The watershed moment was the 1980s Bofors scandal, which triggered a risk-averse, procedure-obsessed defence procurement culture that persists today. The resulting protocols created multiple veto points where civilian bureaucrats who are generalist administrators with limited military expertise can delay or derail acquisitions without accountability. The military has been systematically excluded from capital expenditure decisions and budget preparation, despite being the end-user.
To rise through the ranks, officers must avoid mistakes rather than take calculated risks. This creates a "yes man" culture where dissent is punished. Academically, they know
what needs to be done (
Joint Theatre Commands, independent offensive capabilities, Cold start etc. ), but in practice, no one wants to sign off on the disruption required to implement it.
In a functioning democracy(
Which Pakistanis have no clue of), the politician sets the
goal, and the soldier executes. In India, the politician is largely absent from defense planning, ceding control to the bureaucracy (IAS). These bureaucrats often lack military domain expertise and focus on process (audits, wheels on files) rather than outcomes.
This is why you see "academic brilliance" in white papers but failure in execution. Planners can write excellent doctrines on "Cold Start" or "Multi-Domain Operations," but the bureaucracy cannot process the procurement and logistical integration required to make those doctrines real. You buy the Rafale (the weapon), but the bureaucratic machine delays the hangars, the pilot training pipeline, and the spare parts supply chain (the ecosystem).
India buys expensive toys (Apaches, S-400s, Rafales) to mask institutional hollowness. It looks good on paper (and in Republic Day parades), but without a cohesive "neural network" effectively linking these assets, they are just expensive standalone targets.
BUT
Things are changing - if very slowly:
The biggest push was their ISO act which means the first ITC was supposed to go live by May 2026 but is likely to slip or launch with diluted powers because the underlying "culture of territory" hasn't changed.
However, some key things are important to note that while taking their time will be important to consider:
Previously, a general just had to avoid controversy to get promoted. Now, they are graded on a 1-9 scale based on
performance and
tech-literacy. This is a direct attack on the "yes man" model. If you are a "safe" administrator with no strategic vision, you now get bypassed by a junior officer who takes risks. This is the first time the system has incentivized "disruption" over "compliance".
@Panzerkiel
Compared to that - Pakistan is thinking (due to Army dominance) top-down consolidation: dissolving the CJCSC role and reorganising joint staff functions to reduce inter-service delay and duplication, with joint planning/procurement intended to run through the COAS-CDF/CDF HQ construct.
India is pursuing jointness through
process + institutions: HQ-IDS structures (including cyber/space/special operations elements) and practical joint mechanisms (integrated planning, intelligence sharing, capability prioritisation) being pushed via tri-service conclaves and similar forums
Pakistan has optimized for a "Short War" loop (fast, centralized decision to escalate/de-escalate). India is struggling to build a "Sustained War" loop (resilient, distributed, joint). Pakistan is faster but prone to fatal error (wrong orientation), while India is smarter (better orientation) but too slow to exploit it before the window closes.