Sooraj Jatti was not yet a teenager when he told his father he wanted to join the Indian army. His father, Shankar, a retired serviceman himself, beamed with pride at the thought of having inspired his son.
“For me, it was an obvious choice because of the atmosphere in my house,” 19-year-old Sooraj says, in between his training session at an academy in Palus city of Maharashtra’s Sangli district. “Ever since I could remember, I have never thought about anything else.” Shankar was pleased with his son’s decision. It was the ultimate approval a father could have asked for.
Less than a decade later, Shankar is no longer so sure about his son’s choice. From an emotional and proud father, somewhere along the years he turned sceptical. On June 14, 2022 to be precise.
It was on this day that Defence Minister Rajnath Singh held a press conference and said, "Under Agnipath scheme, Indian youngsters will be provided an opportunity to serve in armed forces as Agniveer."
Before the introduction of the scheme, the five year average of recruitment into the armed forces between 2015-2020 stood at 61,000. When the pandemic struck in 2020, recruitment was stopped.
The Agnipath scheme would recruit less – around 46,000 youth, or Agniveers, into the Indian army for a “younger, fitter and diverse” force. The eligible age was decided between 17.5 to 21 years for the enrolment, potentially bringing down the average age of the forces by 4-5 years, according to the government press release.
Unlike a lifelong army career, this is a four-year engagement, at the end of which 25 per cent of the batch would get a job in the regular cadre of the armed forces.










