June 30, 2024
1 min read

In a first, classmates to lead Army and Navy  

A defence official who knows both the officers said that strong friendships among the senior leadership in the military matter a lot in strengthening the working relationship between the forces…reports Asian Lite News

For the first time in Indian military history, two classmates, Lieutenant General Upendra Dwivedi and Admiral Dinesh Tripathi, will be service chiefs of Indian Army and Navy.

Hailing from the Sainik School Rewa in Madhya Pradesh, Navy Chief Admiral Dinesh Tripathi and Army Chief Designate Lt Gen Upendra Dwivedi were together in the school from class 5th-A in the early 1970s.

The roll numbers of the two officers were also around each other, as Lt Gen Dwivedi’s roll number was 931 and Admiral Tripathi’s was 938.

Their bonding was strong from the initial days in the school and they remained in touch all along, even though they were in different forces.

A defence official who knows both the officers said that strong friendships among the senior leadership in the military matter a lot in strengthening the working relationship between the forces.

“This rare honour of nurturing two prodigious students, who would go on to lead their respective Services 50 years later, goes to Sainik School, Rewa, in Madhya Pradesh,” Defence Ministry Spokesperson A Bharat Bhushan Babu said in a tweet.

The appointments of the two classmates have also come around the same time, in a gap of around two months.

Admiral took over the command of the Indian Navy on May 1, while Lt Gen Dwivedi would be taking over his new appointment tomorrow.

Lt Gen Dwivedi has had a long tenure as the Northern Army Commander where he has had long exposure to the ongoing operations in the military standoff on the LAC in eastern Ladakh.

Born on July 1, 1964, Lt Gen Upendra Dwivedi was commissioned into the Jammu & Kashmir Rifles of the Indian Army on December 15, 1984. (ANI)

ALSO READ-Indian Navy in World’s Biggest Naval Drill

Previous Story

JD(U) seeks special status for Bihar

Next Story

French far right eyes power after election win

Latest from DEFENCE

Chinese Arms: All Show, No Go?

Mounting evidence indicates that systemic corruption and persistent quality issues within China’s defence industry are eroding the reliability and global credibility of its military exports…writes Rishan Sen For over a decade, China

Colombia backs India on terror

The change in tone from Colombia is seen as diplomatically significant, especially given its forthcoming role as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). In a diplomatic correction welcomed

Modi’s New Warfare Playbook

Modi has upended the old playbook and India and Pakistan are entering dangerous new territory where nuclear deterrence is no longer a guarantee against conventional conflict…writes Collins Chong Yew Keat The India-Pakistan

India clears stealth fighter project

New execution model paves way for private sector involvement in India’s ambitious stealth aircraft programme; Army showcases next-gen drone warfare systems. In a landmark decision bolstering India’s defence self-reliance, Defence Minister Rajnath

Tharoor sparks another Cong-BJP slugfest

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor sparks internal backlash over comments praising India’s security posture abroad, exposing fresh factional fault lines within the party’s top leadership. Senior Congress leader Shashi Tharoor has again found
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Army Vice Chief sets the record straight on India’s security spend

Lieutenant General C P Mohanty says if India wouldn’t have

Stealth destroyer Mormugao sails for maiden sea trials

The ship incorporates several niche indigenous technologies and is a