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Why can’t Army deploy women to fight terror

Background & Context

  • JAG Branch in the Army:
    • The Judge Advocate General’s Department is the Army’s legal arm.
    • Officers here deal with military law, court-martials, legal advice to commanders, and legal awareness in units.
    • Despite being a legal service, it is considered a “combatant” branch because JAG officers are commissioned Army officers and can be mobilized in wartime.
  • Pre-judgment Status:
    • The Army had a policy restricting women officers in JAG and reserving a higher number of posts for men.
    • Justification given: JAG officers are “combatant personnel” and a reserve for mobilisation; women were allegedly unsuitable for such mobilisation.
  • Petitioners’ Stand:
    • Represented by Senior Advocate Gopal Sankaranarayanan.
    • Challenged the gender-based restriction as unconstitutional and discriminatory.

Relevance : GS 2(Gender Equality)

Supreme Court’s Key Findings

  • Policy Unconstitutional:
    • Discrimination based on gender in appointments violates Articles 14 (Equality before law) and 16 (Equality in public employment) of the Constitution.
    • Mere “combatant” label does not justify excluding women without evidence-based reasoning.
  • No Legal Basis for Exclusion:
    • No legislation prevents women from serving in combat-support roles like JAG.
    • Army’s reasoning that women are not deployed in counter-terror or counter-insurgency roles was unsupported in law.
  • Comparative Services Reference:
    • Indian Air Force: Women serve as fighter pilots, helicopter pilots, and in airborne missions.
    • Indian Navy: Women deployed on warships and in combat-support roles.
    • Army itself has women in operationally risky roles (e.g., elite airborne and parachute units in emergencies).
  • Judicial Philosophy:
    • Court emphasized it is not imposing its military views, but enforcing constitutional mandates.
    • Quote: “No nation can be secure when half of its population is held back.”

Directives Issued

  • Publish a common merit list for all JAG candidates (men and women).
  • Make marks public to ensure transparency.
  • End gender-based reservation of posts in JAG.

Constitutional & Legal Principles

  • Article 14: Prohibits arbitrary classification; classification must be reasonable and have a rational nexus to the objective.
  • Article 15(1): Prohibits discrimination on grounds of sex.
  • Article 16(1) & (2): Equal opportunity in public employment; exceptions only for specific service-related conditions backed by law.
  • Supreme Court Precedents:
    • Babita Puniya vs Union of India (2020): Permanent commission for women in Army’s non-combat roles.
    • Indira Jaising v. Supreme Court of India (1982): Gender cannot be a bar unless justified by compelling necessity.

Strategic & Operational Implications

  • Talent Pool Expansion: More qualified officers (irrespective of gender) can serve in legal branches, strengthening military justice.
  • Operational Flexibility: Women officers already handle high-risk operations; expanding their legal combat-support presence is operationally feasible.
  • Cultural Shift: Encourages institutional acceptance of gender-neutral postings, aligning military norms with global practices.

Broader Social & Policy Dimensions

  • Gender Equality in Forces:
    • Women’s participation in combat and combat-support roles reflects societal progress.
    • Challenges outdated stereotypes about women’s operational capability.
  • International Comparison:
    • Many advanced militaries (US, UK, Israel, France) allow women in combat-support and combat roles.
  • Civil-Military Relations:
    • Court has reinforced that military policies must conform to constitutional principles unless backed by explicit legislative mandate.

August 2025
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