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Failed In My Dream of Becoming Indian Air Force Pilot: Abdul Kalam

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Abdul Kalam Indian Air Force

For former President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, becoming a fighter pilot was a “dearest dream” but he failed to realise it by a whisker as he bagged the ninth position when only eight slots were available in the IAF.

In his new book “My Journey: Transforming Dreams into Actions”, published by Rupa, Mr. Kalam, who specialised in aeronautical engineering from Madras Institute of Technology, says he was desperate to pursue a career in flying.

“Over the years I had nurtured the hope to be able to fly to handle a machine as it rose higher and higher in the stratosphere was my dearest dream,” he writes.

Out of the two interview calls Mr. Kalam got, one was from the Indian Air Force in Dehradun and the other from the Directorate of Technical Development and Production (DTDP) at the Ministry of Defence in Delhi.

While the interview at DTDP was “easy” he recounted that for the Air Force Selection Board, he realised that along with qualifications and engineering knowledge, they were also looking for a certain kind of “smartness” in the candidate.

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Mr. Kalam bagged the ninth position out of 25 candidates and was not recruited as only eight slots were available.

“I had failed to realise my dream of becoming an air force pilot,” he writes.

Abdul Kalam

He says he “walked around for a while till I reached the edge of a cliff” before deciding to go to Rishikesh and “seek a new way forward.”

“It is only when we are faced with failure do we realise that these resources were always there within us. We only need to find them and move on with our lives,” says Mr. Kalam who went on to put his “heart and soul” at his job as the senior scientific assistant at DTDP.

The book is filled with stories of “innumerable challenges and learning” in his years as the scientific adviser when India conducted its second nuclear test, his retirement and dedication to teaching thereafter and his years as President.

Mr. Kalam has compiled life’s learnings, anecdotes and profiles of key moments and people who inspired him profoundly in the book, which will hits the stands on August 20.

He recounts “staring into the pit of despair” when he failed to make it as an IAF pilot and how he pulled himself up and rose to become the man who headed India’s missile programme and occupy highest office in the country.

While the 82-year-old, popularly known as the Missile Man for his contribution to the development of ballistic missile technology, had in 1999 brought out his autobiography “Wings of Fire” and followed it with “Turning Points”, a journey through challenges” in 2012 that details his political career and challenges, the latest book talks about the people who left a deep impression on him as he was growing up.

In the 147-page book, Mr. Kalam writes about his experience of watching his father build a boat, his early working life as a newspaper boy at the age of eight and even his first-hand experience of the way in their religious elders settled a religious matter in his school.

In a chapter “A brush with fire”, Mr. Kalam recounts the 1999 January 11 incident involving two aircraft which took off from Bangalore towards the Arakkonam-Chennai coastline and crashed, killing 8 men on board.

While Mr. Kalam immediately flew to Bangalore from Delhi and met the bereaved families, he says the grief of the devastated parents and the wailing of the infants remained with him even after years of the incident even after he moved from his office at South Block to Rashtrapati Bhavan.

The former President says that true nation building is not made by political rhetoric alone but should be backed “by the power of sacrifice, toil and virtue”.

“When grand plans for scientific and defence technologies are made, do the people in power think about the sacrifices the people in the laboratories and fields have to make?” he writes.

The book also contains a chapter detailing Mr. Kalam’s favourite books “which have always been close companions” who “were like friends” guiding him through life. Lilian Eishler Watson’s “Light from Many Lamps,” the “Thirukural”, Nobel Laureate Alex Carrel’s “Man the Unknown” have been listed.

Poetry says Mr. Kalam has been “one of his first loves” and poems by T.S. Elliot, Lewis Carroll and William Butler Yeats has “played out in my over and over again”.

In conclusion, Mr. Kalam writes his life can be summed up as “Love poured to the child… struggle… more struggle… bitter tears… then sweet tears… and finally a life as beautiful and fulfilling as seeing the birth of the full moon.

“I hope these stories will help all my readers understand their dreams and compel them to work on these dreams that keep them awake,” he writes.

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Former President APJ Abdul Kalam Dies at 83

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President_on-board_INS_Sindhurakshak

Former President APJ Abdul Kalam died on Monday at a hospital in Meghalaya, where he had gone to deliver a lecture at the Indian Institute of Management in Shillong, reports Press Trust of India. He was 83.

Dr Kalam reportedly collapsed on stage at the IIM and was rushed to the Bethany hospital. Doctors say he suffered from a massive cardiac arrest.

Dr Kalam — the 11th President on India between 2002 and 2007 — was born in Rameswaram on October 15, 1931, to the family of a boatman.President_on-board_INS_Sindhurakshak

Home Minister Rajnath Singh tweeted, “Deeply saddened at the sudden demise of the former president of India Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam. He was an inspiration to an entire generation.”

He played a pivotal role in India’s Pokhran-II nuclear test in 1998, the first since the test by India in 1974. He was known as the missile man of India.

For his achievements, he was awarded the Padma Bhushan and Bharat Ratna, and then he became the 11th President of India in 2002.

Current Affairs 26-27 July 2015

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26-27-July-2015-Current-Affairs

 

NATIONAL

  • CBI adds 100 more officers to probe Vyapam Scam
  • Maoist leader killed in Gumla encounter
  • AIPMT re-exam takes place under strict vigilance
  • Swachh Bharat Mission faces financial hurdle in Kolkata
  • Eminent persons request President to consider Yakub Memon’s mercy plea
  • Anna Hazare demands One Rank One Pension

INTERNATIONAL

  • 80 killed in Yemen air strike; Hadi’s plea for 5-day truce accepted by Saudis
  • Africa is on the move: Obama
  • Strong quake hits off Indonesia, but no tsunami warning
  • Indian school bus set ablaze by Nepal Maoists
  • 5.5-earthquake jolts northern Pakistan
  • China the main economic espionage threat to U.S.: FBI
  • Saudi-led airstrikes kill 120 in Yemen
  • Senior Houthi commander captured in Yemen

POLITICS

  • Parliament canteen subsidy to stay: House Panel Chief
  • A.P. political parties demand Centre sanction for special category State status for Andhra Pradesh
  • President on two-day Karnataka visit from 27 July
  • Modi highlights road safety, social issues in radio address
  • CBI files FIR against MP Governor’s former Officer on Special Duty

DEFENCE

  • PM pays tribute to Kargil martyrs
  • On Kargil Diwas, northern command sounds alarm on ammunition shortages
  • Damaged Black Box of crashed Dornier send to US to retrieve data
  • Myanmar Army Chief starts its 4 day visit to India
  • BDL Chief: LRSAM to be test-fired in Indian in October
  • 4 J-20 fighters undergo simultaneous test flights in Chengdu: Kanwa
  • BSF bought spare parts for grounded chopper: CAG26-27-July-2015-Current-Affairs

SPORTS

  • S Sreesanth among 36 let off in IPL scandal, but BCCI ban stays
  • Hockey India panel deals coach Van Ass fate
  • Rain hit Bangladesh-SA test ends in a draw
  • Sharath and Suchith set up KSCA XI’s big victory
  • FIFA WC 2018 qualifying draw: England drawn with Scotland
  • Usain Bolt bounces back with 100 meter win in London

BUSSINESS

  • UK institute says Dhoni 9th most marketable star
  • Gold likely to fall to Rs. 23,000-level within a month: Experts
  • A.K. Balyan joined Anil Ambani-led Reliance Group as CEO of its Oil & Gas Business
  • China’s Leyard to invest Rs 125 cr in MIC Electronics
  • Reliance Jio Infocomm plans own-branded phones & stores

Does SSB Interview Board Keep A Record Of Past Attempts?

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flaws-in-ssb-interview

Does SSB Keep A Record Of Past Attempts?. If you have a tag of the repeater, you have been through this. Hereby this I mean the thought that whether SSB keeps a record of past attempts? SSB is a much-classified process. Right from the procedure to the results, they are supposed to remain a secret.

Best SSB Interview Books

Not even the people involved in the board know the exact reasons why a candidate is selected or rejected; similarly, they are kept alien to some procedures. Thus it is very difficult to say anything regarding this question. Yet a lot of things direct my answer to yes.

  • You are made to fill up this section in PIQ and even at the time when you fill you written application (Or direct application). This question comes again and again; it would be pointless to ask if they had nothing to do with it.
  • There have been cases when people have lied about being a fresher and post recommendation have landed into trouble.
  • There is a unique identification number given to your application. This definitely goes into their record.
  • You are made to submit certain documents, again which becomes a part of their record.
  • Most of the records are maintained online, it is not rocket science to mine this data and get the information. Hence all your information is just a click away.
  • Once a candidate is recommended a lot of follow up is done regarding his background and other details.
  • The background check involves every detail related to the candidate, police verification, and re-confirming from two gazette officers who know the candidate. So chances are it involves checking the record of the candidate’s previous SSB attempts too.

Some of you may say that you have lied about your SSB attempts and never got caught (I can vouch that no recommended candidate would have ever pulled this off). Here are the reasons you shouldn’t lie about your previous SSB attempts:

  • Because honesty is the first virtue of an officer. You have gone there to become an officer, do you think you should by-pass the first and most important thing which an officer should have.
  • They are experts in catching lies. They are like those mechanics who on seeing equipment can tell what is wrong with that.
  • If you lie you are risking your career. Chances are that you’ll get caught and be thrown out, and if that happens after recommendation, they’ll make sure you are banned from joining the forces. Forever.
  • The groups in SSB are made according to the attempts. For example freshers are put together, repeaters together and so on. If you lie, you’ll be put in a wrong mix, it’ll be easier for them to catch your lie.

So yes if you ask me, I would say, that they do keep a record of past attempts. Never lie.

Why India Needs General No 1?

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Chief of Staff Committee

To lead as well as govern any organisation, a deserving leader is required. Indian military forces are too having such persons. They are known in Army, Navy and Air force as General, Admiral and Air Chief Marshal respectively. Following are the current Chiefs of Indian defence forces.

Chief of Indian Army: General Dalbir Singh Suhag

Chief of Air Force: Air Chief Marshal Arup Raha

Chief of Navy: Admiral RK Dhowan

Recently, during a media conclave, our respected Defence minister Manohar Parrikar stated that “In the next two-three months, my (Cabinet) note with the recommendation will go to the right place (Cabinet committee on security) for the final decision,” It means that he with his team is working to create a permanent post of Chairman of Chief of Staff Committee (CoSC). Currently, this position is headed by the three service chiefs, with a fixed tenure of two-three years. According to him, India will soon get a four-star officer in addition to current Chiefs of three services as the team of defence minister Manohar Parrikar is working in this subject.

What is CoSC?

Chief of Staff Committee can be called as a forum, where the head of three services come together to discuss important matters related to any military issue or any task given by the ministry.

According to the current rule, the senior-most of three services acts as the ex-officio of CoSC till the time he retires. Earlier in 2012, Naresh Chandra Taskforce also suggested for the permanent post of CoSC, which is a diluted form of CDS post.  If India is serious about national security and synergy, some serious actions needed to be taken.Chief of Staff Committee

Why India needs General no-1?

  1. All the three services co-ordinate with each other for different purposes. With the existence of one head of all three services, a better coordination and co-operative practices could be executed.
  2. The requirement of CDS(Chief of Defence Staff) is strongly recommended by successive committees including the Kargil Review Committee headed by K Subramanya .
  3. To provide single point military advice to government.
  4. Streamline long-term defence planning and procurement purpose.
  5. Integrate service Headquarters with the defence ministry.

This is all about India, but a similar post is present in many countries over the globe too. Around 70 countries including UK, US, France and Germany have a post similar to CDS for integration in military planning and operations.  In US and France, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) and CDS respectively are the highest ranking military officers and principal military advice to the President of their country.

According to the latest reports, the proposal to create a permanent post for CoSC is at an advanced stage of planning. With the creation of this post, all three service chiefs will be left independent to run their individual services.

There is an unknown fact in India that ‘Rules of Business’ of India Government adopted from the British, continue to treat Services Headquarters as “Attached Offices”.

Till Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar comes out with a permanent post, stay motivated with SSBCrack.

Won’t Allow Another Kargil, says General Dalbir Singh

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General Dalbir Singh

Gen Dalbir Singh, COAS visited the Kargil War Memorial, Drass today& paid homage to the heroes of Kargil War. Later he interacted with Veer Naris and Soldiers at Kargil War Memorial.

Army Chief General Dalbir Singh Suhag on Saturday said the armed forces will not let another Kargil-like conflict to take place.

After paying tributes to the Kargil war martyrs at a memorial here, he said the “Army won’t allow another Kargil”.

Though the celebrations to mark the 16th anniversary of India’s victory in the Kargil War, also called Vijay Diwas, began on July 20, the main functions will be held today and tomorrow.General Dalbir Singh

Army will hold a memorial service at the Kargil War Memorial where prayers by religious leaders will be held. They will be followed by lighting of lamps.

The wreath laying ceremony for the martyrs will be held tomorrow which will be followed by an interaction with Veer Naris.

The Kargil war, which began in May 1999, lasted for more than two months before Pakistani soldiers, a bulk of them drawn from its Northern Light Infantry, and irregulars withdrew from the mountain tops they had occupied overlooking the Srinagar-Leh highway.

In the conflict, the Indian Army lost 490 officers, soldiers and jawans.

Current Affairs 25 July 2015

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25-July-2015-Current-Affairs

 

NATIONAL

  • PM’s maiden visit to Bihar from tomorrow; To launch Gram Jyoti Yojna in Patna
  • Supreme Court refuses to entertain plea for wearing hijab in AIPMT
  • Centre to set up a Task Force on Financial Redress Agency (FRA) as recommended by the Financial Sector Legislative Reforms Commission
  • Over 31,000 farmers committed suicide across India in last 3 years: Government
  • Centre refuses to set up SIT to probe PDS rice scam in Chhattisgarh
  • Uttar Pradesh recommends CBI probe into murder of crucial witness in Asaram ‘rape’ case

INTERNATIONAL

  • Obama leaves for landmark Africa trip to ancestral home Kenya, Ethiopia
  • Nigeria marks one year without recorded polio case
  • Failing to pass US gun safety laws greatest frustration of Presidency: Obama
  • World’s first malaria vaccine gets go-ahead from EU regulators
  • Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza has won a third five-year term as the leader
  • Will not allow Chinese military bases, Maldives assures India

POLITICS

  • Lokayukta amendment Bill has ‘retrograde’ features: Hiremath
  • TDP MPs demonstrate for special status for A.P.
  • Nitish meets Lalu to clear ‘snake-sandalwood’ controversy
  • Will not let PM to take farmers’ land easily: Rahul Gandhi
  • President inaugurates restored clock tower and renovated clinic to mark third year in office

DEFENCE

  • India, Thailand agree to enhance naval cooperation: Navy chief
  • Performance of ITBP affected as ordnance factories delayed arms supplies: CAG
  • Army celebrates Vijay Diwas in J&K
  • Reliance firm ties up with Singapore’s Augur in defense business
  • India’s Act East Policy balancing China in the region: Think tanks
  • Indian Army short of 10,000 officers: Manohar Parrikar

SPORTS

  • Shubham Jaglan, 10 years old, lifts 2nd Junior World Golf title in two weeks
  • Sports Minister Sonowal flags off All Women Trans Continental road expedition
  • Oman qualify for next year’s World T-20 in India
  • Jayaram & two Indian doubles pairs in semifinal of Russia Open
  • Paul Van Ass not to return as India’s hockey coach

BUSSINESS

  • WTO members have finalized a deal today to cut tariffs on $ 1 trillion worth of IT products in a boost for producers of goods ranging from video games to medical equipment.
  • Fortis Healthcare reappoints Bhavdeep Singh as CEO
  • China signs 1,401 project contracts under Silk Road initiative
  • RBI approves proposal to transfer money to depositor’s account from any bank
  • SIT asks SEBI to clamp down on Participatory-Note route and also prosecute those using equities for tax evasion

CDS II 2015 Notification Apply Now – upsc.gov.in

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CDS II 2015 Notification

CDS II 2015 Notification Apply Now. UPSC has published the latest notification of CDS II 2015, candidates who are waiting for the CDS 2 2015 notification can apply online at www.upsc.gov.in. Combined Defense Services (CDS) Exam is conducted twice in a year by Union Public Service Commission for the recruitment of eligible candidates for Military Academy, Indian Air Force, Officers Training Academy and Indian Naval Academy. UPSC has released the schedule for CDS I and CDS II examination.

CDS II 2015 Notification for:

  • Air Force Academy (Men)
  • Indian Naval Academy (Men)
  • Officers Training Academy (Women,Non-Technical)
  • Officers Training Academy (Men)
  • Indian Military Academy (Men)

CDS II 2015 Educational Qualifications :-

  • For Indian Military Academy / Officer & Training Academy vacancies degree is required
  • For Air Force Academy degree from recognized university and also cleared 12th Class with Physics and Mathematics
  • For Indian Naval Academy engineering degree is required

CDS II 2015 Application fee :- All General and OBC candidates need to pay Rs.200/- As Application Fee & No fee for SC/ST/Female and other category candidates.

Note :-All candidates can pay their fee in cash debit card / credit card or net banking by SBI banking.

CDS II 2015 Selection Process :- Candidate will be selected on the basis of Written test / SSB interview / Document Verification / Medical test and Personality Test.CDS II 2015 Notification

CDS II 2015 How to Apply :-

  • First log-on to the official website or click below link
  • Then Click on Apply online for various UPSC Exam.
  • After that Find your CDS 2 Exam Click Apply online link.
  • Enter your Detail which is asked on page & submit it.
  • Complete the payment of Application Fee.
  • Take Print out of application form for future uses.

Click here to visit official website

CDS II 2015 Notification

Click here for Apply Online

All You Want To Know About IMA – Indian Military Academy

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Indian Military Academy

Hello, Warriors! If you are a die hard aspirant of Indian Military Academy and if a series of shock wave passes through your spine whenever you read somewhere IMA or Indian Army being mentioned and if fills you with the josh & courage to be a part of it, then this article is for you.

Here, I jot some important points about the Indian Military Academy that every aspirant must know:

  1. IMA Indian Military Academy was established on 1st October in 1932 and is headed by Lieutenant General Manvendra Singh, AVSM, VSM as the present commandant and it’s motto is ‘Valor and Wisdom’.
  2. A trainee on admission to the IMA is referred to as a Gentleman Cadet or GC. One reason for this is that the academy expects its graduates to uphold the highest moral and ethical values.
  3. The IMA colours are steel grey and blood red. Steel grey represents the strength of steel in the GCs and blood red indicates the ultimate sacrifice for the protection of the motherland.
  4. The academy is located in the foothills of the Himalayas, about 8 km west of Dehradun in Uttarakhand. The academy area is 1,400 acres (5.7 km2).
  5. The Government of India transferred the erstwhile estate in Dehradun of the Indian Railway’s Railway Staff College, with its 206 acre campus and associated infrastructure, to the Indian Military Academy during Indian independence struggle.
  6. Brigadier L.P. Collins was appointed the first Commandant and the first batch of 40 GCs, began their training on 1 October 1932. The institute was inaugurated on 10 December 1932, at the end of the first term by Field Marshal Chetwode.Indian Military Academy
  7. In late 1947, the IMA was renamed the Armed Forces Academy and a new Joint Services Wing (JSW) was commissioned on 1 January 1949, while training of Army officers continued in the Military Wing. In 1960, the academy was renamed back to its founding name, as the Indian Military Academy.
  8. In 1976, the four battalions of the IMA were renamed the Cariappa Battalion, Thimayya Battalion, Manekshaw Battalion and Bhagat Battalion with two companies each in honour of Field Marshal Kodandera Madappa Cariappa, General Kodendera Subayya Thimayya, Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw and Lieutenant General Premindra Singh Bhagat, respectively.
  9. In 1977, the Army Cadet College (ACC) was moved from Pune to Dehradun as a wing of the IMA. In 2006, the ACC was merged into the IMA as its Siachen Battalion.
  10. The IMA Museum on the campus displays artifacts of historic importance. Among other war relics, it displays the pistol of Lieutenant General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi of the Pakistan Army which he surrendered to Lieutenant General Jagjit Singh Aurora after signing the Instrument of Surrender to end the liberation War of 1971.
  11. The Commandant’s residence is a handsome colonial structure with a landscaped 6 acre garden. It offers a panoramic view of the Tons River silhouetted by the Himalayas.
  12. Developed in the 1970s, the South Campus of the IMA includes facilities for the Somnath Stadium and the Salaria Aquatic Centre. Other facilities on the South Campus include stables with a stud farm and a small arms shooting range.
  13. The IMA War Memorial, with its pillars and columns of Dholpur stone, pays homage to the alumni of the academy who have fallen in the course of action. At the sanctum sanctorum of the memorial is a bronze statue of a Gentleman Cadet with a sword presenting arms.
  14. Cadets undergo training at the IMA for one year. An exception are trainees selected via the Combined Defence Services Exam of UPSC. These cadets who are graduates of a non-military college undergo training for one and a half years.
  15. The Param Veer Chakra awardees of IMA are Major Somnath Sharma, Posthumous; Captain Gurbachan Singh Salaria, Posthumous; Lieutenant Colonel Hoshiar Singh; 2nd Lieutenant Arun Khetarpal, Posthumous; Captain Vikram Batra, Posthumous and Captain Manoj Kumar Pandey, Posthumous.
  16. Making of a Warrior, a documentary by Dipti Bhalla and Kunal Verma, provides an inside look at the IMA’s culture, traditions and training regime. The 2004 Bollywood film Lakshya is partly shot in IMA.

At last let me leave you with the academy’s credo excerpted from the speech of Field Marshal Chetwode at the inauguration of the academy in 1932:

The safety, honour and welfare of your country come first, always and every time.
The honour, welfare and comfort of the men you command come next.
Your own ease, comfort and safety come last, always and every time!

Army Cadet College Exam Syllabus

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Army-Cadet-College-Syllabus

The Army Cadet College (ACC) Wing at Indian Military Academy provides training to the soldier, airmen, and sailor s from the regular army, navy, and air force for commission as officers in the Indian Army. The ACC is also known as the Siachin battalion now.

The training at IMA is aimed at the optimum development of intellectual, moral and physical qualities essential for leadership in the profession of arms. Training at the IMA inculcates those qualities of mind and heart, patriotism, character, dynamism, initiative and understanding that are the very basis of leadership in war as well as in peace.

The Army Cadet College Wing headed by a Brigadier is the fifth Battalion of IMA located in Tons Campus. It consists of three Companies with three platoons each and an Academic Department headed by a Principal. The latter is organized into various departments under the Humanities and Science Streams and each department is being headed by a Professor / Associate Professor.

All About ACC Entry?

  • The ACC exam is conducted 2 times every year.
  • The age limits for ACC is 20-27 years.
  • One must have minimum 02 years of service.
  • For ACC entry you must have 10+2 or its equivalent as your educational qualification.
  • Both married and unmarried soldiers can apply.
  • You can avail maximum 03 chances for ACC entry.

ACC Exam Selection Procedure

  • First of all, before applying for ACC, the jawan must have a good ACR.
  • One must have a clean record without any disciplinary action.
  • A unit-level written exam will be conducted by the CO/OC to find the potential soldiers who can go ahead for ACC entry.
  • Candidates who clear the written exam will be interviewed by the senior officers for further screening and selected candidates’ documents will be forward to the higher formation.
  • Selected candidates will be sent for a 10 Weeks class at Command HRDCs ( Human Resource Development Centers).
  • The respective formations will be sending the names of the candidates and ACC exam will be conducted at Command HRDCs.
  • The ACC exam is usually conducted near February and August for January and July courses respectively.
  • The Result will be declared by DGMT/MT-15 -Director General of Military Training MT-15.
  • A merit list of 500 candidates will be made who will face the SSB interview. (05 x 100 in each batch)
  • These 500 candidates will go for a preliminary screening test similar to the actual SSB interview.
  • After the screening test, 200 candidates will be selected to go for the Young Leaders Course (YLC) at OTA Chennai and the remaining candidates will go for Personality Development Training (PDT) at AEC Centre and Command HRDCs.
  • The likely dates for the ACC SSB interview will be Sep- Nov for Jan Course and Jan-March for July Course.
  • Candidates who clear the SSB interview and medical tests will be called to join the Indian Military Academy, ACC wing.
  • The ACC training will be for 03 years after which 01 year training at IMA, Dehradun.

ACC Exam Syllabus

  • Paper 1 – GMAT
  • Paper 2 – CGAT
  • Paper 3 – ICE (Part 1 and 2)
  • Paper 4 – ACT
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ACC Exam Online Course

How to Prepare for the ACC Exam and SSB Interview?