The National Defence Academy is an iconic institution, a global brand of excellence in the sphere of military education. Over the years it has emerged as a unique military academy, attracting the best of youth from our nation and also from friendly foreign countries and transforming them into officers and gentlemen. During the last six decades of its glorious existence, the National Defence Academy has grown both in grace and grandeur and from its portals have emerged 'leaders of men', who have demonstrated the essence of inter-services camaraderie and jointsmanship thereby vindicating the faith and vision of its founding fathers. Apart from leaders of men, the alumni have proved to be great mountaineers, cosmonauts, sportsmen, researchers, creative writers, artists, corporate honchos and more recently, Olympic champions. Their achievements are all pervading and showcased in every echelon of our Armed Forces and also in the civil society. The 'cradle' has indeed rocked the nascent youth and groomed them properly as 'leaders' who have lived up to its ethos: 'Seva Paramo Sharma' (Service Beyond Self).
The concept of the NDA was conceived at the conclusion of the Second World War when six years of fierce combat had emphatically underlined the needs for 'Jointness' in modern warfare, as it was correctly believed that it is primarily the element of synergy which provides the significant asymmetric edge in a conflict situation. The NDA was at the time of its inception, a unique and pioneering concept that was far ahead of its time. In fact, so exciting and novel was the concept that many nations looked at it with avid interest to see how it would shape out in practice.
Prior to the plan for an Academy being mooted, in 1941, the Government of Sudan had given a generous gift of a hundred thousand pounds to Lord Linlithgow, the Viceroy of India, to build a war memorial to commemorate the sacrifices of the Indian troops in the Second World war for the liberation of Sudan. It was this core corpus that was later utilised to build the grand edifice of the National Defence Academy. On 02 May 1945, a Committee was formed under the chairmanship of the Commander-in Chief, India, Field Marshal Claude Auchinlek, popularly known as 'Auk', to examine the feasibility of forming an institution with excellent facilities for training the officers of the Armed Forces jointly. Manu foreign training academies were visited to analyse the efficacy of their work and evolve a suitable concept for an Indian War Academy.
The Auk ceased to be the Commander-in-Chief of the undivided Indian Armed Forces on 15 August 1947, and the blueprint of the unique academy envisaged by him remained in cold storage for about eight months. But the enthusiasm it had generated and the alarming vaccum in the officer cadre did not allowed it to be shelved. In fact its birth became a paramount necessity. The report was finally referred to the Chiefs of Staff Committee in 1947. Their suggestions for the formation of an interim Joint Inter Services Wing at the Indian Military Academy, Dehradun was accepted for implementation. Concurrently an action plan to commission a permanent war academy at Khadakwasla (Pune) was commenced and Prime Minster Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru himself laid the foundation stone on 06 Oct 1949.
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