The Chief of Defence Staff, or CDS, is India’s senior-most military officer and the principal military adviser to the government on matters related to tri-service integration.
The post was created in 2019, and the first CDS, General Bipin Rawat, took charge on 1 January 2020. The CDS is a four-star officer, equivalent in rank to the chiefs of the Army, Navy and Air Force.
The main purpose of creating the post was to improve coordination among the three services and reduce the problem of each service planning separately.
In May 2026, the government appointed Lt Gen N. S. Raja Subramani (Retd.) as the next Chief of Defence Staff, succeeding General Anil Chauhan. His appointment is important because the next CDS is expected to push forward theaterisation and tri-service integration.
Background
The need for a CDS was strongly felt after the Kargil War, 1999. The Kargil Review Committee and later the Group of Ministers recommended reforms in higher defence management, including better jointness among the armed forces.
India’s military structure was historically service-specific. The Army, Navy and Air Force had separate planning, procurement and operational priorities. This often created duplication, delays and weak integration.
The CDS was created to address these gaps and bring a more integrated approach to defence planning, procurement, training and operations.
Role and Functions
The CDS is not meant to replace the three Service Chiefs. The Army Chief, Navy Chief and Air Chief continue to command their respective services.
The CDS mainly focuses on jointness and integration.
The CDS performs three major roles:
• Acts as Permanent Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee
• Heads the Department of Military Affairs as its Secretary
• Provides military advice on tri-service matters to the Defence Minister
The CDS is expected to promote joint planning, integrated procurement, common logistics, joint training and theatre commands.
Department of Military Affairs
The CDS heads the Department of Military Affairs, created within the Ministry of Defence. The Union Cabinet decision of December 2019 stated that the CDS would head the DMA and function as its Secretary.
The DMA deals with military matters related to the three armed forces, Integrated Defence Staff, Territorial Army, and promotion of jointness in procurement, training and staffing.
Its creation was important because it brought military expertise directly into the Defence Ministry’s decision-making structure.
The DMA handles issues such as:
• Integrated planning among services
• Jointness in procurement and training
• Restructuring of military commands
• Service-specific military matters
• Promoting indigenous defence equipment
• Coordination with Integrated Defence Staff
Theatre Commands
One of the most important tasks linked with the CDS is theaterisation.
Theaterisation means reorganising India’s armed forces into integrated theatre commands, where assets of the Army, Navy and Air Force are placed under one operational commander for a specific geographical or functional theatre.
The idea is to move from service-wise command structures to joint war-fighting structures.
For example, instead of the Army, Navy and Air Force separately planning for one region, a theatre command would integrate land, air, sea, cyber and space capabilities for that theatre.
This can improve:
• Joint operational planning
• Faster decision-making
• Better use of resources
• Reduced duplication
• Integrated response during war
• Common logistics and communication
The challenge is that theaterisation requires major changes in command culture, service autonomy, asset-sharing and operational doctrine.
Importance
The CDS is important because modern warfare is no longer fought separately by the Army, Navy and Air Force. Conflicts now involve missiles, drones, cyber operations, satellites, electronic warfare, special forces, maritime assets and information warfare.
A single-point military adviser helps the government receive integrated advice instead of separate service-specific views.
The post supports:
• Jointness among the three services
• Integrated defence planning
• Better capital acquisition priorities
• Theaterisation
• Indigenous defence capability
• Reduced duplication of resources
• Stronger civil-military coordination
• Long-term military modernisation
For example, air defence, drones, missiles, cyber warfare and space assets cannot be planned in isolated service silos. They require integrated command and control.
Limitations and Concerns
The CDS post is important, but it also faces institutional challenges.
The first concern is limited operational command. The CDS is not the direct operational commander of all three services. The Service Chiefs continue to command their forces.
The second concern is service rivalry. Theaterisation requires the Army, Navy and Air Force to share assets and authority, which can create institutional resistance.
The third concern is civil-military clarity. The CDS heads the Department of Military Affairs, while the Defence Secretary heads the Department of Defence. Clear coordination between these structures is necessary.
The fourth concern is procurement prioritisation. The CDS has to balance service-specific demands with national-level priorities.
Major challenges include:
• Resistance to theaterisation
• Coordination between Service Chiefs and CDS
• Clear division of responsibility inside MoD
• Need for joint doctrine
• Integrated logistics and communication gaps
• Balancing continental and maritime threats
• Ensuring civilian political control over military advice
Conclusion
The Chief of Defence Staff is one of India’s most important defence reforms after Kargil. The post was created to improve jointness, integrate military planning and provide single-point military advice to the government.
Its real success will depend on whether India can move from service-specific planning to genuine tri-service integration through theatre commands, joint procurement, common logistics and modern war-fighting doctrine.



