The Force of Decision: Singapore Army AMX-13 light tanks were shown to the public for the first time at the 1969 National Day Parade. Showcasing tanks alone has a different effect today, in view of their vulnerability to contemporary battlefield threats such as drones.
A visiting general who watched Singapore's National Day Parade (NDP) years ago enjoyed the republic's 9 August birthday celebrations.
It was not the marching contingents, nor the show of military might by war machines in the mobile column, the air force flypast, song and dance routines or fireworks that riveted him.
According to a Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) colonel (now retired) who served as the general's officer-in-attendance, the visitor paid keen attention to how the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) coordinated NDP.
With time-critical elements and datum calls marked on time sheets to the second, all interlinked for "live" television broadcast in front of Singapore's leadership and with the nation watching, the pressure placed upon that year's NDP Executive Committee (Exco) which planned, organised and executed the show, must have been immense.
It has always been that way, for all NDP Excos.
Staging an impressive NDP signals to observers, watching at home and from afar, of Singapore's DNA. Tight-knit, professional, capable of standards of performance par excellence.
Pioneer generation Singaporean leaders recognised that NDP could serve as a shop window to a young, vulnerable and small city-state whose greatest resource lay with its people.
Do it well and people may think well, perhaps even highly, of Singapore.
Over time, however, that need to put on a magnificent NDP seems to have become an end in itself.
Yesterday (14 June 2025) marked the first of eight full dress rehearsals, staged at the actual parade venue, for Singapore's 60th birthday. The number of rehearsals is a luxury that early generations of NDP participants did not have. Still, the old timers pulled off memorable parades.
Colonel (Retired) Goh Lye Choon recalled that there was no rehearsal at the Padang venue when the SAF unveiled its first tank, the AMX-13, as the spearhead of the NDP mobile column in 1969. Today's mobile column can count on eight rehearsals at the actual venue, not counting the internal rehearsals in months past.
With such extensive preparations, one would expect the mobile column to roll out smoothly, successfully.
Achieving that end comes at a price. There is a sense that NDP planning has become rigid, templated, with a sclerotic management style incapable of quick injects and modifications to the run sheet. You do not want professional observers, defence analysts and cognoscenti to see things that way.
So, the means to an end, that is, staging a great NDP to impress observers, has seemingly become an end in itself.
We practice and push NDP participants hard. And for good reason: Because we want a spectacular show. Which Singaporean doesn't?
As a consequence, there is a tendency to stick to the tried-and-tested. Dust off the template from previous NDPs and execute as before.
There is value in working from a template. It is a ready-made starter kit for time-pressed staff officers to get things moving from a cold start. Ideas would have passed the real world test from past NDPs and SOPs such as route planning for a mobile column, time sheets and logistical arrangements would have been enshrined as part of the Exco's institutional memory.
All the good points you can think of for an NDP template do not factor in current-day strategic considerations for assets on display. If the vulnerability of AFVs to drone warfare has been a hot topic amongst military minds, the NDP template with its SOPs and timesheets would not have factored that in. And so, a segment of NDP, say for example the mobile column, which is planned and run according to years-old templates risks exposing the limitations and shortcomings of the SAF.
Feedback from shutterbugs who photographed the mobile column at CR1 was that it was largely cut-n-paste.
Swift and decisive decision making to course correct is critical. The onus is on NDP Exco staff officers, however junior, to speak out during the many vettings at upcoming CRs and NE shows.
Having tanks lead the mobile column in 1969 had a stunning effect on observers because Malaysia had no tanks, whereas our accidental nation operated tracked armoured fighting vehicles (AFV) armed with 75mm guns. Light tanks represented by the AMX-13s were better than no tanks.
Leopard 2 main battle tanks made their NDP debut in 2010. Singapore's enhanced AFV capability, with Leopard 2s boasting a more powerful 120mm gun, better armour, improved mobility and networked capability, telegraphed a strong deterrent message.
Alas, showcasing AFVs today projects not strength, but vulnerability. Who can forget the explosive footage of small explosive-laden drones destroying tanks in war zones from Ukraine to Gaza to Transcaucasia?
TNI Boleh: Can you spot the drone flying top cover in the first image at the top? These are more clearly seen in the second image above.
Indonesia's TNI appears to have understood this well. The TNI integrated flying drones with their mobile column last year, when it staged a massive show of force to mark the TNI's 79th anniversary.
What about injecting new elements to the NDP 2025 mobile column?
The Bronco-based artillery resupply vehicle has never been seen at NDP. And yet, having this vehicle paired with the Project C Primus 155mm Singapore self-propelled howitzers demonstrates sustained firepower, mobility and lethality.

Boats out of water always draw attention. The Republic of Singapore Navy's recently unveiled semi-submersible would look great representing the navy in the mobile column. Other armed forces that did so with their own special forces craft have enjoyed elevated attention from legions of special forces fans and analysts who look out for such assets.
Want to showcase Total Defence? Think civil resources. How about pairing a LARC V amphibian with a similar vehicle from Duck Tours, configured to carry army stores? Free publicity for the commercial operator worth significant PR value. Past year NDP mobile columns even had SBS buses fitted out as ambulances.
Once upon a time, horse cavalry was the elite manoeuvre force. In September 1939, German panzer units crushed Polish cavalry units, which had centuries of proud heritage as Europe's best cavalry force, and convinced observers that the game had changed.
Are tanks obsolete? Not quite.
However, showing off AFVs without a concurrent and credible demonstration of one's drone capabilities compromises Singapore's deterrence messaging.
Keep those Leopard 2SG MBTs as the mobile column vanguard. Tweak the show, perhaps with a top cover of FPV drones just to remind observers the SAF also plays in this space. But above all, do not let those tanks roll into show centre with no drone element as it would underscore backward and unthinking show planning.
There are countless ways to make the mobile column more impactful while enhancing commitment to defence, deterrence and defence diplomacy.
Can Singapore's SG60 NDP do the same? Or is this too late, never tried before, no budget, no time to try etc.