“From commanding India’s premier strike corps to leading all three armed forces — Lt Gen Raja Subramani’s appointment as CDS is the culmination of a career spent on India’s most contested frontiers.”
The Government of India on 9 May 2026 appointed Lieutenant General N. S. Raja Subramani (Retd.) as India’s next Chief of Defence Staff (CDS). He is scheduled to assume charge on 30 May 2026, succeeding General Anil Chauhan, whose tenure concludes on the same date. He will simultaneously serve as Secretary to the Government of India in the Department of Military Affairs (DMA) — a dual responsibility inherent in the CDS post since its creation.
Raja Subramani is the third CDS in India’s history, following General Bipin Rawat (first, 2020–2021) and General Anil Chauhan (second, 2022–2026). His appointment was made alongside the designation of Vice Admiral Krishna Swaminathan as the next Chief of the Naval Staff — a simultaneous transition across two of India’s top defence positions on 9 May 2026.
👤 Who Is Lt Gen N S Raja Subramani?
Lieutenant General Nagendra Singh Raja Subramani holds the decorations PVSM, AVSM, SM, and VSM — among the highest service honours for Indian Army officers. He was commissioned into the 8th Battalion of the Garhwal Rifles on 14 December 1985, following graduation from the National Defence Academy (NDA), Khadakwasla, and the Indian Military Academy (IMA), Dehradun.
His academic qualifications:
- MA — King’s College, London
- MPhil in Defence Studies — University of Madras (Chennai)
His military education includes the Joint Services Command and Staff College (JSCSC), Bracknell, UK, and the National Defence College (NDC), New Delhi — the apex institution in India for training senior officers in national security and strategic management.
After retiring as Vice Chief of the Army Staff (VCOAS) on 31 July 2025, he was appointed Military Adviser at the National Security Council Secretariat (NSCS) from 1 September 2025 — the same trajectory followed by his predecessor General Anil Chauhan before his elevation to CDS.
Think of the CDS as the CEO above three separate departmental heads (Army, Navy, Air Force chiefs). Before this post existed, the three service chiefs operated almost independently with no single officer above them. Raja Subramani, having commanded India’s frontline strike corps against Pakistan and a mountain division facing China, is the military equivalent of a manager who has worked in every critical division before reaching the top.
⚔️ Command and Operational Career
Raja Subramani’s operational experience spans India’s two most sensitive theatres — the Western Front (Pakistan border) and the Northern Front (China border) — as well as the northeast. He is recognised as an expert on both the Pakistan and China fronts, a significant factor in his selection as CDS at a time of heightened threat on both borders.
| Command / Appointment | Role / Significance |
|---|---|
| 16 Garhwal Rifles | Counter-insurgency operations in Assam — Operation Rhino (against ULFA) |
| 168 Infantry Brigade | Operational command in Jammu & Kashmir |
| 17 Mountain Division | Frontline formation in the Central Sector, facing China |
| 2 Corps (Western Front) | India’s premier strike corps — offensive operations against Pakistan in Punjab plains |
| Central Command (Lucknow) | GOC-in-C — March 2023 to June 2024; covers UP, Uttarakhand, central India |
| Vice Chief of Army Staff (VCOAS) | July 2024 – July 2025 — second-highest position in the Indian Army |
| Military Adviser, NSCS | 1 Sep 2025 – May 2026; principal military-NSC bridge |
His staff appointments include: Brigade Major of a Mountain Brigade; Defence Attaché at India’s Embassy in Astana, Kazakhstan; Assistant Military Secretary; Colonel General Staff (Operations) at HQ Eastern Command; Deputy Director General of Military Intelligence; Chief Instructor (Army) at the Defence Services Staff College, Wellington; and Chief of Staff of a Command.
⚖️ Office of the Chief of Defence Staff
The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) is the principal military authority and senior-most appointment of the Indian Armed Forces, functioning as the overall professional head of the Army, Navy, and Air Force. The CDS holds three simultaneous roles:
- Principal military adviser to the Defence Minister on all tri-service matters
- Permanent Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee (COSC) — the inter-service coordination body
- Secretary to the Government of India in the Department of Military Affairs (DMA) — the fifth department under the Ministry of Defence, created alongside the CDS post
The CDS’s principal mandate is the promotion of tri-service jointness and integration. The most consequential structural reform under this mandate is the creation of integrated theatre commands — geographic commands in which Army, Navy, and Air Force elements operate under a single joint commander. Theaterisation remains the defining unfinished work of the CDS institution.
Three CDS to date — all Army: General Bipin Rawat (1st, Jan 2020 – Dec 2021) → General Anil Chauhan (2nd, Sep 2022 – May 2026) → Lt Gen N. S. Raja Subramani (3rd, May 2026 onwards). Note the ~9-month vacancy between Rawat’s death (Dec 2021) and Chauhan’s appointment (Sep 2022).
📜 Creation of CDS: From Kargil Review to 2019
The recommendation for a CDS was first formally made by the Kargil Review Committee (KRC), a four-member panel established on 29 July 1999 — three days after the Kargil War — to review the security lapses that enabled Pakistan’s undetected intrusion across the Line of Control. The KRC was chaired by K. Subrahmanyam, a noted strategic analyst. Its report was submitted on 15 December 1999 and tabled in Parliament on 23 February 2000.
The KRC noted that India was “perhaps the only major democracy where the Armed Forces Headquarters are outside the apex governmental structure.” A Group of Ministers (GoM) chaired by then-Deputy PM L. K. Advani (with Defence, External Affairs, and Finance Ministers) was constituted on 17 April 2000 and submitted its report on 26 February 2001, also recommending the CDS. However, inter-service rivalry, bureaucratic resistance, and lack of political consensus delayed implementation for nearly two decades.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the creation of a CDS in his Independence Day address on 15 August 2019. The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) approved the post on 24 December 2019. General Bipin Rawat was appointed India’s first CDS on 31 December 2019, formally taking charge on 1 January 2020. He was killed in a helicopter crash in Tamil Nadu on 8 December 2021, leaving the post vacant for over nine months. General Anil Chauhan was appointed the second CDS on 30 September 2022. Regulations updated in 2022 allow both active and retired officers to be appointed CDS up to the age of 65 — the provision under which Raja Subramani was recalled from retirement.
| Milestone | Date / Detail |
|---|---|
| Kargil War ends | 26 July 1999 |
| Kargil Review Committee constituted | 29 July 1999 — chaired by K. Subrahmanyam |
| KRC report submitted | 15 December 1999; tabled in Parliament 23 February 2000 |
| Group of Ministers (GoM) on defence reforms | 17 April 2000 — chaired by L. K. Advani; GoM report 26 Feb 2001 |
| PM Modi announces CDS creation | 15 August 2019 (Independence Day address) |
| CDS post formally approved | 24 December 2019 — Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) |
| 1st CDS: General Bipin Rawat | 31 December 2019 (appointed); 1 January 2020 (assumes charge) |
| General Rawat killed | 8 December 2021 — helicopter crash in Tamil Nadu |
| 2nd CDS: General Anil Chauhan | 30 September 2022 |
| 3rd CDS: Lt Gen Raja Subramani | 30 May 2026 |
Three different dates for CDS creation: (1) PM Modi’s announcement — 15 August 2019 (Independence Day); (2) CCS approval — 24 December 2019; (3) General Rawat appointed — 31 December 2019; assumes charge — 1 January 2020. The post was formally “created” on 24 December 2019. Also: the KRC was constituted on 29 July 1999, not on the date the Kargil War ended (26 July 1999).
🏔️ The Garhwal Rifles
The Garhwal Rifles is an infantry regiment of the Indian Army, drawing soldiers traditionally from the Garhwal region of Uttarakhand. It has a distinguished combat history — both World Wars, the Indo-Pak wars of 1947, 1965, and 1971, the Kargil War, and numerous counter-insurgency operations. The regiment is known for its mountain warfare capability. That all three CDS appointees have come from mountain-warfare-oriented regiments — underlining the primacy of the Himalayan and high-altitude threat in India’s strategic calculus.
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Lt Gen N. S. Raja Subramani was appointed the 3rd Chief of Defence Staff on 9 May 2026. He assumes office on 30 May 2026, succeeding General Anil Chauhan (2nd CDS).
The Kargil Review Committee (KRC), constituted on 29 July 1999 and chaired by strategic analyst K. Subrahmanyam, was the first body to formally recommend the creation of a CDS for India. The GoM (chaired by Advani) also endorsed it in 2001, but was not the first to recommend it.
The CDS post was formally approved by the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) on 24 December 2019. PM Modi had announced it on 15 August 2019; General Rawat was appointed on 31 December 2019 and took charge on 1 January 2020.
General Bipin Rawat, India’s first CDS, was killed in a helicopter crash in Tamil Nadu on 8 December 2021, leaving the CDS post vacant for over nine months until General Anil Chauhan was appointed on 30 September 2022.
2 Corps is India’s premier strike corps on the Western Front, responsible for offensive operations against Pakistan in the Punjab plains sector. Lt Gen Raja Subramani’s command of it was a key credential in his selection as CDS.