- Source: Chiefs of Staff Committee (India)
The Chiefs of Staff Committee (COSC) is an administrative forum of the senior-most military leaders of the Indian Armed Forces, which advises the Government of India on all military and strategic matters deemed privy to military coordination, direction and policy between the country's three armed services. By organization, the COSC is comprised several key members, namely, Chief of Defence Staff - who acts as the Committee's Permanent Chairman,
along with the Chief of the Army Staff, the Chief of the Naval Staff and the Chief of the Air Staff - all of whom are also additionally supported by the Chief of Integrated Defence Staff.
By function, the COSC has two principal responsibilities: one, to inculcate and implement jointness through integration of, inter alia, the doctrine, logistics, and operations of the three armed services; two, to apprise to the nation's civilian leadership i.e., the Prime Minister and Minister of
Defence, on all matters related to the nation's security. As such, it exists primarily as an advisory body, endowed with no executive command authority.
To execute its mandate, the COSC is closely supported by the Integrated Defence Staff (IDS) and other inter-service bodies under its patronage that specialize in facets such as intelligence, personnel, operations and training. Comparably, the forum is identical to the United Kingdom's Chiefs of Staff Committee and Pakistan's Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee.
From 1947 to 2019, and briefly from 2021 to 2022 - the leadership of the COSC was rotated amongst the service chiefs (or Chiefs of Staff) of the three armed services, with the senior-most chief serving as Chairman-COSC with no fixed tenure; however, since 2020, the mantle of the COSC's chairmanship is held by the Chief of the Defence Staff, a separate office that functions independent of the service chiefs.
Functioning
The current membership of the Chiefs of Staff Committee:
= Chief of Defence Staff
=The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) is the principal military authority and senior-most appointment of the Indian Armed Forces.
Introduced in 2019, the CDS operates on a status of primus inter pares i.e., first among equals with the Chiefs of Staff and functions as the COSC's Permanent Chairman, independent of the Chiefs of Staff.
As Permanent Chairman-COSC, the CDS maintains the following responsibilities within the forum:
Acting as the principal military advisor to the Minister of Defence on all affairs related to inter-service integration, coherence and functioning.
Participating as a member of the Defence Acquisition Council chaired by Minister of Defence and Defence Planning Committee chaired by National Security Advisor.
Exercising command authority over specific inter-service organizations/agencies/commands, namely, the Defence Cyber Agency (DCyA), the Defence Space Agency and the Armed Forces Special Operations Division vis-à-vis the Integrated Defence Staff (IDS).
Functioning as the Military Adviser to the Nuclear Command Authority.
= Chiefs of Staff
=The service chiefs (also referred to as the Chiefs of Staff) of the three services are, namely, the Chief of the Army Staff (COAS), the Chief of the Naval Staff (CNS) and Chief of the Air Staff (CAS) - all of whom are customarily four-star officers.
As voting members of the COSC, the Chiefs of Staff function in the undermentioned manner:
Functioning with the dual role of leadership as the service's statutory chief of staff and activity as its ex-officio commander i.e., in the former role, overseeing the staff-cum-administrative duties of the services; in the latter role, overseeing the service's operational duties.
Advising the COSC and the civilian leadership on matters privy to their respective services; this is in contrast to the CDS, whose advice reflects a comprehensive nature involving multiple, rather than concerned inputs.
Deliberating inter-service issues to foster joint-realization of the country's national security objectives.
However, their mandate of the Chiefs of Staff are not formally defined by statute, and are obfuscated by the undermentioned:
The Organisation, Functions, Powers and Procedure of Defence Headquarters, 1952 defines the Service Headquarters (SHQ) i.e., the administrative centers of the three services as attached offices, which by statute, excludes them from the departmental structure of the Ministry of Defence (MoD).
The (Allocation of Business) Rules, 1961, which defines the authority, responsibility and obligations of government departments, prescribes that the responsibility for the defence of India thereof is placed with the Defence Secretary; there is no mention of the Chiefs of Staffs or their respective SHQs.
= Chief of Integrated Defence Staff
=In addition to its aforementioned core members, the COSC's functioning is supported by the Integrated Defence Staff (IDS), which functions as the COSC's principal arm and secretariat. The IDS, which by role also acts as an inter-service interface for coordinating the armed services, is led by the Chief of Integrated Defence Staff (CISC) - a three-star officer, who is a non-voting member of the COSC. Functionally, the CISC operates with the unofficial role of vice-CDS, to act as an adjudicator towards fostering inter-service coordination between the Service Headquarters (SHQ) of the three services.
To support the Chairman-COSC, the CISC undertakes the following roles:
Chair the Defence Crisis Management Group.
Supervise the co-ordination of Long Range Plans, Five Years Plans and annual budgetary proposals for the three services and presenting coordinated set of proposals to Minister of Defence after discussion with Chiefs of Staff in COSC and Defence Secretary.
Coordinating and analyzing critical deficiencies in force capabilities, assessing the impact of such deficiencies on national military objectives.
History
= Creation (1947)
=Before India's attainment of independence in 1947, the military organization in the then-British Raj had been constituted as a theatre of operations, wherein the policymaking for the colony's defence affairs emanated from the Committee of Imperial Defence (CID), which oversaw the formulation of military strategy for the overall British Empire. Following the dissolution of the Raj, India's inaugural Governor-General, Lord Mountbatten, sought to establish an administrative structure for the management of the armed forces of the new country. Consequently, Mountbatten selected his chief of staff, Lord Ismay, to execute the task.
Ismay, in his own stead, had spent a significant portion of his military career as a staff officer: he had served in the CID in a secretarial role during the 1920s-1930s with the responsibility of military planning, and had later served on the British Chiefs of Staff Committee during the Second World War; these postings thus allowed him to gain rich expertise in defence administration and subsequently, Mountbatten's choice.
As such, Ismay formulated a practical model for India's higher defence management, comprising a three-tier higher defence organization:
Defence Committee of the Cabinet (DCC), chaired by the Prime Minister.
Defence Minister's Committee (DMC), chaired by the Defence Minister.
Chiefs of Staff Committee (COSC), as part of the Military Wing of the Cabinet Secretariat.
The COSC, which formed the third-tier of Ismay's formula, consisted of three Chiefs of Staff, who would serve as professional advisors to the civilian government wherein their mandate was to render guidance on military planning and operational matters. The COSC, which would come to be a part of the Military Wing of the Cabinet Secretariat, was thus to be led by the Chiefs of Staff on a rotational basis, with the senior-most Chief serving as Chairman-COSC.
Additionally, Ismay formulated a series of several sub-committees that would address the functioning of the COSC and coordination between the three services, staff both by civil servants and uniformed officers; some of them were:
Joint Operation Committee (JOCOM).
Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC).
Joint Training Committee (JTC).
Joint Planning Committee (JPC).
Chairmen
† Died in office.
See also
= Inter-service offices
=Chief of the Defence Staff
Chief of Integrated Defence Staff
= Other offices of the Indian Armed Forces
=Chief of the Army Staff
Chief of the Naval Staff
Chief of the Air Staff
= International equivalents
=Pakistan: Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee (JCSC)
United Kingdom: Chiefs of Staff Committee (CSC)
United States: Joint Chiefs of Staff (JSC)
Notes
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Angkatan Laut Pakistan/Uji coba
- Birender Singh Dhanoa
- Bipin Rawat
- Sam Manekshaw
- Olimpiade Musim Panas 2012
- Daftar julukan kota di Amerika Serikat
- Soe Win (jenderal)
- Chiefs of Staff Committee (India)
- Chief of Defence Staff (India)
- Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee
- Chief of the Army Staff (India)
- Chief of the Naval Staff (India)
- Chief of the Air Staff (India)
- Chief of Integrated Defence Staff
- Joint Chiefs of Staff
- Chief of staff
- Vice Chief of the Army Staff (India)