Why Only 3 Castes Can Join the President's Bodyguard (PBG)?
The President's Bodyguard (PBG) is the senior-most regiment of the Indian Army. It is an elite household cavalry unit stationed at the Rashtrapati Bhavan, tasked with the protection and ceremonial escort of the President of India.
While the modern Indian Army recruits largely on an "All India, All Class" basis, the PBG remains one of the few regiments that strictly follows a "Fixed Class" composition. This means recruitment for troopers is restricted to three specific castes: Jats, Rajputs, and Jat Sikhs.
1. The Composition Breakdown
The regiment is structured to maintain an equal balance among these three communities. The recruitment of troopers (Soldiers/Sepoys) is divided as follows:
- 33.3% Jats (Hindu Jats)
- 33.3% Rajputs (Hindu Rajputs)
- 33.3% Jat Sikhs
Note: This restriction applies only to the Troopers (soldiers). The Officers (who command the unit) and administrative staff (clerks, tradesmen) can be drawn from any community or region in India.

2. The Reasons Behind the Restriction
The Indian Army has officially defended this policy in the Supreme Court and Delhi High Court. The justification relies on two primary arguments: Historical Legacy and Functional Requirement.
A. Functional Requirement (Uniformity & Pomp)
The PBG is primarily a ceremonial unit. Its most visible role is to escort the President during Republic Day, the Beating Retreat, and visits by foreign heads of state.
- Visual Uniformity: The Army argues that for ceremonial grandeur, the troopers must look identical in build, height, and appearance.
- Physical Standards: The PBG has the strictest physical standards in the Army. The minimum height requirement is 6 feet (183 cm), which is significantly taller than the national average.
- The Argument: The Army asserts that these three specific communities (Jats, Rajputs, and Jat Sikhs) generally have a higher average height and similar physical build, making it easier to maintain the "perfectly uniform" look required for ceremonial parades.
B. Historical Legacy
The PBG is the oldest surviving regiment of the Indian Army, raised in 1773 by Warren Hastings (the first Governor-General of India).
- British Tradition: The British organized the Indian Army into "Martial Classes," creating regiments based on caste (e.g., Dogra Regiment, Sikh Regiment, Jat Regiment). The PBG was formed under these principles.
- Post-Independence Shift: Before 1947, the unit was composed of Punjabi Muslims, Sikhs, and Rajputs. After Partition, the Muslim troopers were transferred to Pakistan (to form the Governor General's Bodyguard there). The vacancies left in the Indian unit were filled by Jats, cementing the current 3-caste system.
- Fixed Class System: While new regiments raised after Independence (like the Parachute Regiment or the Guards) are open to all classes, older regiments were allowed to keep their traditions to maintain unit cohesion and history.
3. Operational Role: More Than Just Show
While the caste restriction is justified by "ceremonial" needs, the PBG is also a fully functional combat unit.
- Paratroopers: Every soldier in the PBG is a qualified paratrooper (airborne soldier).
- Tank Men: They are trained as an armoured unit and can operate tanks and armoured vehicles.
- Combat Experience: The PBG does not just sit at the Rashtrapati Bhavan. Detachments of the PBG have served in Siachen Glacier (the world's highest battlefield), with the IPKF in Sri Lanka, and in UN Peacekeeping missions.
4. Legal Challenges
This policy has been challenged in court multiple times by petitioners who were physically qualified (6 feet tall) but rejected because they did not belong to the three specific castes (e.g., Yadavs or Ahirs).
- The Petitioners' Argument: They argue that excluding eligible citizens based on caste violates Article 15 (Prohibition of discrimination) and Article 16 (Equality of opportunity in public employment) of the Constitution.
- The Army's Defense: The Army maintains that the "grouping" is based on functional needs for ceremonial duties, not discrimination. The courts have generally declined to interfere in military policy, acknowledging the unique functional requirements of the President's household troops.
Summary
The restriction is a blend of colonial history and ceremonial aesthetics. The Indian Army maintains that to act as the "show window" of India's military might at the Presidential Palace, the unit requires a specific, uniform physical type found consistently in the Jat, Rajput, and Jat Sikh communities.








23 comments
This is not new. Nearly all Regiments have a fixed historical class composition. Two Regiments are purely of Dalit troops. It has a logical basis though even that can be dismantled, if required. It has worked for the Army and within the Army is not considered important.
Legacy of colonial era should be discontinued, because there are other warrior communities like Kodava in Karnataka and Nair in Kerala who have physical characters and looks fit for PBGs
Good. Welcome .Really talents are defers on caste base. Bloods are red. But cannot donate to all. Can identified as gorops. Like that soldiers refers on caste base
We must drop this colonial slavery and include those soldiers who can qualify the physical requirement for PBG
President is bigger than the country? If not then why we kept these rules in our working system? If any community can serve India with their merit & with the dignified standards of Army, then what’s the problem to protect The President? Army’s answer is biased with two different theories. In one hand they are claiming that they are secular & in other they are protecting the colonial rule & playing with the cast system. I strongly recommend the rule must be disowned as soon as possible, & PBG must be free from all past rules which was imposed by some unethical persons & it should be structured with merit basis not with caste basis.