– the ‘yes man’.
I am going to illustrate from my own life an example of moral
courage. In 1971, when Pakistan clamped down on its province, East Pakistan,
hundreds and thousands of refugees started pouring into India. The Prime
Minister, Mrs. Gandhi had a cabinet meeting at ten o’clock in the morning. The
following attended: the Foreign Minister,
Sardar Swaran Singh, the Defence Minister, Mr. Jagjivan Ram, the
Agriculture Minister, Mr. Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, the Finance Minister, Mr. Yashwant Rao, and
I was also ordered to be present. Ladies and Gentlemen, there is a very thin line between becoming a
Field Marshal and being dismissed. A very angry Prime Minister read out messages
from Chief Ministers of West Bengal, Assam and Tripura. All of them saying that
hundreds of thousands of refugees had poured into their states and they did not
know what to do.
So the Prime Minister turned round to me and said: “I want you to do
something”.
I said, “What do you want me to do?”
She said, “I want you to enter East Pakistan”.
I said, “Do you know that, that means War?”
She said, “I do not mind if it is war”.
I, in my usual stupid way said, “Prime Minister, have you read the
Bible? ”And the Foreign Minister, Sardar Swaran Singh (a Punjabi Sikh), in his
Punjabi accent said, “What has Bible got to do with this?”, and I said, “the first book,
the first chapter, the first paragraph, the first sentence, God said, ‘let there
be light’’ and there was light. You turn this round and say ‘let there be war’
and there will be war.
What do you think? Are you ready for a war? Let me tell
you –“it’s 28th April, the Himalayan passes are opening now, and if the
Chinese gave us an ultimatum, I will have to fight on two fronts”.
Again Sardar Swaran Singh turned round and in his Punjabi
English said, “Will China give ultimatum?”
I said, “You are the Foreign Minister. You tell me”.
Then I turned to the Prime Minister and said, “Prime Minister, last
year you wanted elections in West Bengal and you did not want the communists to
win, so you asked me to deploy my soldiers in penny pockets in every village, in
every little township in West Bengal. I have two divisions thus deployed in
sections and platoons without their heavy weapons. It will take me at least a
month to get them back to their units and to their formations. Further, I
have a division in the Assam area, another division in Andhra Pradesh and the
Armoured Division in the Jhansi-Babina area. It will take me at least a month to
get them back and put them in their correct positions. I will require every
road, every railway train, every truck, and every wagon to move them. We
are harvesting in the Punjab, and we are harvesting in Haryana; we are also
harvesting in Uttar Pradesh. And you will not be able to move your harvest.
I turned to the Agriculture Minister, Mr. Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, “If
there is a famine in the country afterwards, it will be you to blame, not me.”
Then I said, “My Armoured Division has only got thirteen tanks which are
functioning.”
The Finance Minister, Mr. Chawan, a friend of mine, said, “Sam, why
only thirteen?”
“Because you are the Finance Minister. I have been asking for money
for the last year and a half, and you keep saying there is no money. That is
why.”
Then I turned to the Prime Minister and said, “Prime Minister, it is the
end of April. By the time I am ready to operate, the monsoon will have broken in
that East Pakistan area. When it rains, it does not just rain, it pours. Rivers
become like oceans. If you stand on one bank, you cannot see the other and
the whole countryside is flooded. My movement will be confined to roads, the Air
Force will not be able to support me, and, if you wish me to enter East
Pakistan, I guarantee you a hundred percent defeat.”
“You are the Government”, I said turning to the Prime Minister, “Now
will you give me your orders?”
Ladies and Gentlemen, I have seldom seen a woman so angry, and I am
including my wife in that. She was red in the face and I said, “Let us see what
happens”. She turned round and said, “The cabinet will meet four o’clock in the
evening”.
Everyone walked out. I being the junior most man was the last to
leave. As I was leaving, she said, “Chief, please will you stay behind?” I
looked at her. I said, “Prime Minister, before you open your mouth, would you
like me to send in my resignation on grounds of health, mental or physical?”
“No, sit down, Sam. Was everything you told me the truth?”
“Yes, it is my job to tell you the truth. It is my job to fight and
win, not to lose.”
She smiled at me and said, “All right, Sam. You know what I want.
When will you be ready?”
“I cannot tell you now, Prime Minister”, I said, but let me guarantee
you this that if you leave me alone, allow me to plan, make my arrangements, and
fix a date, I guarantee you a hundred percent victory”.
So, Ladies and Gentlemen, as I told you, there is a very thin line
between becoming a Field Marshal and being dismissed. Just an example of moral courage.
Now, those of you who remembered what happened in 1962, when the Chinese occupied
the Thag-la ridge and Mr. Nehru, the Prime Minister, sent for the Army Chief,
in the month of December and said, “I want you to throw the Chinese out”. That
Army Chief did not have the Moral courage to stand up to him and say, “I am not
ready, my troops are not acclimatized, I haven’t the ammunition, or indeed
anything”. But he accepted the Prime Minister’s instructions, with the result
that the Army was beaten and the country humiliated.
Remember, moral courage. You, the future senior staff officers and
commanders will be faced with many problems. People will want all sorts of
things. You have got to have the moral courage to stand up and tell them the
facts. Again, as I told you before, a 'yes man’ is a despicable man.
===========
Brig Narinder Dhand (Veteran)
http://signals-parivaar.blogspot.in
BACK TO PARIVAAR
BACK TO MY LIBRARY
http://signals-parivaar.blogspot.in
BACK TO PARIVAAR
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.