V. K. Singh

Last updated

"The world has forgotten the atrocities committed in Bangladesh. I do not think the people of Bangladesh of that period have forgotten, but the coming generations, probably have found it easier to put it somewhere in the corner"

Singh, Indian Army Records

He was very much inspired by Sam Manekshaw and was a follower of his ideology and learnt leadership from him, after he met him after the War of India and Pakistan in 1971. [30] After the war, the battalion went to Bhutan on a training exercise with the Royal Bhutan Army. In 1973, he was nominated to attend the battalion support weapons course at Mhow. After finishing the course and returning to the battalion, in early 1974, he was again sent to attend the winter warfare course at Gulmarg. In mid-1974, he was posted to the Infantry School as an instructor in the platoon weapons division. [31] [32]

In late 1975, Singh was one of two officers selected to attend the United States Army Ranger School at Fort Benning, Georgia in the United States. The Ranger course is 62 days long and is aimed at small unit tactics and leadership. During this course, he was assigned to Whisky company of the 75th Ranger Regiment. He performed well in the physically-extracting course, which started with over 300 students and ended with only about 90 graduating. He was graded an honours graduate since he had graded more than 80%. [33] Since he was a graduate of the Ranger School, he was permitted to wear the coveted Ranger tab on his uniform. [34]

After completing the course, he returned to India and was posted to the Commando School at Belgaum. [31] After a year at the school, he moved back to his battalion in Secunderabad but was immediately selected to attend the Junior Command course at the College of Combat in Mhow. He finished the course and joined his battalion and was given command of a company. Two months later, he was selected to attend the winter warfare advanced course at the High Altitude Warfare School at Gulmarg. [35]

Mid-career (1978-1994)

In April 1978, Singh came back to his battalion which was to move to Poonch for its operational tenure along the Line of Control. He commanded the 'A' company of the battalion during this tenure. Later that year, he was posted to the Indian Military Training Team (IMTRAT) in Bhutan. He served as an instructor at IMTRAT for about two years. After his return from Bhutan, he was transferred to a new unit, the 25th battalion of the Rajput Regiment (25 Rajput) at Fatehgarh. He was given command of the Delta company of the battalion. [35]

The battalion then moved to Alwar where Singh served as a company commander. In March 1982, he was selected to attend the Defence Services Staff College, Wellington, having secured a competitive vacancy. [36] After completing the year-long course, he was posted as General Staff Officer 2 (GSO-2) in the Military Operations (MO) Directorate at Army headquarters. His tenure at the MO directorate was an eventful one. He had a ring-side view during Operation Meghdoot in early 1984, Operation Blue Star later that year, Operation Brasstacks in late 1986 and the 1987 Sino-Indian skirmish in the Sumdorong Chu Valley. [35]

In mid-1987, he joined his battalion as a company commander. In July, as part of the 76 Infantry Brigade, the battalion moved to Chennai and embarked for Sri Lanka on the Tank Landing Ship INS Magar (L20). Inducted as part of the Indian Peace Keeping Force, they landed at Trincomalee. He spent the next two years in Sri Lanka fighting the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). In mid-1988, he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel and was appointed second-in-command of the battalion. [35] On 26 January 1990, he was awarded the Yudh Seva Medal for leading an operation which eliminated 6 LTTE men. [37]

In late 1989, Singh was approved to be promoted to the rank of Colonel and cleared to command a battalion. In early 1990, the battalion embarked for Mumbai. Shortly thereafter, Singh was appointed Chief Instructor of the Commando School at Belgaum, where he had earlier served as an instructor. [38] [39] He was earmarked by the Colonel of the Regiment to take over command of 24 Rajput, but Singh was determined to get back to his old battalion (2 Rajput) or take over the battalion he served with in Sri Lanka (25 Rajput). After a few months, he was appointed Commanding Officer of 2 Rajput. [35] The battalion was in Nowshera, Jammu and Kashmir along the Line of Control. It was a part of the 80 Brigade under the 25th Infantry Division. He commanded the battalion for about two years in Nowshera, before taking the unit to its peace location in Faizabad. The tenure started off in a tense environment - the Demolition of the Babri Masjid in December 1992, when the battalion was on the move to Faizabad. [35]

Singh also made a cameo appearance in the 1991 Hindi film Prahaar: The Final Attack, starring Nana Patekar, Madhuri Dixit and Dimple Kapadia. [38]

Later Career (1994-2001)

In June 1994, Singh was selected to attend the Higher Command Course at the Army War College, Mhow. After the ten-month course, he was appointed Colonel General Staff (Col GS) of the 12th Infantry Division at Jodhpur. He spent close to three years in this appointment under two division commanders. [35] In 1998, he was promoted acting Brigadier and appointed Commander of the 168 Infantry Brigade in Samba, Jammu and Kashmir. [31] [40] As Brigade commander, he had four infantry battalions and two Border Security Force units under his command. A year into his command, the Kargil War broke out and all units were on high alert. He was in command of the brigade till mid-2000. [35]

In June 2000, Singh was selected to attend the United States Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania in the United States. [41] He performed well at the War College and was graded 'exceptional' in the course. After the course, he returned to India and was appointed Brigadier General Staff (BGS) of Jalandhar based XI Corps. He served in this appointment during Operation Parakram when Indian troops were mobilised on the border in the wake of the 2001 Indian Parliament attack. [42]

General Officer (2001-2010)

Lt Gen Singh as the Eastern Army Commander in 2008. Lt. Gen. V.K. Singh, PVSM, AVSM, YSM, ADC, presently GOC-in-C, Eastern Command has been appointed the next Chief of the Army Staff in the rank of General with effect from the afternoon of March 31, 2010.jpg
Lt Gen Singh as the Eastern Army Commander in 2008.

Singh was promoted to the rank of Major General and appointed General Officer Commanding (GOC) Victor Force - a division-sized formation in the Rashtriya Rifles in Jammu and Kashmir. The Victor Force is responsible for the districts of Anantnag, Pulwama, Shopian, Kulgam and Budgam. For his distinguished service as GOC Victor Force, he was awarded the Ati Vishisht Seva Medal on 26 January 2003. [42] After a one-and-a-half tenure, he took over as the Chief of Staff (COS) of the XV Corps. [43] As the COS and the officiating Corps Commander, he was involved in the relief operations in the aftermath of the devastating 2005 Kashmir earthquake, the deadliest earthquake to hit South Asia since the 1935 Quetta earthquake. [44]

On 15 April 2006, Singh was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General and shortly thereafter appointed General Officer Commanding II Corps at Ambala. He was at the helm of the Strike Corps for about two years. On 25 February 2008, he was promoted to Army Commander grade and appointed General Officer Commanding-in-Chief Eastern Command. [45] For distinguished service of the highest order, he was awarded the Param Vishisht Seva Medal on 26 January 2009. [42] [46]

Chief of Army Staff (2010-2012)

Gen V.K. Singh paying homage at Amar Jawan Jyoti after taking over as Army Chief Gen. V.K. Singh paying homage at Amar Jawan Jyoti after taking over as Army Chief, in New Delhi on April 01, 2010.jpg
Gen V.K. Singh paying homage at Amar Jawan Jyoti after taking over as Army Chief

Singh became the 24th Chief of Army Staff on 31 March 2010, and was the first commando to achieve that position. [6] Towards the end of his career, a dispute regarding his date of birth arose; Singh took the Government of India to court and become the first serving officer of the Indian Army to do so. [47] Because of an error made in 1965 when he enrolled with the National Defence Academy, official records misstated the year in which he was born. Singh withdrew the writ in February 2012 when, according to The Hindu , the Supreme Court of India "refused to intervene". The Court noted there was no dispute regarding his actual date of birth and that the matter being contested was the way in which it had been recorded. It ruled Singh had on three occasions accepted the misrecorded date. [48] [lower-alpha 8]

The BBC noted in 2012 that defence experts considered a drive to modernise the Indian army had suffered from "a lack of planning and acrimony between the military and the defence ministry". This report followed an interview given by Singh in March 2012 that caused a political row. According to Singh, over a year earlier he had reported to A. K. Antony, the defence minister, that he had been offered a bribe of US$2.7 million if the army bought several hundred sub-standard vehicles. Antony issued a rebuttal to the interview, saying he had requested a written report from Singh regarding the incident and that this had never been submitted. Two days after the interview with Singh, a correspondence between V.K. Singh and the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was leaked. The correspondence criticised the standard of India's defences and caused another political row. [49]

Singh retired as Chief of Army Staff on 31 May 2012. He was succeeded by General Bikram Singh. [50] [lower-alpha 9]

Political career

After his retirement from the military, Singh showed support for the anti-corruption movement. [51] He was seen on the stage in August 2012 at Ramlila Maidan in New Delhi, where the yoga instructor Ramdev was fasting in protest of alleged black money and corruption. Singh was reported to have said, "It is shocking but true that over two lakh farmers have committed suicide since 1995. The problems of farmers will have to take the forefront in this movement as the government has turned a blind eye to their woes." [52] Around that time he also said the anti-corruption movement, whose principal figurehead was Anna Hazare, to that of the Bihar Movement that was led by Jayaprakash Narayan in 1975. Singh said, "When I evaluate the country's present condition, it is similar to that of 1975. Jayaprakash Narayan had then said 'Vacate the throne, common people are coming'. He felt then that corruption is the root of all problems ... the situation in the country is the same today." [53] [lower-alpha 10]

Minister of State for External Affairs, Gen V.K. Singh (R) with King Abdullah II of Jordan at Raj Ghat The King of Jordan His Majesty Abdullah II Bin Al-Hussein paying homage at the Samadhi of Mahatma Gandhi, at Rajghat, in Delhi.jpg
Minister of State for External Affairs, Gen V.K. Singh (R) with King Abdullah II of Jordan at Raj Ghat

Singh and Ramdev led a demonstration on 23 December 2012 at Jantar Mantar, New Delhi, on the 2012 Delhi gang rape case. [55] [56] Singh joined the BJP on 1 March 2014. [57] He won the Ghaziabad (Lok Sabha constituency) seat in the 2014 Indian general election, defeating Raj Babbar of the Indian National Congress by a margin of 567,260 votes. [58] He was re-elected in a landslide during the 2019 Indian general election.

Union minister

Singh as Minister of External Affairs. India's Minister of State for External Affairs Vijay Kumar Singh (15760995677) (cropped).jpg
Singh as Minister of External Affairs.

In May 2014, Singh was appointed as Minister of State of External Affairs and Minister of state (independent charge) for North East Region in the NDA-led Indian government. [59] He was relieved of responsibility for the North East Region in November 2014, when Jitendra Singh replaced him. [60]

Singh is praised for leading Operation Raahat, a rescue mission to evacuate Indian citizens and other foreign nationals from Yemen during 2015 Yemeni Crisis. [61] Prime Minister Narendra Modi in April 2015 said, “I believe this is the first time in the world that a government minister has stood on the battlefield like a soldier to do this work ... I salute General V. K. Singh.” [62] In May 2019, Singh became Minister of State for Road Transport and Highways. [63]

Electoral history

2019 General Election

V. K. Singh
VK Singh.jpg
Minister of State for Civil Aviation
Assumed office
7 July 2021
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
BJP Vijay Kumar Singh9,44,50361.96+5.45
SP Suresh Bansal 4,43,00329.06+21.09
INC Dolly Sharma1,11,9447.34-6.91
NOTA None of the Above 7,4950.49+0.03
Majority5,01,50032.90-9.36
Turnout 15,25,09755.89-1.05
BJP hold Swing -7.82

2014 General Election

PartyCandidateVotes%±%
BJP Vijay Kumar Singh7,58,48256.51+13.17
INC Raj Babbar 1,91,22214.25-18.16
BSP Mukul1,73,08512.89-8.84
SP Sudhan Kumar1,06,9847.97N/A
AAP Shazia Ilmi Malik 89,1476.64N/A
NOTA None of the Above 6,2050.46N/A
Majority5,67,26042.26+31.33
Turnout 13,42,47156.94+11.64
BJP hold Swing +15.665

Personal life

Singh is married to Bharti Singh. Bharti complained of an occurrence[ when? ] of blackmail and extortion by a man of Gurugram. [64] She and Singh have two daughters, Yogja Singh and Mrinali Singh. Yogja is married to Dr. Anirudh Singh who is the son of Lt. Gen. Ashok Singh. [65]

Aside from his career in defence and politics, his interests are sport,[ specify ] horse riding, and reading. He has written an autobiography, Courage and Conviction, covering his career and experience in the Indian Army. [66]

He has often been embroiled in controversy over his comments on social issues and topics of national importance. From a family with a military background, he is open in his expression of nationalism. [67] He faced criticism over his battle to have the army's record of his date of birth rectified. [lower-alpha 11] The dispute culminated in a Supreme Court case. Singh failed in his attempt to have the Army's anomalous record of two different birth dates amended to reflect the later date. The court ruled that the Ministry of Defence could act to enforce his retirement according to the earlier 1950 date, given that Singh had previously agreed to the Army's use of the 1950 date when granting him promotions and awards. The court did not dispute the fact that his actual date of birth was in 1951. [70] [71]

Honours and awards

Military awards

Param Vishisht Seva Medal ribbon.svg Ati Vishisht Seva Medal ribbon.svg Yudh Seva Medal ribbon.svg IND Poorvi Star Ribbon.svg
IND Special Service Medal Ribbon.svg IND Sangram Medal Ribbon.svg IND Operation Vijay medal.svg IND Operation Parakram medal.svg
IND Sainya Seva Medal Ribbon.svg IND High Altitude Medal Ribbon.svg IND Videsh Seva Medal Ribbon.svg IND 50th Anniversary Independence medal.svg
IND 25th Anniversary Independence medal.svg IND 30 Years Long Service Ribbon.svg IND 20YearsServiceMedalRibbon.svg IND 9YearsServiceMedalRibbon.svg
Ranger Tab.svg
Param Vishisht Seva Medal Ati Vishist Seva Medal Yudh Seva Medal Poorvi Star
Special Service Medal Sangram Medal Operation Vijay Medal Operation Parakram Medal
Sainya Seva Medal High Altitude Service Medal Videsh Seva Medal 50th Anniversary of Independence Medal
25th Anniversary of Independence Medal 30 Years Long Service Medal 20 Years Long Service Medal 9 Years Long Service Medal
US Army Ranger Tab

During his service as the COAS, Singh was appointed honorary Aide-de-camp to the President of India. He served as the Colonel of the Rajput Regiment and as the honorary Colonel of the Brigade of Guards, by virtue of being the Army Chief. [72] On 11 March 2011, he was inducted into the United States Army War College Class of 2001 graduates International Fellows Hall of Fame. He is the 33rd International Fellow and the first officer from the Indian Armed Forces to be inducted. [73] He was inspired by the legacy of Sam Manekshaw in the 1971 Indo Pak war when he was a junior officer in Army. [30]

Dates of rank

InsigniaRankComponentDate of rank
Second Lieutenant of the Indian Army.svg Second Lieutenant Indian Army 14 June 1970 [3]
Lieutenant of the Indian Army.svg Lieutenant Indian Army 14 June 1972 [74]
Captain of the Indian Army.svg Captain Indian Army 14 June 1976 [75]
Major of the Indian Army.svg Major Indian Army 14 June 1983
Lieutenant Colonel of the Indian Army.svg Lieutenant-Colonel Indian Army 1 November 1991 [76]
Colonel of the Indian Army.svg Colonel Indian Army 1 February 1993 [77]
Brigadier of the Indian Army.svg Brigadier Indian Army 4 June 1999 [78]
Major General of the Indian Army.svg Major General Indian Army 29 June 2004 [79]
Lieutenant General of the Indian Army.svg Lieutenant-General Indian Army 1 October 2006 [80]
General of the Indian Army.svg General
(COAS)
Indian Army 1 April 2010 [81] [82]

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References

Notes

  1. A subset of the official records of the Army misstated the year in which Singh was born (as 1950). [4] [5]
  2. V K Singh started his career as a military officer and became the first ever commando (trained to carry out high altitude and counter insurgency operations) in the Indian Army to have been promoted to the General rank. [6] He was part of the 1971 India-Pakistan War and Operation Pawan.
  3. "Minister of State (Independent Recharge)[ clarification needed ] for Statistics and Programme Implementation"
  4. Singh's order in the succession of COAS depends on how the count is made. From the establishment of Indian "home rule", there had been 25 heads of the Indian Army prior to Singh's appointment. The first was designated, "Commander-in-Chief, Indian Army", while the second and 3rd were called "Chief of the Army Staff and Commander-in-Chief, Indian Army". If counted from the first commander with COAS included in the position title, Singh would be the 25th COAS; if from the first who was called solely COAS, he would be 23rd in the order; if counted from the very first Head of the army after home rule began, he would be the 26th. (See Chief of the Army Staff (India).) Most sources describe Singh as the 24th COAS. [8]
  5. Singh, V.K.; Verma, Shiv Kunal (2013), Courage and Conviction: An Autobiography. Aleph Book Company [12]
  6. V K Singh was born on May 10, 1951 (or, according to some - erroneous - Army records, 1950). While his grandfather was a Junior Commissioned Officer, his father was a colonel in the Indian Army.
  7. Pride, tradition and the shortage of other local work opportunities continue to send Bapora’s Rajputs year after year to the Army’s recruitment camps (called bharti, enrollment) in neighbouring towns or states. Many who are enrolled enter the Rajput Regiment, as did Gen. Singh. [17]
  8. Singh was the 24th Indian Army Chief and the only one to date to take a dispute with the Union Government to court, in the case of his date of birth issue. [11]
  9. 68-year-old Gen VK Singh Singh retired as Army chief in 2012 after a long drawn-out battle with Raj Babbar of Indian National Congress in Gaziabad.
  10. After retiring from his position as Chief of Army Staff, Singh became a member of the BJP. He also actively participated in the anti-corruption campaign led by Anna Hazare in New Delhi’s Ramlila Maidan. V K Singh once compared Anna’s movement with the 1975 Bihar Movement of Jayaprakash Narayan. On the issue of Nirbhaya gang rape case of 2012, which shook the conscience of the country, Singh was among the leading agitators against the crime. [54]
  11. A variety of sources took a range of positions (not all critical) on Singh's fight with the Ministry of Defence over his date of birth. [4] [68] [69] [5]

Citations

  1. "Army chief Gen V K Singh had accepted date of birth". Economics Times. Retrieved 12 October 2020.
  2. "V K Singh to be next Indian Army chief". News 18.
  3. 1 2 3 "Part I-Section 4: Ministry of Defence (Army Branch)" (PDF). The Gazette of India. 16 October 1971. p. 1209.
  4. 1 2 Singh, RSN. "Age controversy: Is Gen VK Singh paying the price for being honest?". Sify.com. Archived from the original on 22 May 2021. Retrieved 22 May 2021.
  5. 1 2 "Why Gen VK Singh's D.O.B is not just a 'personal' matter". Firstpost. No. India News. 27 January 2012. Retrieved 22 May 2021. The case arose from a difference in the records of the Military Secretary's Branch and the Adjutant General's (AG's) Branch of the army. The latter is the usual record-keeper. In Gen Singh's case, the ministry of defence decided that it will go by the Military Secretary's records – when common sense should have told it to do otherwise. In fact, the MoD has done so in at least one earlier case.
  6. 1 2 "Gen V K Singh takes over as Army Chief". India Strategic. March 2010. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  7. ANI (9 July 2021). "VK Singh takes charge as MoS Civil Aviation". The Economic Times . Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  8. India Strategic (March 2010). "Gen V K Singh takes over as Army Chief". www.indiastrategic.in. No. Indian Army News. Archived from the original on 13 June 2017. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  9. Official Indian Army Web Portal. "Chief of the Army Staff (COAS)". www.indianarmy.nic.in. Archived from the original on 18 July 2021. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  10. Staff writers (23 May 2021). "V K Singh: Latest News (topic roundup)". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 10 June 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021. Singh served as the 24th Chief of the Army Staff from 2010 to 2012
  11. 1 2 Staff writer. "Gen VK Singh Biography in Hindi: About family, Political life, Age, Photos, Videos, History". Patrika News (in Hindi). Retrieved 12 October 2020. VK Singh retired on 31 May 2012 after contributing for 42 years in the Army. He was the 24th Chief of the Army Staff in the Indian Army
  12. "India is Seeming Ungrateful, Writes General VK Singh". The Hindu. Retrieved 12 October 2020.
  13. "Members : Lok Sabha". 164.100.47.194.
  14. 1 2 Singh & Verma 2013, p. 17.
  15. Singh & Verma 2013, p. 1.
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Selected works

Military offices
Preceded by
J S Lidder
General Officer Commanding Victor Force
2004-2005
Succeeded by
Prakash Menon
Preceded by
K D S Shekhawat
General Officer Commanding II Corps
2006-2008
Succeeded by
J P Singh
Preceded by General Officer Commanding-in-Chief Eastern Command
2008-2010
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief of Army Staff
2010-2012
Succeeded by
Lok Sabha
Preceded by Member of Parliament
for Ghaziabad

2014 – Present
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of State for Road Transport and Highways
2019-present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
Minister of State for External Affairs
2014-2019
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Paban Singh Ghatowar
Minister of State
with Independent Charge
Minister of Development of
North Eastern Region

26 May 2014 – 9 November 2014
Minister of State
with Independent Charge
Succeeded by
Jitendra Singh
Minister of State
with Independent Charge
Preceded by
Rao Inderjit Singh
(Minister of State with
Independent charge)
Minister of Statistics and Programme Implementation
(Minister of State with
Independent charge)

10 November 2014 – 5 July 2016
Succeeded by