Saturday 31 October 2020

‘Will be difficult for them to save face,’ Rajnath Singh attacks Congress on China issue

SOURCE: HT

Union defence minister Rajnath Singh on Saturday attacked the Congress for ‘questioning’ the bravery of Indian jawans. Addressing an election rally in Patna, the senior BJP leader said that the Congress was spreading misinformation about India-China issue. Lobbing a challenge to the Opposition, Rajnath said once he makes a disclosure, those who are questioning the Army today will not be able to show their face.

“Some political parties.. Congress… are questing the bravery of our jawans. They are saying China has captured 1200 square kilometre of land. If I make a disclosure, it will be difficult for them to save face. And you all are educated people. You have been following the state of affairs since 1962 to 2013. As the defence minister, I take immense pride in saying that our jawans had made India proud.

The issue of the ongoing India-China standoff has surfaced several times in Bihar election campaign. In their first election rallies in Bihar before the first phase of Bihar Assembly Election 2020, both Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi evoked Bihar’s pride of sending jawans to protect the country. The Prime Minister had said that the Opposition should be ashamed of seeking votes in Bihar when they want Article 370 of erstwhile Jammu and Kashmir back. Rahul Gandhi also questioned why Prime Minister Narendra Modi denied transgression by Chinese Army.

On Friday, Rahul Gandhi shared a report which quoted Ladakh’s former BJP MP Thupstan Chhewang saying that the Chinese troops have further transgressed into Indian territory and occupied positions in Finger 2 and 3 of north bank of Pangong lake. The Centre has denied this claim and said it was fake news.



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Pakistan: Shaking legs cause political quake

SOURCE: SUSHANT SAREEN / ORF

Around two months after the 27 February 2019 air skirmish between India and Pakistan that followed the air strikes on the Jaish-e-Mohammad terror facility in Balakot, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, addressed an election rally in Gujarat. Speaking to the audience, he revealed that Pakistan had been warned against any harm to the captured Indian pilot, Wing Commander Abhinandan whose had bailed out over Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and had been captured by the Pakistani armed forces.

Mr Modi claimed: “Fortunately, Pakistan announced that the pilot would be sent back to India. Otherwise it would have been ‘qatal ki raat’ (a night of bloodshed).” At that time, Mr Modi’s statement was seen as typical election rhetoric and didn’t make too many waves. But a year and a half later, a top Pakistani politician has not only corroborated Mr Modi’s claims, but has in the process also revealed the trepidation in Pakistan over India going up the escalation spiral.

Speaking in the National Assembly of Pakistan, former Speaker Ayaz Sadiq revealed that a panicky Imran Khan government had organised an in-camera meeting to brief opposition politicians and take them on board before making a peace offering to India. According to Sadiq, Pakistan Army chief Gen Qamar Bajwa, whose legs were quaking with fear and who was sweating with tension, was accompanied by the Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi who pleaded with the opposition leaders to let Abhinandan go or else after 9PM that night, India would attack Pakistan. Another opposition leader and former defence minister Khawaja Asif claimed that Bajwa had hinted that Pakistan needed to ‘appease’ India to cool things down.

Expectedly enough, after these revelations the spin doctors of the Pakistan army in Pakistan’s ‘independent’ media jumped to the defence of their ‘friends not masters’. Even the official spokesman of the Pakistan military had to hold a hurried press conference to ‘set the record’ straight. But the damage had been done, and Pakistan Army’s assiduously cultivated image of being the indefatigable and tenacious ‘defender of territorial and ideological frontiers’ took a terrible beating. Whether this happened by design – the opposition, in particular PMLN supremo and former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has been relentlessly targeting the Army’s top brass – or Ayaz Sadiq was misunderstood – he later clarified that it “must have been Imran Khan whose legs were trembling with fear” – is in many ways just a matter of detail. In either case, the outcome is the same in terms of public perception – Pakistan buckled under pressure and India successfully coerced it to release the captured Indian pilot. Even among the most ardent supporters of Imran and the current army chief the seed of doubt has been sown. The mortification being suffered by the ‘selected’ government and the Army became worse when, in an effort to portray himself more loyal than the King, a cabinet minister Fawad Chaudhry implicated the Pakistani state, government and army by declaring in Parliament that the Pulwama suicide bombing in February 2019 was a major achievement of the Imran Khan government.

In a way, Imran and his ‘selectors’ have brought this situation upon themselves. Ever since Nawaz Sharif crossed the Rubicon by targeting Gen Bajwa and the ISI chief, the ruling party has gone up the escalation spiral by accusing the opposition of singing the tune of Pakistan’s enemies (read India). With charges of unpatriotic behaviour flying around, a push back from the opposition was only to be expected. Actually, Ayaz Sadiq was not trying to ridicule the Army chief but instead trying to burnish the patriotic credentials of the PMLN. What he was doing was pointing out that at a time of grave danger to the country, when both the civil and military leadership was panicking and desperate for the opposition’s support, the opposition parties stepped up to the plate. The opposition very patriotically bailed out the government despite not agreeing with its assessment that India would attack Pakistan. This was quite similar to what Nawaz Sharif did during the Kargil conflict. At that time, the Pakistan Army was facing a rout and desperately needed a face saving. Nawaz Sharif provided that by taking the flak on himself by going to Washington and announcing a withdrawal from Kargil after a meeting with President Bill Clinton.

Imran and his ‘selectors’ have brought this situation upon themselves. Ever since Nawaz Sharif crossed the Rubicon by targeting Gen Bajwa and the ISI chief, the ruling party has gone up the escalation spiral by accusing the opposition of singing the tune of Pakistan’s enemies

Of course, Sadiq botched up things completely by yielding to the temptation of showing down the ruling party and its sponsors as a bunch of lily-livered folk who lost their nerve and yielded to India. This has left the military seething with anger and it is almost certain that there will be payback. Chances are that using the government machinery, an example will be made of Ayaz Sadiq and others. The information minister has already hinted as much. But whether this will stem the flow of disparaging comments from the opposition against the military brass and its political appointees, or it will lead to even more embarrassing revelations tumbling out is something that remains to be seen. Already, a colleague of Sadiq, Rana Sanaullah, has said that the decision to release Abhinandan was taken by Gen Bajwa and Imran Khan was made to announce it in Parliament.

Quite clearly, until now, every move by the government and the army to muzzle the opposition has been backfiring. The Army is now being openly accused of carrying out false flag attacks – bomb blasts in Quetta, Peshawar and other parts of Pakistan – to stop the opposition’s political mobilisation under the banner of Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM). Maulana Attaur Rehman, younger brother of PDM chairman Maulana Fazlur Rehman and a senator in his own right, recently made an explosive speech in the Senate in which he not only accused the military of trying to sabotage the PDM rallies through bomb blasts, but also warned that if the generals involve themselves in politics then they must be prepared to face the music. Other opposition leaders have used the PDM platform to also take pot-shots at the army, and a few have even called for the independence of Balochistan.

The Pakistan Army which has thrived on fear for decades is suddenly finding that politicians are not afraid to take aim at the top brass. What is even more infuriating for the serving, and retired generals (most of whom act as unofficial spokespersons of the military), is the distinction that the opposition politicians are making between the rank and file and the top brass. The Army sees this as an attempt to sow divisions between the officers and the men. But the politicians see this as a way to skirt around the law (especially Art.63(1)(g)) by targeting only the cabal of generals, and not the armed forces as an institution. Technically, unless someone interprets that Bajwa and his ISI side-kick as embodying the Army as an institution, targeting them cannot be construed as defaming or ridiculing the armed forces. In fact, the opposition politicians go out of their way to extol the virtues of the armed forces, laud their sacrifices and promise their complete support to them. At the same time, however, the opposition is ratcheting up pressure on the army as an institution to force it to stop propping up the ‘selected’ government of Imran Khan.

That the pressure is mounting is a no-brainer. The hysterical response from the treasury benches is only one indication that the opposition’s line of attack has spooked the government. There are also reports that the army has been trying to reach out to Nawaz Sharif and other leaders to get them to back down from the strident stand they have taken against the army’s top leadership. So far, Nawaz Sharif has refused to budge. Meanwhile, the army chief is trying to send messages that not only is the army firmly behind him but also that he is firmly behind Imran Khan. A day after Sadiq’s speech, Bajwa called on Imran Khan, and the military’s spokesman declared that the armed forces “leadership and rank and file could not be separated and they would remain united.”

There are also reports that the army has been trying to reach out to Nawaz Sharif and other leaders to get them to back down from the strident stand they have taken against the army’s top leadership

Pakistan appears to have entered uncharted political waters. Not only is the military’s dominance and interference in politics being challenged, its role as an arbiter between contending political forces is also being undermined like never before. This is unfamiliar territory, not just for the army but also the civilians. The more the army backs its ‘selected’ regime, the greater the incentive for the opposition to tag the military with its civilian appointees and heap the blame for the ills of government and governance on the army. Conversely, the more the army leadership is targeted, the greater its incentive (in part for reasons of self-preservation and in part for telling off the opposition) to back the current civilian dispensation. Clearly, this sort of a situation cannot continue indefinitely. Something’s got to give. Will the Army’s legs quake once again under the opposition’s relentless tirade and force it to give up on Imran Khan? Or, will the Army brass decide to do a Qatal ki Raat (this time, carry out a Pakistani version of the Night of Long Knives) to get rid of inconvenient and disobedient politicians? Either option will have its own repercussions, both in the short, as well as long, term. The Chinese curse of living in interesting times is visiting Pakistan.



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Pakistan sees red after PM?Modi’s remarks on Pulwama terror attack

SOURCE: HT

Pakistan on Saturday rejected what it called Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “insinuation” of its involvement in the Pulwama attack by alluding to remarks made by a Pakistani minister in that country’s parliament.

The statement from its foreign ministry was in reaction to Modi’s remarks that the truth behind the 2019 attack has been revealed after claims made in Pakistan’s National Assembly.

“After the neighbouring country accepted responsibility for the attack in its parliament, the true nature of the people who resorted to ugly politics during our difficult time has been uncovered. I request them not to do such politics in the interest of the nation,” Modi said on Saturday during a two-day visit to Gujarat, in remarks aimed at the opposition.

On February 14 last year, 40 troopers were killed in a suicide attack on a convoy of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) by a member of the Pakistan-based terrorist group Jaish-e-Mohammed.

Pakistan’s science and technology minister Fawad Chaudhry on Thursday said in the National Assembly that his country had entered India and beaten it on its own soil. “Hum ne Hindustan ko ghuss ke mara hai (We have entered and attacked India),” Chaudhry had said.

But on Saturday, the Pakistan foreign office said Modi’s remarks “is a brazen attempt to twist the remarks of the federal minister, who was referring to the befitting response given by the Pakistan Armed Forces in broad day light to India’s ill-conceived misadventure of 26 February 2019, in violation of the UN Charter and international law.”

It said, “It is the BJP leadership’s incurable obsession with Pakistan that impels them to invariably blame Pakistan for their own failings and shortcomings.”

“Most notably, it has been a part and parcel of the BJP’s electoral strategy to raise the Pakistan ‘bogey’ in the attempt to galvanise voters’ support, while seeking to divert public attention from their domestic and foreign policy failures.”

“Pakistan firmly believes that the biggest beneficiary of the February 2019 Pulwama attack was the BJP government, as it resulted in BJP’s landslide victory in Lok Sabha elections following their virulent anti-Pakistan electoral campaign,” it said.

“On the other hand, to this day, India has failed to provide any credible evidence of Pakistan’s alleged involvement in the Pulwama attack.”

“The BJP regime is advised, once again, to stop dragging Pakistan into India’s domestic politics, especially at the time of elections in India,” it said. “Instead of mobilising the electorate through stoking of anti-Pakistan sentiments, the BJP leadership would be well-advised to win voter support by demonstrating actual performance in meeting the expectations of the Indian people.”



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Russia fulfills India’s defence requirements list handed over in June

SOURCE: ZEE NEWS

Russia has fulfilled requirements related to India’s defence equipment list handed over in the month of June. Sources confirming the development said that India’s defence requirements included light guns, projectiles, bombs.

A number of contracts were signed during the summer to implement the Indian requirement. While the status of the shipment is not known yet, the requirement was by March 2021. 

The defence requirement list was handed over during Defence Minister Rajnath Singh’s June visit to Moscow. The Defence Minister had gone to Russia to participate in Victory Day Parade, celebrating Soviet victory and surrender of Nazi Germany.

The visit of the Defence Minister came in the backdrop of the Galwan incident at the Line of Actual Control in Eastern Ladakh on 15th June. In the incident, India lost 20 soldiers, while China also suffered huge casualties but never accepted it openly.

Nothing is known yet on MiG 29 to be procured from Russia. In July, New Delhi had approved the proposal for procurement of 21 MiG-29 along with the upgradation of the existing 59 MiG-29 aircraft and procurement of 12 Su-30 MKI aircraft.

One of the key elements of India-Russia ties is defence. BrahMos Missile System, as well as the licensed production SU-30 aircraft and T-90 tanks, are shining examples of India-Russia flagship defence cooperation. 

An agreement on the cooperation in the production of spare parts for Russian/Soviet military equipment was signed during the 20th Annual India Russia Bilateral Summit in Vladivostok in September 2019.

In March 2019, PM Modi announced the JV– Indo-Russian Rifles Pvt. Ltd. for production of AK Series Assault Rifles at Ordnance Factory Korwa under the ‘Make-in-India’ program.



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To counter Islamabad’s propaganda, India reminds Kashmiris of Pakistan’s atrocities

SOURCE: THE WEEK

Over the last ten days, Pakistan has waged a battle of historical narratives with India, turning to psychological warfare in a desperate bid to black out the widespread protests taking place against it, both on its soil and outside as well.

From London to Srinagar and even parts of Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir, protests have taken place against the atrocities that Pakistani forces unleashed on the Kashmiris seven decades ago as well as against the fresh efforts being made to destabilise Kashmir.

It is well known history that, in October 1947, Pakistani raiders invaded Jammu and Kashmir and tried to capture it, only to be repulsed by the Indian Army—who fought the raiders till November 7 and managed to drive them away.


Once again, it is not just territorial claims but nationalistic and historical assertions by India that are unsettling Islamabad, which has been using extreme forms of violence and brutality to try and change the ground situation in Kashmir to its favour.

“After the abrogation of Article 370 and crackdown on Pakistan-sponsored terror groups and separatists in the Valley, Kashmir is no longer seen as a meeting ground for three kinds of nationalism—Indian, Pakistani and Kashmiri. The growing Indian nationalism in J&K is a matter of worry for the Pakistan ISI,” says a senior intelligence official.

Each year in October, Kashmiris recall the painful memories of the invasion by Pakistani raiders. However, the “wrong history and propaganda” by Islamabad has “under the cover of religion, slowly been fed into the minds at a young age and the new generation of youth are not aware of the decades-old Kashmiri nationalist sentiment,” said an intelligence official.

”So, it is important to go back to history and remind the youth of Kashmir how they have fought alongside the Indian Army against the unprovoked aggression that started against them in October 1947, resulting in the killing of tens of thousands of innocent people of JK, [in] looting and arson, [and in] the rape and kidnapping of Kashmiri women,” the official added.

To counter Pakistan’s propaganda, national security strategists in New Delhi are not losing any opportunity to reach out to and remind Kashmiri people about their history.

Whether it is through social media cells of intelligence agencies, discussion forums or local outreach programmes in Kashmir, the aim is to build confidence between the security forces and Kashmiri people by reminding them of the history that shaped Kashmir through the sacrifices and contributions not just of the Indian army but also of Kashmiri nationalists like Maqbool Sherwani.

When Pakistani raiders were asked by the Army to plunder the city and seize Srinagar airport, it was Sherwani who, on his motorcycle, tried to misguide the raiders by directing them to the wrong path. Security officials said the trick by Sherwani was a huge contribution as it helped buy time for the Indian Army to be deployed in Kashmir as Maharaja Hari Singh was yet to sign the instrument of accession to allow the Indian soldiers to enter Kashmir. The Maharaja signed it on October 26 and the Indian government airlifted the Indian army into Kashmir on October 27.


However, once the raiders discovered that they were misguided by Sherwani, they searched for him and found him in Sumbal, a town in Baramulla. They tortured and mutilated his body.

”To terrorize the nationalists, the raiders pasted a paper on his head with the message ‘He is a traitor, his punishment is death,’” recalled an official. “These are the terror tactics that continue to be employed by Pakistani state actors and non state actors to instil fear,” he added.

However, government officials say that after the abrogation of Article 370, the Kashmiri people, especially the youth on both sides of the border, have been keen to look beyond the distorted history, thus becoming more aware of Pakistan’s role in the devastation of their lives, culture and future.


A case in point is an intelligence report which notes that this year, despite COVID-19 constraints, Kashmir Black Day protests have taken place not just in Srinagar, but also in Nepal, Bangladesh, Tokyo, the Netherlands, Malaysia, London, Tanzania, Washington and PoK. In PoK, residents of Bagh, Muzaffarabad and Hajira took to the streets with masks and placards to end the violence against Kashmiris. In places like Spain, Indian communities organised webinars.

The report noted that a desperate Pakistan is trying to black out these protests taking place on its soil. Already on a sticky wicket after its failure to garner international support against India’s move to abrogate Article 370, Islamabad is desperate to play down the events that took place this time of the year in 1947. But, in cities such as Muzaffarabad, Rawalakot, Kotli, Gilgit and Rawalpindi, the people have defied the government and gathered on the streets to register their demand and protest against the illegal occupation of Kashmir by the Islamabad government. The Jammu Kashmir Awami Workers party has already blamed the Pakistani government for violating the agreement signed with the Maharaja of Kashmir and invading JK.



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Pakistani lawmaker Ayaz Sadiq stands by Indian Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman’s release statement

SOURCE: ANI

Pakistan lawmaker Ayaz Sadiq, who faced criticism from the Pakistan government and Army for revealing that Imran Khan-led govt had released Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman fearing an imminent attack from India, said he stands by his statement, adding that he knows “many secrets” but never made irresponsible statements.

Speaking in the Pakistan National Assembly, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz leader Sadiq had recounted the events of the February 2019 meeting during a speech in the country’s National Assembly.

He had revealed why Imran Khan’s government decided to release Abhinandan Varthaman, saying Pakistan Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa’s “legs were shaking” while Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi told the meeting of parliamentary leaders that India was about to attack their country.

His statement was heavily criticised by ruling party ministers and also prompted the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) chief Major General Babar Iftikhar to hold a presser in which he sought to “correct the record” regarding the events.

“But these are political differences. Their attempt to associate my statement with the armed forces of Pakistan was not a service to the country,” Dawn quoted Sadiq as saying.

“You (the government) have played into the hands of Indian media and you have not done justice to Pakistan. I am standing by my stance and you will see in future, I have many secrets. I had been heading the National Security Committee,” it added.

Information Minister Shibli Faraz has slammed PML-N leader Ayaz Sadiq for his remarks recalling the incident that led to the release of Abhinandan.

“The remarks by Ayaz Sadiq are beyond apology. Now the law will take its course. Weakening the state is an unforgivable crime for which Ayaz Sadiq and his companions must be punished,” Faraz tweeted on Friday.

Wing Commander Varthaman came into the limelight after he shot down a Pakistani aircraft F-16, which had transgressed into the Indian airspace during a dogfight between Indian and Pakistani air force on February 27, 2019 and in the process, his plane crossed over to the Pakistani side and was shot down.

Abhinandan was returned to India from the Attari-Wagah border on March 1, 2019. He has been awarded the Vir Chakra on Independence Day by President Ram Nath Kovind for his exemplary bravery.



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India-China ties under ‘severe stress’, LAC changes unacceptable: Jaishankar

SOURCE: HT

India-China ties are under “severe stress” and normalcy can be restored only if bilateral agreements on border management are respected in their entirety, external affairs minister S Jaishankar said on Saturday, with the border standoff in Ladakh set to enter its seventh month.

Jaishankar made the remarks while delivering the Sardar Patel Memorial Lecture on the theme “India and the post-Covid world”. The speech contained an overview of India’s relations with major powers such as the US, Russia and China, and outlined the government’s vision to enhance the country’s standing in the world order emerging from the Covid-19 crisis.

Noting that relations with China had remained stable for three decades, he said peace and tranquillity on the border had allowed the two sides to expand cooperation in other domains. “But as the pandemic unfolded, the relationship has come under severe stress,” he said.

“To restore normalcy, agreements between the two countries must be respected scrupulously in their entirety. Where the Line of Actual Control (LAC) is concerned, any attempt to unilaterally change the status quo is unacceptable,” Jaishankar said.

“The relationship cannot be immune to changes in the assumptions that underpinned it. Large civilisational states re-emerging in close proximity will not have naturally easy ties. Their interests are best served by a sustained engagement based on mutual respect and mutual sensitivity,” he added.

India has said Chinese troops had hampered patrolling by its forces along the LAC since April this year and violated border agreements and protocols. Twenty Indian soldiers were killed in a violent clash in June and warning shots have been fired by both sides – the first time guns were used along the LAC since 1975. With winter approaching, tens of thousands of troops mobilised on both sides are set to remain deployed in Ladakh region as several rounds of military and diplomatic talks have been unable to take forward the disengagement process.

Jaishankar also highlighted the importance of border infrastructure in national security, saying the periphery will reflect the capabilities of the heartland. Leaving parts of the border underdeveloped has its risks and “safeguarding borders is a 24×7 exercise [and] not only an appropriate response to an emerging situation”, he said.

India’s experience in the past few years in expediting the creation of border infrastructure in the north shows how much difference sharper focus and better implementation can make, and the shift from declarations to delivery is in keeping with the outlook of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, he added.

“Underlying it is, of course, a basic willingness to fully recognise the challenges that the nation faces. By playing down issues like cross-border terrorism or competitive geopolitics, there has been a tendency to look away from the hard choices. In a more difficult world, that is going to be less possible,” Jaishankar noted.

With the US, successive governments on both sides have pursued a “non-partisan endeavour”, and strong economic and technological complementarities have laid a strong foundation for the relationship, he said. “But it is in the face of emerging multi-polarity that both nations have developed a serious interest in more intensive engagement,” he added.

India’s relations with Russia have held remarkably steady and the “strategic logic that has sustained this relationship since its early days still remains largely relevant”, Jaishankar said, adding that India has also ramped up its engagement with European states, which are taking a greater interest in the Indo-Pacific region.

There is also a strong case for accelerating the partnership with Japan, which has been responsible for catalysing many aspects of India’s modernization, he said.

Looking at the world order emerging out of the Covid-19 crisis, Jaishankar said it was apparent even before the pandemic that the existing international system was under great stress due to multiple and complex reasons, including the disenchantment with a globalised economic system that created unequal gains. “The Covid-19 pandemic could well be the last straw on the back of a fraying global consensus,” he said.

“India will approach the world in a more proactive way in the aftermath of the pandemic…The pressures of the pandemic will naturally impart a different urgency to such engagements…Indian diplomacy will be more integrated with our defence and security needs, more supportive of our economic and commercial interests, more aware of our technology capabilities and offerings, and more sensitive to the diaspora,” he added.

The annual lecture has been organised by All India Radio since 1955 to commemorate Sardar Patel.



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Have many secrets, says Pakistan MP who revealed Abhinandan was released out of panic

SOURCE: TNN

A Pakistani lawmaker, who recently spilled the beans on the tension within the Imran Khan government before the release of Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, has said that he knows “many secrets” but never made any “irresponsible” statements.

Ayaz Sadiq, PML-N leader and former National Assembly speaker, told Dawn news that he stands by the remarks he made in the National Assembly but did not divulge any further details on what transpired after the capture of Varthaman.

During his speech in the National Assembly recently, Sadiq had revealed that Pakistan army chief Qamar Javed Bajwa’s “legs were shaking” and he was “sweating” while foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi told a high-level meeting that India would attack by 9pm if they didn’t release Abhinandan.

Sadiq’s statement had invited the fury of both the ruling Imran Khan-led government and the powerful army, prompting the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) chief Major General Babar Iftikhar to hold a media briefing in which he sought to “correct the record” regarding the events.

The 37-year-old IAF pilot took down a Pakistani F-16 aircraft during a dogfight across the LoC on February 27 last year. He was captured by the Pakistani army after his MiG-21 Bison jet went down during the combat. The incident took place a day after IAF jets bombed the Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM) terror camps in Balakot in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa of Pakistan to avenge the Pulwama terror attack.

” … these are political differences. Their attempt to associate my statement with the armed forces of Pakistan was not a service to the country,” Dawn quoted Sadiq as saying.

“You (the government) have played into the hands of Indian media and you have not done justice to Pakistan. I am standing by my stance and you will see in future, I have many secrets. I had been heading the National Security Committee,” he added.

The Pakistan government, which went into damage control after the statement, claimed that there was “no pressure” on it to release Abhinandan

“The Government of Pakistan took the decision as a gesture of peace, which was appreciated by the international community,” foreign office spokesman Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri told reporters during his weekly media briefing.
Pakistan’s information minister Shibli Faraz had hit out at Sadiq’s remarks, saying they are beyond apology and have “weakened” the state.

“The remarks by Ayaz Sadiq are beyond apology. Now the law will take its course. Weakening the state is an unforgivable crime for which Ayaz Sadiq and his companions must be punished,” Faraz said on Twitter.

Abhinandan was returned to India from the Attari-Wagah border on March 1, 2019. He was awarded the Vir Chakra on Independence Day by President Ram Nath Kovind for his exemplary bravery.



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‘India, China ties were stable for 3 decades because…’: Jaishankar on LAC

SOURCE: Hindustan Times

External affairs minister S Jaishankar on Saturday said any attempt to unilaterally challenge the status quo is unacceptable where the Line of Actual Control (LAC) is concerned.

Commenting on the ongoing standoff between India and China, the foreign minister said ties were stable for three decades as two nations addressed inherited challenges and new circumstances. “Peace and tranquillity in border areas provided basis for expanded cooperation on other domains,” Jaishankar said.

Agreements between the countries must be respected scrupulously in the entirety to restore normalcy, Jaishankar said.

The foreign minister has commented several times on the India-China standoff and reiterated that the immediate focus should be on restoring peace and tranquillity.



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Intelligence: Indian agencies get a BECA boost

SOURCE:  SUNDAY GUARDIAN LIVE

 When 79 US commandos and Cairo the dog, a Belgian Malinois, stormed into the Abbottabad, Pakistan, residence of Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden at 1.30 am (IST) on 2 May 2011 in order to neutralise him, they knew the exact number of steps that they will have to take from the landing zone where their modified Black Hawk helicopters would land to reach the third floor room of Laden, where he was sleeping.

This was possible because for months they had studied and analysed the exact replica, down to the number of stairs and the number of doors of Laden’s hideout. The model of the house took six weeks to be built and 1 inch on the model meant 7 feet on ground.

So, when the commandos landed at the doorstep of Laden, it was like the proverbial walk in the park for them. They knew where the doors were, where the kitchen was and which side they had to turn as they “cleared” the three-floor house.

For a long time, it was assumed that someone from the inside, who knew the house inside out, had helped the commandos. However, this swift execution of such a difficult mission in an inhospitable environment, which was over within nine minutes of the commandos entering the Laden compound, was made possible because of the pin-pointed intelligence that included very high resolution images gathered and the model of the house built by men and women at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, or the NGA, which is located at Fort Belvoir North Area in Springfield, Virginia.

The importance and the resources at the disposal of the NGA can be gauged from the fact that it is the third-largest government building in Washington after the Pentagon and the Ronald Reagan Building. (The helicopters landed in Laden’s house at Abbottabad at 1 am IST, Laden was shot at 1.09 am and by 1.40 am, every commando was out of Abbottabad.)

As per intelligence experts, the NGA, among the many US agencies that were tracking Laden, perhaps played the most crucial role in closing the Laden chapter.

When Indian Defence Minister Rajnath Singh and External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar signed the Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement (BECA) with their US counterparts—United States Secretary of Defense Mark Esper and Secretary of State Michael Pompeo—earlier last week, they paved the way for the use of similar high value intelligence data for Indian agencies, including those engaged in intelligence gathering and counter-terrorism.

The resources generated by NGA, that will now be available to India following the signing of BECA, have far-reaching advantages not just for intelligence agencies, but also the agencies and organisations involved in taking offensive and defensive actions on the border, including on India’s eastern border.

The geospatial information, which BECA will generate for Indian agencies, will be useful both against China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and against the state-supported terror groups functioning from inside Pakistan. It will also lead to training of Indian officials at the US National Geospatial Intelligence College.

“The Laden operation was carried out in 2011, almost 10 years ago. One can just speculate the improvement in intelligence generation by NGA that has happened since then. The capabilities of many of our offensive platforms, including ballistic missiles and drones, will grow exponentially due to the resources which we will be able to access post BECA. It will also allow us to take more prudent military decisions and allocate our resources more judicially,” a senior government official said.

India has a number of space satellites that are focused on intelligence gathering, including EMISAT and RISAT-2, but the assets that it will be able to use post BECA are state-of-the-art and they will augment Indian offensive capabilities, both during direct and indirect war, manifold.

The provision “10 U.S. Code § 454” that talks about “exchange of mapping, charting, and geodetic data with foreign countries, international organizations, nongovernmental organisations, and academic institutions”, will govern the BECA with India.



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US-India ties attract attention of Russian intelligence

SOURCE:  SUNDAY GUARDIAN LIVE

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) on 9 December 2011 declassified a “secret” report, which its field office in Delhi had sent to the headquarters in December 1985, detailing the extent of the penetration of Moscow, USSR, into Indian political parties and Indian media.

The 32-page report concluded that the “size and momentum of Moscow’s political apparatus in India is such that it is unlikely to be easily derailed”. The report mentioned how board members and journalists of a prominent media outlet were on the “payrolls” of the Soviet government. However, the most worrisome aspect of the report was how prominent politicians, including Members of Parliament, were acting, in lieu of money and other benefits, as “agents of influence” to promote Soviet interests in India.

However, there is no way to find out how authentic or fictional the CIA’s findings were or if they were deliberately declassified in 2011 to “warn” policymakers and journalists in India on how easy it was to discredit them by simply releasing a “classified” document that contained names of “pliable” politicians and journalists. Even then, the role of Russian agencies and the likelihood of them interfering in India’s internal affairs, including elections, are being constantly watched by Indian officials due to Russia’s increasing tendency of interfering in important events happening in other countries. And also because geo-political events of the recent past have created a situation where India has come closer to the United States, Russia’s past and present foe.

The most prominent Russian agency, which has experience of influencing individuals in India, as per India officials, is the GRU.

The giant reach of the Russian General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate or GRU, which is the military intelligence unit of the Russian armed forces, can be understood from the 15 October action of the Department of Justice, United States of America, when it charged six Russian residents, all working for Unit 74455 of the GRU, for their involvement in destabilising the Ukrainian government, the Georgian government, apart from interfering in elections in France and other similar activities.

Between April and May 2017, when France was witnessing Presidential elections, the six GRU officers, as per official documents submitted by the Department of Justice, conducted at least seven “spear-phishing” cyber campaigns (a cyber activity where emails are sent ostensibly from a known or trusted sender in order to force the targeted individuals to reveal confidential information) against the confidants of Emmanuel Macron and other high profile individuals to elicit confidential information and also started “leaking” thousands of purportedly confidential documents from emails disguised as official accounts of Macron’s party. All this was done to derail Macron’s campaign as Russia was in favour of Marine Le Pen winning the elections. Later, Russia congratulated Macron on his win and asked him to “overcome mistrust”.

Before that, during the US Presidential campaign of 2016, all top three US intelligence agencies—CIA, FBI and the National Security Agency (NSA)—collectively reached a conclusion that the Russian agencies, on the direct instructions from their top bosses, tried their best to influence the Presidential polls in multiple ways, including discrediting one of the nominees who they believed was not suitable for Russia’s interest.

According to Indian officials, with the deep penetration of social media into Indian society and following the 2014 general elections, which was the first Indian election also fought on social media, the danger of something similar to what happened in the US and France happening in India is very real.

“Using the cyberworld to carry out political campaigns has now become a part of the political strategy of every political party. Russia, like a few other countries, has a lot of interest in how things move in India. Russia has highly capable infrastructure and units to launch cyber campaigns with deep ramifications. We are aware of the challenges that can come in the near future due to recent developments that we are witnessing between India and the US (referring to BECA),” an official said.

The officials, while pointing out the poor cyber habits of Indian users and the lack of focus of the government and private enterprise on cyber protection, stated that it was easy for any foreign agency to penetrate the private cyber domain of individuals and groups and then sabotage their political campaigns. “A ‘leaked’ video on Twitter just before the elections are to take place or when the individual is about to file his nomination can change the direction of the entire political campaign for the political party. We have seen in the 1980s and 1990s how people’s representatives were handpicked and nurtured by certain foreign agencies so that these individuals could mend national policies that suit that particular country,” an official said.



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A ‘Hindu India’ would be a ‘Sanghi Hindutva’ state: Tharoor in new book

SOURCE: PTI

 A ‘Hindu India’ would not be Hindu at all, but a “Sanghi Hindutva state”, which is a different country altogether, says Congress MP Shashi Tharoor in his new book, The Battle of Belonging, that was released on Saturday. “People like me want to preserve the India we love, and not turn our beloved nation into the kind of religious state we were brought up to detest,” he said.

Tharoor also asserted that Hindutva movement rhetoric echoes the bigotry that India was constructed to reject.

In the book, published by Aleph Book Company, Tharoor makes a stinging critique of the Hindutva doctrine and the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, which he says is a challenge to, arguably, the most fundamental aspect of ‘Indianness’.

Devoting a chapter to the ‘Hindu Pakistan’ controversy in the book, the former Union minister writes, “I had inveighed against the ruling party’s attempts to create a Hindutva version of Pakistan, since that was not what our freedom movement fought for, nor was it the idea of India enshrined in our Constitution.”

“This is not just about the minorities, as the BJP would have us believe. Many proud Hindus like myself cherish the inclusive nature of our faith and have no desire to live, as our Pakistani neighbours are forced to, in an intolerant mono-religious state,” he writes.

Tharoor’s reported comment last year that the BJP will pave the way for creation of a “Hindu Pakistan” had sparked a controversy, with the party demanding his apology over the remarks.

Hinduism, as Swami Vivekananda asserted, teaches the acceptance of difference as a basic credo, Tharoor said in the book.

“Hindutva is not Hinduism; it is a political doctrine, not a religious one,” he said.

“What is bizarre about the media drama over my remarks is that no one who was giving airtime to multiple BJP voices, frothing at the mouth about my words, actually asked them one simple question: ‘Is the BJP giving up its dream of a Hindu rashtra?'” Tharoor said.

BJP apologists point out that the government has done nothing to amend the Constitution, and others have suggested that the Supreme Court’s ruling that secularism is part of the ‘basic structure’ of the Constitution makes the idea of a ‘Hindutva Pakistan’ impossible, he said.

“But the fact is that both have only been held at bay by the simple fact that the BJP has not had the numbers required to achieve their goal—two-thirds of both Houses of Parliament and half the states,” he said.

Their overwhelming victory in the Lok Sabha elections in 2019 and winning a plurality of seats in the Rajya Sabha in June 2020 has ensured that they finally have all the elements needed to fulfil their “project”, he said, adding that the nation has been “warned”.

Tharoor argues in the book that the battle is between two opposing ideas of India or what might be described as ethno-religious nationalism versus civic nationalism.

In a sharp criticism of the CAA, Tharoor said it is the first law to question a basic building block of the nation—that religion is not the determinant of our nationhood and, therefore, of our citizenship.

“At a time when India’s major national priority ought to have been its flailing economy, whose plummeting growth rate had already aroused widespread alarm even before the coronavirus struck, the Modi government plunged the country into an unwanted political crisis of its own making with the CAA,” he said.

“With its penchant for shock and awe, the government pushed through Parliament legislation that fast-tracks citizenship for people fleeing persecution in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh—provided they are not Muslim. By excluding members of just one community, the new law is antithetical to India’s secular and pluralist traditions,” writes Tharoor.

“The religious bigotry that partitioned the country with the founding of Pakistan has now been mirrored in pluralist India. As I told my fellow parliamentarians, that (1947) was a partition in the Indian soil; this is now a partition in the Indian soul,” he said.

The Hindutva movement is the mirror image of the Muslim communalism of 1947; its rhetoric echoes the bigotry that India was constructed to reject, Tharoor said.

Its triumph would mark the end of the Indian idea, the Congress leader added.

In the book, Tharoor also delves into the issue of the slogan ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ allegedly becoming an “acid test of Indian nationalism” and reiterated his stance that no Indian should be compelled to mouth a phrase that is nationalistic in the eyes of some, but not in his own.

Revisiting the 2016 controversy involving Muslim legislator Waris Pathan, who was suspended from the Maharashtra Assembly for refusing to utter the slogan, Tharoor noted that some Muslims say, “‘Tell us to say Jai Hind, Hindustan Zindabad, Jai Bharat, we’ll do it; but do not ask us to say Bharat Mata ki Jai’.”

“The same Constitution that, in our civic nationalism, gives us the right to freedom of speech, also gives us the freedom of silence. We cannot put words in people’s mouths,” he asserted.

Tharoor also criticised the manner in which Article 370 was abrogated on August 5, 2019, saying Modi shocked the nation with an announcement on Kashmir that could well turn out to be the “political equivalent of demonetisation”.



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Warm Welcome For Omar Abdullah In Drass Is Not Good News For Leh

SOURCE: OUTLOOK INDIA

Former Chief Minister Omar Abdullah reached October 30 Kargil to launch a campaign against the revocation of Article 370 and the bifurcation of erstwhile J&K state into two union territories.

In the Drass area of Kargil, Omar addressed people on behalf of the People’s Alliance for the Gupkar Declaration. The warm welcome accorded to him is considered significant because, since the bifurcation of Jammu and Kashmir into two Union Territories, Kargil leaders have been demanding that they would prefer to be a part of Kashmir rather than Leh.

Echoing their sentiment, Omar said the People’s Alliance for Gupkar Declaration has decided to seek the views of people about the bifurcation of the state and revocation of Article 370. “We don’t want to talk about something in Srinagar or Jammu or in the Parliament and have a different situation on the ground,” he said. Hence it was necessary to visit Kargil and verify before conveying to the Centre that the decisions of August 5, 2019, are not acceptable to the people of Kargil.

He said whenever decisions to bifurcate states were taken in the country, they were done in consultation with the people of that state. “When Punjab and Haryana separated, it was done after consultation with the people. When Bihar was bifurcated into two states and Jharkhand came into existence, people of the state welcomed it. When MP was bifurcated and Chhattisgarh became a state, people were consulted during the decision,” he said. But in the case of Jammu and Kashmir, the state was illegally bifurcated and then downgraded into a Union Territory without the people being consulted.

“We are not going to accept this decision,” he said. “We are on one platform, all political parties, CPIM, CPI, NC, Peoples Conference PDP, and others with one motive, to fight against the black decisions taken on August 5, 2019,” he said. He told the people of Kargil that they shouldn’t consider themselves alone, and vowed to fight for the rights of people. “We will fight for the restoration of the whole state, having Leh, Kargil, and other areas,” he added.

Kargil leaders have repeatedly said from day one that they were not part of the demand for the Union Territory for Ladakh. Former legislator of J&K Assembly and senior leader from Kargil Asgar Ali Karbalai has been saying no one in Kargil had demanded Union Territory status, and not a single soul in Kargil is happy with the division of Jammu and Kashmir State
Another leader of the region Sajjad Kargili said the people of Kargil warmly welcomed the Omar Abdullah-led delegation and expressed full solidarity and support for the restoration of the August 4, 2019 position.

Omar’s visit could also create trouble for the Leh leadership that is demanding the Sixth Schedule status for Ladakh Union Territory, which is meant to safeguard the rights of the tribal population through the formation of Autonomous District Councils (ADCs). The Centre has promised Leh leadership Sixth Schedule, but they would be asked to take the Kargil leadership along, which is drifting more toward the Valley and has even lodged protests against the UT status.



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J&K admin to annul all actions taken under Roshni land scheme

SOURCE: PTI

Three weeks after the Jammu and Kashmir High Court ordered a CBI probe into an alleged scam in the Roshni land scheme, the J&K administration on Saturday said it would annul all actions taken, cancel mutations and retrieve entire land in six months. The scheme initially envisaged conferment of proprietary rights of around 20.55 lakh kanals of land (1,2,50 hectares) to occupants of which 15.85 per cent of land was approved for vesting of ownership rights.

But against the expected revenue from such occupants, the revenue actually generated was meagre, thereby failing to realise the objective of the scheme that was finally repealed by Satya Pal Malik, the former governor of the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir, on November 28, 2018.

On October 9, a division bench of Chief Justice Gita Mittal and Justice Rajesh Bindal ordered the CBI probe into irregularities in the scheme and directed the agency to file a status report every eight weeks.

“The J&K administration has decided to implement the high court order in which it declared the Jammu and Kashmir State Land (Vesting of Ownership to the Occupants) Act, 2001, as amended from time to time as unconstitutional, contrary to law and unsustainable,” an official spokesman said.

The act, popularly referred to as the Roshni scheme or the Roshini Act, was believed to be a revolutionary step that had the twin objectives of generating resources for financing power projects and conferment of proprietary rights to occupants of state land.

It was hoped that the legislation would help to boost the farming sector and in turn generate substantial revenue for funding power projects across the state.

An order issued by the Jammu and Kashmir Department of Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs, with the approval of the Lt Governor, stated that the government has been found necessary in the order to implement the judgment passed by the court on a PIL and other connected matters.

“Now, therefore, it is hereby ordered that the principal secretary to the government, revenue department, shall pass an order declaring all actions taken under the Jammu and Kashmir State Land (Vesting of Ownership to the Occupants) Act, 2001, as amended from time to time, and rules made there under as void ab-initio,” the spokesman said quoting the order.

He said it would be ensured that all the mutations done in furtherance of the act are annulled.

The principal secretary will also work out a plan to retrieve the large tracts of state land vested under the act in a time-bound manner, the spokesman said.

He said the secretary will also work out the modalities and a plan to evict encroachers from such state Land and retrieve it within six months.

The officer would also work out modalities for handling the money received for these lands after annulment, the spokesman said.

The secretary will also ensure that information regarding district-wise state land, as on January 1, is complied and posted on official websites with details of land that has been encroached, he said.

“The details of the applications received under the act, the valuation of land, amounts paid by the beneficiary, the orders passed under the act, and the persons in whose favour the vesting was done and also… further transfers, if any, recognised and accepted by the authorities” should be posted on the websites, the spokesman said.

The details should also include, “complete identities of all influential persons (including ministers, legislators, bureaucrats, government officials, police officers, businessmen) their relatives or persons holding benami for them, who have derived benefit under the act or occupy state lands”, he said.

The action would be completed within a period of one month, the spokesman said.

Divisional commissioners of Jammu as well as of the Kashmir region will place on record before the high court the details of encroached state land not covered by the act, he said.



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Alleged ISI Spy Arrested In Rajasthan By Special Branch Of CID

SOURCE: DAILY HUNT

An alleged ISI spy was arrested by the Special Branch of CID in Rajasthan on Saturday. Ram Niwas Gaura who has been arrested in Jaipur has been accused of working for the Pakistan intelligence agency for a while. He has also been accused of collecting information by keeping in touch with the officers and jawans of the Indian Army.

The 28-year-old has been arrested under espionage charges by the Special Branch of CID. It has also been alleged that the man was using a pseudonym to work under the ISI. Gaura is a resident of Nagaur District in Rajasthan.

Ram Niwas Gaura, who was allegedly working as spy for Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Last month, the Delhi Police Special Cell arrested a freelance journalist named Rajeev Sharma after he was suspected of spying for the Chinese intelligence. As per sources, Chinese intelligence had tasked the journalist with sharing sensitive information in exchange for large amounts of money. In line with this, he had also shared some classified documents with a Chinese woman in New Delhi recently.



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Lt Governor Manoj Sinha inaugurates Workshop on Youth Engagement & Outreach in J&K - Scoop News

Lt Governor Manoj Sinha inaugurates Workshop on Youth Engagement & Outreach in J&K  Scoop News

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Hurriyat calls strike in Kashmir over land rules but Utter it was Failure

SOURCE: HINDUSTAN TIMES

Shops and businesses remained mostly shuttered in response to separatist Hurriyat Conference’s call for a one-day long strike against the Centre’s “anti-people orders”, especially pertaining to land rights, even as vehicles plied on the roads.

The call was given after the Centre on Tuesday notified rules allowing outsiders to buy non-agricultural land in Jammu & Kashmir over a year after the region’s special status was scrapped. The status prevented people from outside the state from buying or owning immovable property.

In a statement calling for the strike and peaceful protests, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq-led Hurriyat Conference said the Centre’s imperial approach was bound to fail. It accused the Centre of “issuing incessant anti-people orders at frequent intervals to intimidate and psychologically torture the people”.

The statement said the amalgam reiterates its “principled stand of engagement and dialogue among stakeholders for resolution of the Kashmir dispute”. It accused the Centre of attempting to “undermine all attempts of pursuing a peaceful resolution”.

“A policy of permanent demographic change is aggressively being pushed to snatch our land, destroy our identity and turn us into a minority in our own land. One after the other laws are being invented and amended by New Delhi and forcibly thrust upon the people…”

It added the Centre first brought in the “arbitrary” domicile law that gave residency rights to non-permanent residents and then allowed them to get jobs. “…now our land laws have been brazenly repealed to allow anyone from across India to own land in Jammu & Kashmir,” it said.

Abdul Majid, a grocer in Srinagar’s Lal Chowk, said now nothing has been left for them. “The new laws introduced after the nullification of Article 370 [that gave Jammu & Kashmir the special status] and division of the state are anti-people and efforts are made to disempower the people.”



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5 Bangladeshis, 12 Indians apprehended by BSF for illegally crossing border

SOURCE: PTI

Five Bangladeshis and 12 Indian nationals were apprehended by the Border Security Force personnel in separate incidents for illegally crossing the Indo-Bangla border in West Bengal’s Nadia district, a statement issued by the paramilitary force said.

Five Bangladeshis and 12 Indian nationals, including one tout, were apprehended by the border guards while illegally crossing over to this side near Ramnagar outpost in Nadia district on Thursday, the BSF statement said on Friday.

The apprehend Indians confessed they had earlier crossed the border at the Benapole area to meet their relatives in Bangladesh and were returning back.

The Bangladeshis said they were going to Bengaluru to work as labourers.

All apprehended persons have been handed over to the Hanskhali police station.

In another incident, one Indian national was caught and 10 cattle seized by a patrolling BSF team at Khasmahal outpost on the same day.

The man was trying to smuggle the cattle to Bangladesh along with some other persons.

However, while others in the group managed to escape, the man was caught and handed over to local police.

The price of the seized cattle is estimated to be Rs 2,25,230 in local market, it added.



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Country is establishing new dimensions of unity: PM Modi - News Live

Country is establishing new dimensions of unity: PM Modi  News Live

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MHA orders promotion of two senior IPS officers of J&K cadre - Goa Chronicle

MHA orders promotion of two senior IPS officers of J&K cadre  Goa Chronicle

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IGP Srinivas, Mohanty promoted to DGP rank - The Northlines

IGP Srinivas, Mohanty promoted to DGP rank  The Northlines

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Jaish militants killed in Srinagar firefight - Deccan Chronicle

Jaish militants killed in Srinagar firefight  Deccan Chronicle

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J&K: Pakistan violates ceasefire in 3 sectors along LoC, IB - Deccan Herald

J&K: Pakistan violates ceasefire in 3 sectors along LoC, IB  Deccan Herald

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Indian Army shoots down Pakistans quadcopter at LoC in Jammu & Kashmirs Keran - Republic World

Indian Army shoots down Pakistans quadcopter at LoC in Jammu & Kashmirs Keran  Republic World

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Friday 30 October 2020

‘Boost to Indian Air Force’: Rudram missile to be inducted by 2022, say top officials

SOURCE: Hindustan Times

India’s first anti-radiation missile ‘Rudram’ will be ready for induction into service by 2022 and will boost the Indian Air Force’s capabilities to knock out enemy radars and surveillance systems, top officials familiar with the developments said on Friday.

The indigenous missile, being developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) for the IAF, was tested for the first time in the anti-radiation mode from a Sukhoi-30 fighter jet on October 9 against a target on Wheeler Island off the Odisha coast.

“We plan to carry out six to seven more tests before declaring the weapon ready for induction by 2022. The missile’s passive homing head can detect, classify and engage targets over a wide band of frequencies as programmed,” the officials said.

The missile will help the air force take out enemy air defence systems from large stand-off ranges. “With this, the country has established indigenous capability to develop long-range air-launched anti-radiation missiles for neutralising enemy radars, communication sites and other RF emitting targets,” the defence ministry announced on October 9 when the missile’s maiden test was conducted.

While the Rudram is likely to be tested again from a Su-30 jet by the year-end, India is also developing a new air-launched missile capable of knocking out enemy tanks from a stand-off distance of more than 10 kilometres and a crucial test of the weapon will be conducted in two months, as reported by Hindustan Times on October 22.

The indigenous missile – named stand-off anti-tank missile (SANT) — is expected to be mated to the IAF’s Russian-origin Mi-35 attack helicopters to arm them with the capability to destroy enemy armour from an improved stand-off range. The existing Russian-origin Shturm missile on the Mi-35 can target tanks at a range of 5 kilometres.

The SANT, also being developed by the DRDO, will be launched from a Mi-35 helicopter gunship for the first time in December in what is being seen as a developmental milestone.

The SANT missile was successfully tested from a ground launcher on October 19 off the coast of Odisha – the 13th test-firing of a missile by India in less than two months amid the border stand-off with China and deadlocked talks to reduce tensions along the contested Line of Actual Control (LAC).

The DRDO is also planning to test the ‘Nirbhay’ sub-sonic cruise missile again after a failed test on October 12 when the weapon was tested with an indigenous engine for the first time.

“We are looking at increasing the indigenous content in the missile. Development trials of the missile with the Russian engine were completed last year. A high-powered panel is examining what went wrong with the October 12 launch. We will fix the snag and test the missile again soon,” the officials said.

The key tests recently conducted by India include the supersonic missile-assisted release of torpedo (SMART) to target submarines at long ranges and a new version of the nuclear-capable hypersonic Shaurya missile with a range of 750 kilometres.

India is also developing a new class of ultra-modern weapons that can travel six times faster than the speed of sound (Mach 6) and penetrate any missile defence. In early September, the DRDO carried out a successful flight test of the hypersonic technology demonstrator vehicle (HSTDV) for the first time from a launch facility off the Odisha coast.

Only the United States, Russia and China have developed technologies to field fast-manoeuvring hypersonic missiles that fly at lower altitudes and are extremely hard to track and intercept.

India could develop hypersonic cruise missiles powered by air-breathing scramjet engines in about four years.



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India Resists U.S. Pressure to Buy Armed Drones as Trump Looks for Foreign Policy ‘Wins’

SOURCE: USNEWS

THE U.S. PRESSURED India to purchase sophisticated armed drones during a high-level meeting between top officials this week but was not successful, officials confirm to U.S. News, robbing President Donald Trump of a sought-after foreign policy “win” in the waning days of his reelection bid.

The State Department has already cleared the way for India to purchase MQ-9 Reaper drones, which have become prolific in American-led counterterrorism wars and which U.S. officials believe would perform a critical role in better preparing India’s army for the kind of deadly border clashes with China that have escalated in recent months.

Multiple current officials speaking on the condition of anonymity confirm that the sale was at the top of the agenda for Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Secretary of Defense Mark Esper going into their trip to India earlier this week to meet with their local counterparts, the latest in a series of high-profile summits known as the 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue.

However, India, at least for now, refused.

The sale, like many weapons deals the president has previously touted, would have served as a sterling example of the domestic and foreign policy doctrine Trump has espoused. It would enable another country to carry out a White House foreign policy goal, in this case the foundational promise Trump has stressed in recent weeks of deterring and containing China. And following the Air Force’s announcement earlier this year it plans to transition away from relying on the MQ-9 as it prepares for its own potential confrontations with Russia and China, a new deal with an economic powerhouse like India would secure American jobs at the General Atomics assembly plant for the Reaper in California.

It would also serve as a symbolic step toward incorporating more American hardware into India’s arsenal and move away from the Russian and Soviet equipment that currently comprises much of it – a key goal of the Pentagon’s as it continues to court a greater alliance with the South Asian powerhouse.

“For a customer like India, we get a strategic bang for our buck and at the same time we get the economic benefits,” says Karl Kaltenthaler, a professor at the University of Akron who frequently advises various elements of the U.S. government on drone policy and other security matters. “This is a good story in that we’re keeping American jobs, we’re sticking it to China.”

Pushing for an MQ-9 sale to India also meets a set of requirements that have become a new reality for the national security elements of the government during this administration: It achieves a goal set by the Pentagon, is easy to sell the president and does not conflict with Trump’s vision of the world or his style of leadership.

“For the Trump administration, this issue is much more a political one rather than a strategic one,” Kaltenthaler says. “And this is one of those cases where Trump’s incentives or motivations for doing this don’t conflict with the Pentagon.”

It was not immediately clear why the Indian government declined the U.S. offer at this time, and its Ministry of External Affairs did not respond to requests for comment.

However, multiple sources familiar with the discussions and speaking on the condition of anonymity cited the expense of these drones – which as of last year cost roughly $16 million each. They also say New Delhi plans to hold out for a larger and more comprehensive arms package at some point in the future, but certainly not before Election Day next week.

The State Department declined to answer questions on-record about why it was so eager for India to agree to the sale, or criticism that the timing of the U.S. pressure amounted to an attempt to grant Trump a foreign policy “win” in the lead-up to next week’s election.

A spokesperson speaking on the condition of anonymity says the U.S has “strived to meet India’s defense requirements in recent years,” and noted that “defense trade has increased significantly over the past two decades.”

As of 2020 the United States has authorized more than $20 billion in defense sales to India,” the spokesperson says, adding that the country maintains the largest fleets of C-17 and P-8 aircraft outside of the United States.

At the summit this week, the four senior officials signed a much-anticipated Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement, a significant achievement that formalizes future military and intelligence cooperation between the two powers.

And Esper indicated in public remarks that the prospect of drone sales in the future, as well as other military equipment, remains a likelihood.

“Our defense trade and technology cooperation continues to grow, as reflected in India’s acquisition of Apache and Seahawk helicopters earlier this year,” the defense secretary said at a press conference with the other officials. “We look forward to advancing sales for other key defense platforms, including fighter aircraft and unmanned aerial systems.”

Trump has made arms sales a central component of his foreign policy and routinely boasts about how he perceives their benefit. Early in his administration, Trump sped up the approval process for arms sales abroad by reducing oversight, prompting widespread concern. In April 2019, Trump withdrew from an international weapons pact that had previously bolstered efforts to limit the spread of arms globally, saying it undermined American sovereignty.



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India’s first Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor in final stages of commissioning

SOURCE: Express News Service

Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research (IGCAR) director Dr Arun Kumar Bhaduri on Friday said India’s first Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) was in the final stages of commissioning.

He was responding to a query by The New Indian Express on the sidelines of a rare press conference organised following the inauguration of an incubation centre. “The PFBR is in the final stages of commissioning. I can only say this much,” he said.

On March 5, in response to a question in Parliament, the Union minister of state for atomic energy Jitendra Singh said the PFBR will be “commissioned and operationalised” in December 2021.

In an RTI reply to Chennai-based activist, Bharatiya Nabhikiya Vidyut Nigam Limited (BHAVINI), the organisation in charge of building and operating the PFBR, has attributed the delay in various stages of commissioning to multiple technical issues and challenges, primarily pertaining to the design and manufacture, as it is the first of its kind.

“The sequential commissioning comprises various stages. The application for the stage commensurate with the current status of the project has been submitted and permission granted by Atomic Energy Regulatory Board,” reads BHAVINI’s reply, a copy of which is available with The New Indian Express.

Meanwhile, the World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2020, which was released in September, has termed the PFBR as the most delayed project. It was supposed to be completed by 2010 but its startup date has been repeatedly pushed back.

In March 2020, the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Science and Technology, Environment, Forests and Climate Change outlined the “hope” that the Department of Atomic Energy  (DAE) will be in a position to commission the PFBR at Kalpakkam near Chennai by the end of 2021, a timeline that accords with Jitendra Singh’s statement in the Parliament.

The committee acknowledges the lengthy delay on this project, but advocates for completion, suggesting the PFBR will “transform” India’s nuclear energy program. That “transformation” might take longer than India’s nuclear establishment promised.

In the latest annual report published by BHAVINI, the chairman admits that within the organisation “a re-think is being done” about the capacity of the next fast breeder reactors and “based on the ongoing difficulties and experience generated during the entire ongoing commissioning phase of PFBR, it is being deliberated whether for the purpose of standardisation it may be prudent to retain them as 500 MWe units” in contrast to earlier proposals to build a design capable of generating 600 MWe.

The ongoing difficulties during the commissioning phase pertain to numerous problems involving various components of the PFBR, including electro-magnetic pumps, fueling machinery, and secondary sodium pumps. In addition to considering lowering the power level of future FBRs, the annual report also admits that “construction of these reactors is expected to commence, only after the power operation of PFBR, so as to ensure availability of adequate performance feedback /data from PFBR and correspondingly bringing about suitable incorporation of required design changes in the proposed FBRs.”

In contrast, the previous annual report had asserted that “construction of these reactors is expected to commence in 2021 by which time adequate performance feedback on full power operation from PFBR is expected to be available, for factoring in the proposed 600 MWe designs.”

The projected cost of the PFBR has also risen from the initially anticipated Rs 34.9  billion  (US $463  million) — first to Rs 56.7 billion  (US $752 million) and currently to Rs 68.4  billion (US $907 million).



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IAF Flies From Punjab To Successfully Launch DRDO’s BrahMos To Hit Target In Bay Of Bengal

SOURCE: ANI

In a significant accomplishment, an Indian Air Force (IAF) Sukhoi-30 fighter flew from Halwara airbase on Friday to successfully hit the DRDO-developed air launched BrahMos supersonic cruise missile to hit a ship in the Bay of Bengal.

According to sources, the aircraft had taken off from Halwara and reached the Bay of Bengal after mid-air refuelling. This is the second such successful test of the missile, said sources. The IAF Su-30 had taken off from the Halwara airbase in Punjab around 9 am and hit its target around 1.30 pm after mid-air refuelling, the sources said.

The total distance travelled by the fighter jet during the sortie was over 3,500 kilometres which required it to be refuelled multiple times by the Ilyushin-78 midair refuelling aircraft which had taken off from Agra.

This was the second such successful mission by the IAF in the recent past as in the earlier mission, it had taken off from Kalaikunda airbase in West Bengal and hit targets in the Arabian Sea near Lakshadweep and Minicoy Islands territory.

The IAF has a specialist squadron that flies in maritime role too in Thanjavur. The squadron is also known as the ‘dominator of the Indian Ocean Region’ due to the long reach of Sukhois deployed in it who are armed with BrahMos cruise missiles.



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Reforms to make armed forces atmanirbhar

SOURCE: The Tribune

Border clashes with Chinese troops and the rising tension along the northern borders have forced accelerated domestic and foreign purchase of weapons. Whenever there has been a border clash or a major terror attack, we have been resorting to emergency purchases and granting greater financial powers to service headquarters for the purchase of emergent items.

It clearly indicates that our defence industry and the regular system laid down for procurements in a certain time frame are not functioning properly, resulting in emergency purchases in times of crises. These drawbacks have been highlighted by many committees as also by the Parliamentary Committee on Defence, but apparently no lessons seem to have been learnt in the 21 years since the Kargil conflict.

Amid the ongoing border tension, the Defence Minister on September 28 unveiled the Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) 2020 in which an endeavour has been made to align it with the vision of Atmanirbhar Bharat and empower the domestic industry through the Make in India initiative. It has adequately included provisions to encourage FDI to establish manufacturing hubs, both for import substitution and exports, hence protecting the interests of our domestic industry.

Earlier, the Finance Minister had announced key structural reforms in the defence sector after the Prime Minister announced a special economic and comprehensive package of Rs 20 lakh crore to revive the economy and called for an Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan. As a part of this package, the FDI limit in defence manufacturing under the automatic route is to be raised from 49 per cent to 74 per cent. There will be a time-bound defence procurement process and faster decision-making will be ushered in by the setting up of a project management unit to support contract management, besides a realistic setting of the general staff qualitative requirements (GSQRs) of weapons/platforms and the overhauling of the trial and testing procedures.

As per Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), we are the second largest importer of weapons and equipment in the world, spending approximately $100 billion in defence contracts per year. To become self-reliant in defence production, the Make in India plan is to be promoted by notifying a list of weapons/platforms for a ban on import with year-wise timelines, the indigenisation of imported spares and a separate budget provisioning for domestic capital procurement. This will assist in the reduction of the defence import bill and improve autonomy, accountability and efficiency in ordnance supplies.

We have not been able to develop home-grown technologies. The DRDO, DPSUs and even the private defence sector have not invested adequately in R&D and foreign companies are generally not ready to transfer the latest technology without having adequate control in decision-making in the company.

The FDI limit in 2015 was raised to 49 per cent, but it still did not take off, restricting our indigenisation efforts. Raising the FDI to 74 per cent is likely to attract foreign companies. The imported technologies will act as a catalyst for future development of in-house technologies.

Foreign companies will require an ecosystem to procure some parts and spares from local manufacturers which will provide them the required opportunities. Local availability of spares will be useful in times of crises and also help in providing a better lifetime support to the equipment.

Another major development is the endeavour for the corporatisation of the Ordnance Factory Board (OFB), which formed a part of the Modi 2.0 government’s ‘167 transformative ideas’ to be implemented in 100 days, i.e. by October 2019. The proposal for corporatisation was floated in July/August 2019, but the trade unions called for an indefinite strike against the decision and the strike was called off only after certain assurances by the government. Corporatisation of the OFB is necessary to rouse it from slumber and transform it into a state-of-the-art facility that is more competitive and self-reliant. Hopefully, the recently formed high-powered committee should be able to overcome the resistance and ensure implementation.

The proposal to import certain weapon systems/equipment and indigenisation of imported spares to improve self-reliance will give a boost to the local defence industry. However, there is a need for extreme caution while drawing out the list, which should be in sync with our existing capability and not the futuristic envisaged capability because it can mislead us and completely block the import route to procure these items even in times of crises.

The proposal of a separate budget for domestic capital procurement is yet another step to boost the indigenous defence industry. This provision, coupled with keeping a check on reducing the defence import Bill, should encourage domestic manufacture by facilitating them to assess the exclusive government allocation. However, it needs to be seen whether it will be over and above the defence budget allotment or form a part of the allotted capital outlay, which at the moment is insufficient to even meet the committed liabilities for defence acquisitions.

The process of formulation of GSQRs has been further refined with greater emphasis on identifying verifiable parameters based on analysis of comparative equipment available in the world and domestic markets. Effort has been towards the simplification of trial procedures to conduct trials with an objective of nurturing competition based on the principles of transparency, fairness and equal opportunities to all and not as a process of elimination. The success of these measures will depend largely on the close involvement of uniformed personnel and their predominant role in these set-ups.

These reforms have the potential to achieve self-reliance and provide a much-needed fillip to the defence industry which has historically been plagued by policy paralysis. At present, officials dealing with these crucial issues in the Ministry of Defence are not professionals with experience, but are transients with little experience. Reservation in employing defence personnel in these pivotal roles has to be shed. Success will largely depend on ensuring greater involvement of users — the uniformed community — in key positions of execution. With rising tensions along the northern borders, there is an urgent need to push for these reforms pending for decades for better defence preparedness. 



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Japan picks Mitsubishi Heavy to develop own stealth fighter Japan picks

SOURCE: AP

Japan has picked Mitsubishi Heavy Industries as a main contractor to develop the country”s own next generation stealth fighter for launch in the 2030s, the defense minister said Friday.

The next generation fighters, currently known as F-X, are part of Japan”s upgrading of its aging fighter jet fleet as the country builds up its military capability to counter growing threats from China and North Korea. The next generation stealth jet will replace F-2s that Japan co-developed with the U.S. They are due to be retired around 2035. The Defense Ministry is seeking 58.7 billion yen ($556 million) in the 2021 budget for research into developing the aircraft.

“We will steadily push forward the development of our next generation fighter jets,” Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi told reporters in making the announcement.

Mitsubishi will decide on other participants in the project, including avionics, engine and other parts makers. Japan also is considering co-developing some parts with foreign contractors including those in the U.S. and Britain.

Japan”s Air Self-Defense Force has a fleet of about 290 fighter jets and is also replacing its F-4 fighters with dozens of F-35s to strengthen its missile deterrence out of concern over North Korea”s missiles and nuclear program.

Japan”s purchases of American weapons have helped reduce its trade surplus with the US while also responding to demands from President Donald Trump to do more to pay for its defense. But the purchases have raised concerns about weakening efforts to build up Japan”s fledgling defense industry. 



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Behind China’s threat to support insurgency in India

SOURCE: ASIA TIMES

China does not normally object when other countries trade with Taiwan as long as it is done on a private level. But when news reports began circulating about the possibility of an official Indian-Taiwan trade pact, China hit back via its mouthpiece media with unprecedented threats.

Long Xingchun, president of the Chengdu Institute of World Affairs, a think tank administered by China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, wrote in the Chinese Communist Party-run Global Times on October 22 that “once a country wants to develop official trade ties [with Taiwan], it is by no means a purely trade issue.”

He followed with a stern if not ominous warning: “If India supports Taiwan secessionist forces, China and India will come to hostility, especially if the India’s moves (sic) force China to support secessionist forces in India as a countermeasure. Each would attack the weakness of the other.”

China views Taiwan as a renegade province and those who advocate for the self-governing island’s independence as “secessionists.”

The “secessionist forces” China may be “forced” to support in India would likely be ethnic insurgents in its volatile northeast, armed groups that previously received massive support from Beijing and which still are known to maintain low-level contacts with Chinese security services.

So is China truly contemplating revitalizing those insurgent links and leveraging them to destabilize India? What is known is that Paresh Baruah and other leaders of the United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA) have for years resided in various towns near the Myanmar border in China’s western Yunnan province.

That is also the base for at least two ethnic resistance forces from Manipur, another restive state in northeastern India.

Those forces, in turn, are allied with the Khaplang-faction of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN-K), which draws most of its support from ethnic Nagas on the Myanmar side of the border, but also has a following inside Nagaland and Manipur in India.

For years, Naga, Assamese and Manipuri insurgents have been based in remote mountains of Myanmar’s northwestern Sagaing Region, from where they have launched raids into India and then retreated across the border beyond the Indian army’s reach.

Those cross-border raids were supposed to have ended when the Myanmar army, after decades of neglect and denial, finally yielded to Indian pressure in February 2019 and attacked and captured Taga, a sprawling camp in northern Sagaing where Nagas, Manipris and Assamese rebels had long been based.

But the rebels simply regrouped and launched more cross-border raids, one in Nagaland in May 2019 and another in Arunachal Pradesh in early October of this year. The insurgents are equipped mostly with arms that have been obtained by intermediaries from Chinese sources or the illicit arms market in Southeast Asia.

They are then transported through northern Myanmar to the camps along the Indian border. It would thus not be difficult for China to boost the number of arms it supplies through those already existing smuggling routes if it sought to support the “secessionist” forces vaguely mentioned in the Global Times op-ed.

The Nagas were the first ethnic minority in northeastern India to rise up against New Delhi, and they were also the first to receive Chinese support for their demand a separate homeland.

The Naga rebellion broke out in the mid-1950s and during the decade 1967-76, nearly 1,000 Naga rebels trekked through northern Myanmar to Yunnan, where they received military training and returned with Chinese-supplied automatic rifles, grenade launchers, mortars and pistols.

They were followed in the early 1970s by about 200 Mizo rebels who also were trained in Yunnan while a smaller group of Manipuri insurgents made it to Tibet, where they received military and political training.

The training and support stopped after the death of Mao Zedong in 1976 and the rise of Deng Xiaoping, who was more interested in promoting trade than exporting revolution. Nevertheless, in the late 1980s, ULFA rebels attempted to reach China but ended up staying with the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), a group battling the Myanmar military.

The KIA kicked them out after receiving promises of aid from India and the ULFA leaders retreated into China, where they stayed as “civilians” while their armed followers allied themselves with NSCN-K and were able to carry on their struggle from Taga and other bases in Sagaing.

The NSCN-K, which at one stage had a ceasefire agreement with India to enable it to take part in talks, was eventually banned by New Delhi in July 2018. An Indian government spokesman stated at the time that the NSCN-K had been “responsible for explosions, ambushes and bombings.”

However, the Indian government has since 1997 had a ceasefire agreement with another NSCN faction, labeled NSCN-IM after Isak Chishi Swu and Thuingaleng Muivah, Nagas from Nagaland and Manipur respectively. Isak passed away in New Delhi in 2016 at the age of 87 while the slightly younger Muivah is 86 and in frail health.

Until the late 1980s, there was one NSCN with Isak as the chairman, Khaplang as vice chairman and Muivah as general secretary. But the Myanmar Nagas, led by Khaplang, eventually tired of being treated as serfs by their Indian cousins and drove them out of northern Sagaing.

The NSCN-IM was without a base area, and began operating through various NGOs in Southeast Asia with its leaders posing as representatives of “indigenous peoples.” But in the end, they had no choice but to enter into talks with the Indian government and a truce was reached.

Those talks and the 23-year-long ceasefire were supposed to lead to a final settlement to be signed this year. But then, in an interview published on the Indian website The Wire on October 16, Muivah declared that Nagaland — or a greater entity which he calls Nagalim and includes Naga-inhabited areas of Nagaland, Manipur, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam and parts of northwestern Myanmar — should have its own flag and constitution.

Muivah went on to say that “Nagas will never be part of the Indian Union nor will they accept the Indian constitution.”

It’s not clear what kind of backing Muivah may have for his rather bold demands, which no Indian government could possibly agree to. NSCN-IM’s soldiers, equipped mostly with wooden replicas of rifles, are now confined to “ceasefire camps” in Nagaland where they conduct exercises, pray to God (most Nagas are Christian) and play ball games.

In case the ceasefire breaks down, the NSCN-IM remains flush with funds because of extensive — and widely unpopular — unofficial taxation of people and businesses in Nagaland and Manipur. But still it lacks cross-border sanctuaries and once Muivah is gone there is no successor with the same stature in Naga society.

On the other hand, the NSCN-IM is believed to have been behind an ambush on October 21 in Arunachal Pradesh, a state not covered by the ceasefire agreement. A soldier from the paramilitary Assam Rifles was killed in the attack, which was launched in Tirap, a district bordering Myanmar.

Whether that was an attempt by NSCN-IM to show that it still has real military muscle or was a decision taken by a local commander is impossible to say. But if China really intends to act on the tacit threat made to support “secessionist forces in India” it would make more sense to funnel arms to the NSCN-K, ULFA and the Manipuri groups than the NSCN-IM.

Only time will tell if China intends to act on its threat, which if so would open a sort of proxy front as the two sides face off over territory in the western Himalayas near Ladakh.

While the opinion expressed by a representative at a Chinese state-backed think tank is not official policy, Global Times would never be allowed to publish an op-ed that completely contradicts its official position.



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By April IAF to have 21 Rafale Fighter Jets

SOURCE: ONE INDIA NEWS

 Come April 2021, the Golden Arrows squadron will be complete with 18 Rafale fighter jets. The Indian Air Force (IAF) will get its second batch of three to four Rafale fighter jets in the first week of November. This will further bolster the Air Force amidst the tensions with China.

By April 2021, 16 omni role Rafale jets will be inducted into the Golden Arrows Squadron. On September 10, five French-made multirole Rafale fighter jets were inducted into the Indian Air Force in a glittering ceremony at the Ambala air force base.

Three more jets will arrive in January, while another three in March. Seven more would arrive in April and this would take the total number of fighters handed over to the Indian Air Force to 21. While the Golden Arrows Squadron would be complete with 18 fighters, the remaining three would be sent to the Hashimara airbase in north Bengal’s Alipurduar.

This would aid in counter the Chinese threat on the eastern front.

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh had said that the induction of the jets was crucial considering the atmosphere being created along the frontier and that it is a “big and stern” message to those eyeing India’s sovereignty.

“The induction of Rafale jets is a big and stern message for the entire world, especially to those eyeing our sovereignty. This kind of induction is very important for the kind of atmosphere that has been created on our borders,” Singh said.

“We understand very well that with changing times, we also have to prepare ourselves. I feel proud to say that our national security has been a big priority of Prime Minister Narendra Modi,” Singh said.



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