AGNIVEER system in the Indian Army
The AGNIVEER system in the Indian Army is becoming a serious concern for many youths of this country. Thousands of young boys dream of serving the nation by joining the Army. They prepare for years with dedication, sacrifice, and discipline. But today, many feel that their future is being turned into a temporary contract instead of a respected lifelong service.
The biggest issue is simple — an AGNIVEER performs the same duty as a permanent soldier. He stands at the same border, carries the same weapon, faces the same enemy, and risks the same life for the nation. The bullet does not differentiate between an AGNIVEER and a permanent soldier. Then why is there discrimination in salary structure, job security, benefits, and pension?
A soldier is not a temporary worker. Army service is not like a private company contract that can end after a few years. The nation expects complete loyalty and sacrifice from these young men, but in return many of them are left uncertain about their future after service. After giving the best years of their youth to the country, many AGNIVEERS may return home without long-term security, pension, or guaranteed employment. This creates fear not only for them but also for their families.
Another painful reality is the social and internal discrimination many feel. People often separate them by saying “he is just an AGNIVEER.” This mentality damages morale and self-respect. A person wearing the Indian Army uniform should be respected equally, regardless of the scheme under which he joined.
There is also frustration regarding the behavior some soldiers face from higher authorities. Discipline is necessary in the Army, but respect and dignity are equally important. Soldiers are human beings who dedicate their lives for the nation, not machines without emotions. When young soldiers feel undervalued, unheard, or treated unfairly, it affects their confidence and mental strength.
The strength of the Indian Army has always come from motivation, brotherhood, honor, and long-term commitment. Policies should strengthen these values, not weaken them. The youth of India do not fear hard work or sacrifice. What hurts them is uncertainty, inequality, and the feeling that their dedication is being treated as temporary.
Every soldier who is ready to die for the nation deserves equal respect, dignity, and security. Because service to the country should never feel temporary.
If you contact me I will tell you what is really going on in the Indian Army. Army is just a status people don't know what is going inside it....
The biggest issue is simple — an AGNIVEER performs the same duty as a permanent soldier. He stands at the same border, carries the same weapon, faces the same enemy, and risks the same life for the nation. The bullet does not differentiate between an AGNIVEER and a permanent soldier. Then why is there discrimination in salary structure, job security, benefits, and pension?
A soldier is not a temporary worker. Army service is not like a private company contract that can end after a few years. The nation expects complete loyalty and sacrifice from these young men, but in return many of them are left uncertain about their future after service. After giving the best years of their youth to the country, many AGNIVEERS may return home without long-term security, pension, or guaranteed employment. This creates fear not only for them but also for their families.
Another painful reality is the social and internal discrimination many feel. People often separate them by saying “he is just an AGNIVEER.” This mentality damages morale and self-respect. A person wearing the Indian Army uniform should be respected equally, regardless of the scheme under which he joined.
There is also frustration regarding the behavior some soldiers face from higher authorities. Discipline is necessary in the Army, but respect and dignity are equally important. Soldiers are human beings who dedicate their lives for the nation, not machines without emotions. When young soldiers feel undervalued, unheard, or treated unfairly, it affects their confidence and mental strength.
The strength of the Indian Army has always come from motivation, brotherhood, honor, and long-term commitment. Policies should strengthen these values, not weaken them. The youth of India do not fear hard work or sacrifice. What hurts them is uncertainty, inequality, and the feeling that their dedication is being treated as temporary.
Every soldier who is ready to die for the nation deserves equal respect, dignity, and security. Because service to the country should never feel temporary.
If you contact me I will tell you what is really going on in the Indian Army. Army is just a status people don't know what is going inside it....
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Cannot say till Dec 2026
Cockroach Scout · 120 pts
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Cannot say till Dec 2026
1h ago
Everyone give you point of view please
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