Monday 30 November 2020

WBZ News Update For November 27 - Yahoo News

WBZ News Update For November 27  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/36mnUiI
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Operation Santa Brings Holiday Cheer To Kids In Madison, N.J. - Yahoo News

Operation Santa Brings Holiday Cheer To Kids In Madison, N.J.  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/3fUZvDO
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Michael Jordan Donates $2M To Feeding America - Yahoo News

Michael Jordan Donates $2M To Feeding America  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/3lkT8Lb
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

WHO says it wants to see clinical data on Russia's Sputnik vaccine - Yahoo News

WHO says it wants to see clinical data on Russia's Sputnik vaccine  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/3lljsFf
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Turkey announces record coronavirus death toll for fifth consecutive day - Yahoo News

Turkey announces record coronavirus death toll for fifth consecutive day  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/3lxVtTr
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Facing COVID Challenges For Red Kettle Campaign, Salvation Army Introduces Kettle Pay - Yahoo News

Facing COVID Challenges For Red Kettle Campaign, Salvation Army Introduces Kettle Pay  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/3qhFUm8
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Man Takes New York Post Delivery Truck On Joy Ride - Yahoo News

Man Takes New York Post Delivery Truck On Joy Ride  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/36mzzOk
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Baylor professor on new coronavirus vaccine in development - Yahoo News

Baylor professor on new coronavirus vaccine in development  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/2Vn9Xea
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Lowell Man Arrested For Allegedly Dragging NH Troopers With His Car - Yahoo News

Lowell Man Arrested For Allegedly Dragging NH Troopers With His Car  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/39vEfU0
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

PAWS Dog Of The Week: Tostito - Yahoo News

PAWS Dog Of The Week: Tostito  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/3o7zXqb
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Wall Street rises, Nasdaq hits record high - Yahoo News

Wall Street rises, Nasdaq hits record high  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/36c1el9
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Rancho Bernardo Boy Becomes Author To See More Diversity In Books - Yahoo News

Rancho Bernardo Boy Becomes Author To See More Diversity In Books  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/33wlzQo
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Westchester To Hold Remembrance Ceremony For Coronavirus Victims - Yahoo News

Westchester To Hold Remembrance Ceremony For Coronavirus Victims  Yahoo News

from current affair of kashmir - Google ... https://ift.tt/39HDQyf
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/375rfAd

Jaish terrorists arrested in Jammu and Kashmir's Kupwara; grenade, cash seized - Defence News India - Defence Aviation Post

Jaish terrorists arrested in Jammu and Kashmir's Kupwara; grenade, cash seized - Defence News India  Defence Aviation Post

from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/3lubx8I
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

Pakistani Fighter Jets Spotted Near Kashmir -- Will India Deploy Its Rafales To Counter PAF F-16s? - EurAsian Times

Pakistani Fighter Jets Spotted Near Kashmir -- Will India Deploy Its Rafales To Counter PAF F-16s?  EurAsian Times

from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/39Hxsaf
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

Pakistani troops open fire across IB in Kathua - The Kashmir Images Newspaper

Pakistani troops open fire across IB in Kathua  The Kashmir Images Newspaper

from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/39uSFnq
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

A wake-up call - Daily Pioneer

A wake-up call  Daily Pioneer

from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/3miZEn2
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

Emerging Trends in Terrorism-related Activities in Kashmir Part 1 – Success of Anti-Terror Operations - Defence News India - Defence Aviation Post

Emerging Trends in Terrorism-related Activities in Kashmir Part 1 – Success of Anti-Terror Operations - Defence News India  Defence Aviation Post

from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/3liNqcU
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

Terrorists Desperately Trying To Disrupt DDC Polls In Jammu And Kashmir: Army Chief Naravane - Outlook India

Terrorists Desperately Trying To Disrupt DDC Polls In Jammu And Kashmir: Army Chief Naravane  Outlook India

from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/36gQTUS
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

Drone spotted at International Border in J&K's RS Pura; returns to Pakistan following BSF firing - India TV News

  1. Drone spotted at International Border in J&K's RS Pura; returns to Pakistan following BSF firing  India TV News
  2. Drone Spotted at International Border in J&K, Returns to Pakistan After Firing by BSF  India.com
  3. Drone spotted along India-Pakistan border in J-K’s Jammu; BSF troops open fire  The Tribune India
  4. Drone sighted in Jammu Kashmir's RS Pura Sector  Economic Times
  5. Drone spotted at International Border in J&K's RS Pura sector; flies back to Pakistan after BSF firing  India Today
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News


from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/37el1ji
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

2 Soldiers Killed Along LoC In J-K, Taking Toll To 5 In Two Days - Outlook India

2 Soldiers Killed Along LoC In J-K, Taking Toll To 5 In Two Days  Outlook India

from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/37gOQiY
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

BSF Result 2020 for GD Constable Out: Download CISF Constable Result @bsf.gov.in - Jagran Josh

BSF Result 2020 for GD Constable Out: Download CISF Constable Result @bsf.gov.in  Jagran Josh

from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/2Jr0lMO
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

BSF-Pak Rangers hold flag meeting - The Tribune India

BSF-Pak Rangers hold flag meeting  The Tribune India

from "BSF in jammu kashmir" - Google News https://ift.tt/2Vn0H9U
via IFTTThttps://ift.tt/2SnRDBp

SCO meet: India launches thinly veiled attack on Pakistan over terrorism

SOURCE: Hindustan Times

During a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation’s (SCO) council of heads of government, India on Monday launched a thinly veiled attack on Pakistan for using terrorism as an instrument of state policy and called for collective efforts to combat the menace.

Vice president M Venkaiah Naidu, who chaired the virtual meeting of the council, also indirectly criticised Pakistan for attempting to use SCO to raise bilateral matters and said this went against the grouping’s charter, which safeguards the sovereignty and territorial integrity of member states.

In his opening remarks, Naidu pointed to the importance of efforts to boost economic recovery amid the Covid-19 pandemic and took a tacit swipe at China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), saying trust alone determines sustainability of global trade and countries must demonstrate their compliance with rules of multilateral trade.

The council of heads of government is the second-highest body of SCO and is responsible for handling the grouping’s trade and economic agenda and approving its annual budget. This is the first time India is hosting a meeting of the body since it was admitted into the eight-member grouping in 2017.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Pakistani counterpart Imran Khan did not join the virtual meeting. Pakistan’s participation was at the lowest level – the country was represented by parliamentary secretary for foreign affairs Andleeb Abbas – and Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan were represented by their prime ministers.

Naidu said trade can flourish only in an environment of peace and security, and the most important challenge faced by countries in the region is terrorism, “particularly cross-border terrorism”. He described terrorism as “the enemy of humanity” that needs to be combated collectively.

“India condemns terrorism in all its manifestations. We remain concerned about threats emerging from ungoverned spaces and are particularly concerned about states that leverage terrorism as an instrument of state policy,” he said, without naming Pakistan.

“Such an approach is entirely against the spirit and ideas and the charter of the SCO. Elimination of this threat will help all of us realise our shared potential and create conditions for stable and secure economic growth and sustainable development.”

Naidu said SCO is key to cooperation based on universally recognised international norms, rule of law, openness and transparency and it is “unfortunate …that there have been attempts to deliberately bring bilateral issues into SCO and blatantly violate the well-established principles and norms of the SCO charter safeguarding the sovereignty and territorial integrity of SCO member states”.

Pakistan has repeatedly sought to raise bilateral matters such as the Kashmir issue at multilateral forums and India had walked out of a virtual meeting of national security advisers of SCO in September after the Pakistani representative projected a map that inaccurately depicted the borders of the two countries.

Naidu said the government’s Atmanirbhar Bharat (self-reliant India) initiative is aimed at building national economic strength, resilience and enhanced capacities so that the country can be a trusted partner. The initiative recognises the importance of reciprocity, transparency and fairness in trade and is central to collective efforts to overcome vulnerabilities exposed by the Covid-19 pandemic, he said.

“Partners must be trustworthy and transparent. It is trust that determines the sustainability of our global trade and nations must demonstrate their compliance with rules of multilateral trade to remain a part of this system,” he said.

Naidu also highlighted India’s role in producing more than 60% of vaccines used for global immunisation programmes and said, “This global vaccine production and delivery capacity will be used to help all the countries in fighting this crisis.”

He noted that the socio-political impact of Covid-19 had exposed the weaknesses of global institutions, including the WHO, which need to be revamped as part of a reformed multilateralism that reflects today’s realities and gives voice to all stakeholders.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/2VglCuW
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Nepal ties with India are warming up. China could complicate the situation

SOURCE: Hindustan Times

Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli’s government is keen to move forward on its relationship with India and could take a positive view on a travel air bubble with India and the Pancheshwar multi-modal project after foreign secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla’s two-day visit, people familiar with the matter said. Shringla had a 50-minute one-on-one conversation with PM Oli on November 26 that saw the two countries focusing on steps to normalise relations hit hard due to the Lipu Lekh boundary row.

“They are keen to move forward on the relationship and will send some positive signals in this regard. But they also want the boundary issue to be discussed,” a senior official said. As the first step to deepen bilateral cooperation, the two countries could set up the travel air bubble and revive negotiations over the Pancheshwar multi-modal project. Foreign minister Pradeep Kumar Gyawali is expected to be India in December for which the dates are being worked out.

Relations between the two neighbours had nosedived this year after Nepal opposed an 80 km-border road to Lipulekh region that is claimed by Nepal. Kathmandu responded by issuing a new map that showed Indian territories of Kalapani, Lipulekh and Limpiyadhura as part of Nepal.

For the last few months, the two countries have been taking quiet steps to restore the ties. India does not want to vacate the space in Nepal and allow China to create additional leverages in the Himalayan Republic.

But diplomats in New Delhi and Kathmandu suggest there is some concern that China, which does appear to wield influence over Nepal’s politics and economy, could hold back Kathmandu.

The continuing political flux in Nepal and the battle between the two co-chairs of Nepal Communist Party (NCP) – KP Sharma Oli and PK Dahal aka Prachanda – has added to the uncertainties around the ruling party, and created an opportunity for China to intervene.

President Xi Jinping’s Communist Party of China has been keen that the Nepal Communist Party formed in 2018 after the merger to Nepal’s two communist parties – Communist Party of Nepal (United Marxist Leninist) (CPN-UML) and Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre) – does not split. Chinese ambassador Hou Yanqi has been reported to have stepped in to bridge the divide between the two factions led by PM Oli and Prachanda in the past.

Diplomats say the timing of Chinese Defence Minister General Wei Fenghe on Sunday was indicative of Beijing’s focus on Kathmandu and reinforcement of its multiple messages to PM Oli’s government and the opposition. During his day-long visit, General Wei held meetings with PM Oli, President Bidya Devi Bhandari and Nepal Army Chief Purna Chandra Thapa before leaving for Pakistan in the evening.

PM Oli is believed to have suggested to ambassador Hou Yanqi at their meeting earlier this month that he is capable of handling challenges within his party without any assistance from other countries. But it is unclear if he can stand his ground.

Beijing wants the Nepalese Communist movement to remain united so that the country remains antagonistic towards India. The other option in play is to squeeze PM Oli, who wants a rapprochement with India, out of the party and the government.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/2VkeAWm
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Iranian embassy tries to draw India’s attention to killing of its top nuclear scientist

SOURCE: Hindustan Times

The Iranian embassy in New Delhi has called on the international community to condemn the “act of state terror” after its top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, was assassinated last Friday near Tehran. In a statement released on Monday, the embassy tried to draw the attention of the Indian government and people towards Fakhrizadeh’s “outstanding role in peaceful scientific projects in Iran” and accused Israel of conspiring to “incited chaos” in the region.

“Iranian people expect that the international community condemn state terrorism and build a consensus to counter tension and adventurism in the region,” the statement read.

The embassy praised the slain scientist for his contribution to the “national efforts in curbing the Covid-19 pandemic”. It further said that several top Iranian scientists and national heroes have been targeted over the past years, stressing that evidence “clearly indicates” foreign hands behind such attacks.

“The recent assassination of the senior Iranian nuclear scientist also bears the clear hallmark of cowardly acts committed by the terrorist regime of Israeli, which has already assassinated a large number of scientific elites in Iran and all over the region,” the embassy added.

Fakhrizadeh was long suspected by the West of masterminding secret nuclear programme for the country and in 2018, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had said, “Remember that name, Fakhrizadeh,” while warning about a secret atomic warehouse. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspected the alleged atomic warehouse site in February 2019 and found traces of uranium.

The United States, Russia, China, Germany, Britain and France entered a deal with Iran in 2015, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPoA). In 2018, US President Donald Trump announced Washington’s withdrawal from the deal and imposed unilateral sanctions on Tehran as a part of its “maximum pressure” campaign.

The Iranian embassy has also accused Israel of persuading Washington to leave the nuclear accord.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3od8MtR
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Indian Army wanted Royal Enfield Bullets — Nehru ensured they were ‘made in India’ first

SOURCE: THE PRINT

Royal Enfield had come to acquire a fair amount of fan- following in the immediate years after the Second World War. During the War, the Redditch-based company made and supplied the ‘Flying Flea’ to the British Army as a means of transport for its paratroopers. These 125cc, 2-stroke engine bikes that produced 2.5 hp power could be dropped by parachute in a tubular crate behind enemy lines. Nothing like this had been done before. These bikes were fast enough for army purposes, light-weight, and able to get through where heavier vehicles would not.

Some Royal Enfield bikes were also being imported to India by Madras Motors Ltd Its owner K.R. Sundaram Iyer (KRS) also imported a host of other British bikes. In search of greener pastures, KRS and his nephew K. Eswaran had moved to the then Madras from their ancestral village in Kallidaikurichi in Tamil Nadu just before the Second World War started.

‘One worked as a fitter in the cycle shop and another as an accounts clerk in a cycle shop they eventually acquired. Then they also took over English Cycle, which was another cycle shop, and English Cycle was also importing bicycles from UK and selling it,’ Kapil Viswanathan, the grandson of KRS, told me in an interview for this book.

Gradually, KRS and Eswaran went on to become importers of motorcycle brands such as Raleigh, Rudge, Humber, BSA, Hercules, and Enfield.

Also read: ‘Indian Icon’, a new book that traces the journey of the legendary Royal Enfield bikes

In 1952, Madras Motors received an order for 500 350cc Bullets from the Indian Army, a model the company had launched three years ago in the UK. The motorcycles arrived from Redditch in early 1953 and proved to be a great success, being both hardy and easy to maintain. The army officers who rode the motorcycle in flat, cultivable lands to patrol Indian borders felt it was better than the bikes they used.

After 1947, the Indian Army had been using Triumphs and BSAs to patrol the newly-created Indian borders.

However, these motorcycles were prone to many mechanical glitches and frequent wear and tear. To compound the problem, they were all imported.

The Indian Army was so impressed with the Bullets that it wanted to place an order for more bikes. However, the Indian government was of the opinion that the bikes be locally manufactured.

The Indian government under Jawaharlal Nehru was operating on a shoe-string budget and wanted motorcycles that could be acquired at a reasonable cost. They were specifically on the hunt for ones that could be manufactured locally, that could at a later stage be ‘Made in India’. Nehru’s government believed this would allow industrialisation to take root in the country.

The British manufacturer agreed to the terms and conditions of the Indian government and presented the 350cc, 4-stroke Royal Enfield Bullet.

The next task was to find a joint venture partner in a mostly barren motorcycle landscape. This would come from an unlikely region, one that was far from the mountains and the northern plains of India.

‘T.T. Krishnamachari was the commerce minister at the time and my grandfather and he … they knew each other rather well. By Independence, my granddad was fairly well established as a large cycle importer, seller, and re-seller,’ Viswanathan said.

In 1955, Enfield India Ltd was formed as a 51:49 joint venture in favour of Madras Motors and owned by KRS and Eswaran. The duo later split the business once it diversified into power transmission in the 1960sWhile KRS and his sons retained Enfield India, Eswaran and his family kept the power transmission business.

Enfield India had a solid start on the back of their first order from the Indian Army for the 350cc Bullet, whose rhythmic thump is part of folklore.

In 1956, a manufacturing plant was built in the Tiruvottiyur locality of North Madras and the production of motorcycles began in a phased manner. A total of 163 Bullets were built by the end of the year. The first completely ‘Made in India’ Enfield rolled out of the factory in 1962. India was now making and selling Royal Enfield Bullets.

KRS’s eldest son, S. Sankaran, and later, his younger one, S. Viswanathan, took charge of managing the company. KRS’s second son S.R. Subramanian headed Madras Motors, distributing the company’s products at the national level. In pre-liberalisation India’s protected market conditions, with limited competition, Enfield India slowly but steadily flourished.

When the Indian Army placed a big order for 500 Royal Enfield 350cc Bullets with Madras Motors in 1952, it could have broken a forty-three-year-old colonial record for selling the greatest number of single-brand motorcycles in India.

The record until then was held by Francis Benjamin Stewart, the famed photographer who had filmed the Delhi Durbar for Lord Curzon in 1903. Stewart ran a company based out of Pune called Messrs. F.B. Stewart and Son. Among other things, the company was also the distributor of Triumph Motorcycles in the country and they held the record for selling 136 Triumph motorcycles in the country in less than five years.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3olELsf
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

At SCO meet, Vice President Venkaiah Naidu tears into Pakistan over its support to terrorism

SOURCE: Times Now

Addressing a virtual meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) on Monday, Vice President Venkaiah Naidu hit out at the countries which continue to use terrorism as an instrument of state policy. Though the Vice President did not name Pakistan in his remarks during the 19th meeting of SCO Council of Heads of Government, the reference was amply clear.

Naidu said India condemns terrorism in all its manifestations and described terrorism as the “most important challenge” faced by the countries in the region.

Chairing the meeting, the Vice President stressed on the collective need to combat “scourge of terrorism”.

“The most important challenge faced by us is terrorism, particularly cross-border terrorism. India condemns terrorism in all its manifestations. We are particularly concerned about states that leverage terrorism as an instrument of their state policy,” the Vice President stated.

The VP slammed Pakistan, again while choosing to not name it, for raking up bilateral issues during past SCO meets.

“It’s unfortunate to note that there had been attempts to deliberately bring bilateral issues into SCO and blatantly violate well-established principles and norms of SCO charter. Such acts are counterproductive to the spirit of consensus that defined SCO,” he stated.

It is for the first time that India is chairing a summit-level meeting of the SCO since it gained full-membership of organisation.

“Relations between India and the SCO region have flourished uninterrupted for thousands of years. By 2025, India’s GDP is expected to reach 5 trillion. It will be the youngest nation with an average age of 29 years,” Naidu said in his address to the SCO meet.

The VP highlighted India’s fight against the coronavirus pandemic, especially the resilience shown in ensuring economic stability.

“India has bravely fought the global pandemic and has shown remarkable resilience in fighting the virus as well as ensuring economic stability. India has kept its COVID-19 death rate at the lowest level in the world. India’s efforts have found global recognition,” he noted.

“During the chairmanship of our tenure, we’ve proposed to create a special working group on start-ups and innovations. India has created robust dynamic environment for start-ups. India made an offer to annually host special working group for start-ups,” he said further.

The Vice President said that India will host an SCO Food Festival next year to commemorate the 20th anniversary of SCO.  

“I would like to extend an invitation all member states to participate in this event,” he stated.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/36mjzMA
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

DRDO shuts down 3 labs, sends staff to other centres

SOURCE: Tribune News Service

As part of its restructuring process, the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has, in an unprecedented step, shut down three of its laboratories and merged its mandate and staff with other establishments.

This is the first step towards minimising functional overlap between laboratories having a similar charter and rationalising expenditure, sources said. More laboratories are expected to be shut down or merged in the near future.

Two laboratories in Delhi, the Defence Terrain Research Laboratory (DTRL) and the Laser Science and Technology Center (LASTEC) and one in Hyderabad, Advanced Numerical Research and Analysis Group (ANURAG) are now no longer functional as independent entities.

DTRL was involved in the analysis of terrain characteristics and providing geo-spatial solutions and terrain intelligence for the armed forces. Its staff has now been merged with Snow and Avalanche Studies Establishment (SASE) based at Chandigarh that is working in avalanche forecasting, structural control in snowbound mountaineous areas, data collection in cryospheric regions and creation of snow cover information system. SASE has been renamed as Defence Geological Research Establishment.

 LASTEC was working in the fields of laser sources, laser countermeasures and laser spectroscopy and was involved in the development of high power laser sources and related technologies for directed energy applications as well as detectors, weapon locators and laser illuminators.

ANURAG’s mandate was advanced computing concepts and technologies including design and development of high performance computing systems using parallel processing techniques with indigenous architecture and application specific integrated circuit based products or critical applications.

The staff of LASTEC and ANURAG are being relocated to two other laboratories in Hyderabad, where several DRDO laboratories, especially those involved with the development of missiles, are already based.

The relocation of staff has also created some immediate functional issues like fixing of intra-laboratory seniority, allocation of tasks and responsibilities, availability of accommodation, disruption of family life and children’s education.

Set up 1958, DRDO is the research and development wing of the Ministry of Defence, responsible for the design of indigenous weapon systems and allied technology. It has 52 laboratories spread across the country that are categorized into seven technology clusters named Naval Systems and Materials, Aeronautical Systems, Armament and Combat Engineering Systems, Missiles and Strategic Systems, Electronics and Communication Systems, Life Sciences, and Micro Electronic Devices, Computational Systems and Cyber Systems, all manned with a strength of about 5,000 scientists and 25,000 scientific, technical and support staff.

While DRDO is said to be India’s largest and most diverse research organisation, it has often drawn flak for delayed projects and missing repeated deadlines with huge cost overruns. Parliament’s Standing Committee of Defence as well as the Comptroller and Auditor General of India have commented critically on its performance and the status fo some of its projects.

In August this year, Dr G Satheesh Reddy, Secretary Defence Research and Development and Chairman DRDO, had constituted a five-member committee under the chairmanship V Ramagopal Rao, Director, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, to review the existing structure of DRDO and the charter of duties of its laboratories, redefine the mandate of laboratories on the basis of current and futuristic defence requirements and minimise the overlap of technologies they are working on at a time when increasing stress was being laid on self-reliance and the import of a large number of weapon systems and military equipment has been banned.

There have been attempts in the past to restructure DRDO and streamline its functioning. The last was in 2008 by the P. Rama Rao Committee that had, among other recommendations, suggested that DRDO concentrate only on core technologies of strategic importance. It was on the advice of this committee that the aforementioned technology clusters were created.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/37p57CN
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

26/11: Extradition hearing for Tahawwur Rana to be held on February 12

SOURCE: PTI

A US court has set February 12 as the date of hearing for the extradition of Pakistani-origin Canadian businessman Tahawwur Rana, who has been declared a fugitive by India for his involvement in the 2008 Mumbai terror attack case.

Rana, 59, a childhood friend of David Coleman Headley, was re-arrested on June 10 in Los Angeles on an extradition request by India for his involvement in the 2008 Mumbai terror attack in which 166 people, including six Americans, were killed. 

Rana was earlier arrested in October 2009 by US police soon after Headley’s arrest at Chicago O’Hare airport.

US District Court Judge in Los Angeles Jacqueline Chelonian said in her order on November 13 that the Extradition Hearing, in this case, is scheduled for February 12, 2021, at 10:00 am. 

Rana has time till December 21 to file his opposition to the request for extradition. The United States Government will have another months’ time to file its reply.

In its motion on September 28, the US government supported Rana’s extradition to India where he has been charged with the offences of conspiracy to wage war, commit a terrorist act, the waging of war, the commission of murder, and a terrorist act.

Rana, in his defence, has argued that the US’ decision not to extradite his co-conspirator, David Headley, to India is inconsistent and bars his extradition.

However, the US government argued differently “because Headley fulfilled the required terms, the plea agreement established that Headley would not be extradited to India,” said US attorney Nicola T Hanna.

“Rana’s situation is different because he neither pleaded guilty nor cooperated with the United States. As a result, cannot avail himself of the benefits afforded to Headley through his negotiated plea. Such a position is neither inconsistent nor a bar to extradition,” he said.

Unlike Rana, Headley immediately accepted responsibility for his conduct and pleaded guilty to all of the charges in the Superseding Indictment, Hanna said. As per the plea agreement, the United States agreed that it would not extradite Headley to India “for the foregoing offences, including conduct within the scope of those offences for which he has been convicted in accordance with this plea so long as he fully discloses all material facts concerning his role with respect to these offenses and abides by all other aspects of this agreement.” Pakistan-born Rana completed Army Medical College there, and served in the Pakistani Army as a doctor for more than a decade, but eventually deserted. 

He is currently a Canadian citizen but was a resident of Chicago where he had a business. According to the court papers, he has also resided in and travelled to Canada, Pakistan, Germany and England and speaks seven languages.

According to the federal prosecutors, between 2006 and November 2008, Rana conspired with Headley, also known as ‘Daood Gilani”, and others in Pakistan to assist Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Harakat ul-Jihad-e-Islami, both US-designated terrorist organisations, to plan and carry out the Mumbai terrorist attacks.

Pakistani-American LeT terrorist Headley was involved in plotting the 2008 Mumbai terror attack. He was made an approver in the case, and is currently serving a 35-year prison term in the US for his role in the attack.

India seeks his arrest on a number of offences, including the conspiracy to commit murder, conspiracy to commit forgery for the purpose of cheating, and murder under relevant sections of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). 

The 2008 Mumbai attack was one of the most horrific terrorist attacks in India in which 166 people were killed and over 300 injured as 10 heavily-armed terrorists from Pakistan created mayhem in the country’s financial capital.

Pakistani national Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, the lone terrorist captured alive, was hanged to death on November 21, 2012. 



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3moaPen
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

JeM terrorist’s associate held in J-K’s Kupwara with grenade, Rs 3.5 lakh cash

SOURCE: ANI

An associate of Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) terrorist was arrested in Kupwara by Jammu and Kashmir Police on Monday. One hand-grenade and Rs 3.50 lakh were seized from his possession, police said.

Earlier this month on November 19, four JeM terrorists were killed in Nagrota in Jammu and Kashmir in an encounter by security forces. 11 AK-47s rifles, 3 pistols, 29 grenades, and other devices were seized from them.

Later, Prime Minister Narendra Modi lauded the security forces and said they have defeated a nefarious plot to target grassroots level democratic exercises in Jammu and Kashmir.

At present, elections for the District Development Councils are being held in Jammu and Kashmir for the first time. The polls being held in eight phases will conclude on December 19 and the counting of votes be held on December 22.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3o6wx72
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Sunday 29 November 2020

Tejas Mk2 will outrange Mirage-2000 reveals new information

SOURCE: IDRW NEWS NETWORK

Indian Air Force (IAF) has ensured that the upcoming Tejas Mk2 will not only be superior to the upgraded French Mirage-2000V but also outperform it in many fields and as per tender documents for the construction of the fuel system test rig (FSTR) reveal Internal fuel carrying capabilities of the Mk2 jets stands at 3388 kg that is 228 kg more than the Mirage-2000V which Internal fuel carrying capabilities of 3160 kg.

When it comes to contemporaries in the segment, Gripen-E Internal fuel carrying capabilities stands at 3400 kg that is quite similar to Tejas Mk2. 3388 kg of Internal fuel will translate into a 2500km+ Ferry Range and a combat radius of 1500km+ thanks to fuel-efficient American GE-F414 engines that both fighter jets will be using as a power source.

Tejas Mk2 will have a total internal + Drop tank fuel carrying capacity of 7148kg that will give it an impressive Ferry and combat range for the 17.5tonne aircraft that will be similar to Gripen-E even though Mk2 will have a Ground up take-off weight of 1 tons more then Gripen-E and has per Tejas Mk2 tender documents can manage up to 18.2 tons Ground-up take-off weight in rare emergencies.

Commencement of the First metal cutting process for construction of the Tejas Mk2 will begin by mid of 2021 and as per HAL, the first aircraft will be ready to roll out in the next 18 months that could be by end of 2022 for first flight trials in early 2023. The final Design freeze will happen by early 2021 and the final design configuration likely will be seen at the Aero India 2021 to be held in Bengaluru.

IAF has kept the upgraded French Mirage-2000V as a Benchmark for the designers and engineers of the Tejas Mk2 to supersede and put perform in each field. Tejas Mk2 will be replacing 50 Mirage-2000V and 80 Mig-29UPG in active service from the IAF fleet by 2040, while total aircraft entering production might cross 200 units to compensate for retired Mig-27 and Jaguar jet fleet too.

NOTE : Article cannot be reproduced without written permission of idrw.org in any form even for YouTube Videos to avoid Copyright strikes



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3mm6SXz
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Hitting where it hurts: With China in mind, India test fires multiple types of missiles

SOURCE: ENS

Since the month of July, India has succeeded in testing multiple missiles meant for variable strike platforms and from a different medium. Defence experts see it as a message to China which has moved its forces in standoff posture along the Ladakh borders since the month of May.

Among the wide array of missiles, Indian Army successfully launched its BrahMos supersonic cruise missile on 24 November hitting the target in the Bay of Bengal with pinpoint accuracy. BrahMos missile — a supersonic cruise missile with a speed of 2.8 mach is being jointly produced by India and Russia. It can be launched from submarines, ships, aircraft, or from land based platforms.

Lt Gen VK Chaturvedi (Retd), the Defence Analyst, says, “It is a message to the China that in case of any misadventure from its side Indian forces will be able to hit it in close ranges, standoff range and even deeper inside from land, water and air”. 

He added, “these tests also demonstrate our capability to produce complex offensive and defensive missile systems on our own. The country’s missile technology has acquired the capability of the reliable pin-pointed strike on enemy’s sensitive targets”.

The BrahMos missile batteries have been deployed along with the other key assets at several strategic locations along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) with China in Ladakh and Arunachal Pradesh. BrahMos missiles are also being integrated on over 40 Sukhoi fighter jets to add to the combat capability of the force.

The DRDO successfully test-fired the Brahmos with an extended range of 400 kilometers, as per the sources.  Clarifying the quick tests of missiles Brg SK Chatterji, Defence Analyst says, “It is a show of strength to the Chinese, we will hit where it hurt.”

“The Chinese have brought in their armoured vehicles and have been showing off their missiles. This Chinese action has hastened the tests which were due. We have tested anti-tank missiles and helicopter fired tank busting missiles also,” added Brg Chatterji who happens to be a gunner himself.

India in July successfully tested the Dhruvastra, a  helicopter version of ‘Nag Helina’, which is meant to destroy enemy bunkers, armoured vehicles, and main battle tanks. In October, the third generation Anti-Tank Guided Missile (AT GM) Nag completed successfully the final user trial.

In October anti-radiation missile named Rudram-1 was tested from a Sukhoi-30 MKI, which is planned to be inducted into service by 2022. The missile is meant to destroy enemy radars, communication sites and similar targets thus disabling adversaries from launching surface-to-air missiles. In doing so, it exposes the enemy to attacks via relatively inexpensive short-range weapons.

Raising the missile capability further, Hypersonic Technology Demonstrator Vehicle (HSTDV), DRDO fired the next generation hypersonic cruise missiles on 7 September. The HSTDV technology will be assisting the country to develop futuristic space assets like long-range missile systems and aerial platforms.

The HSTDV is capable of powering missiles to attain a speed of around Mach 6 or six times the speed of sound, the officials said, adding only a very few countries like the US, Russia and China have such a capability.

The tests in these few months have also been done to spruce up the nuclear warhead delivery capability at shorter ranges. Nuclear-capable Shaurya supersonic missiles and the supersonic missile assisted release of the torpedo that targets submarines apart from test-firing the laser-guided anti-tank guided missile were tested in quick succession, just 10 days apart.

In between, the DRDO also carried out a night trial of the nuclear-capable ballistic missile Prithvi-II, the surface-to-surface missile capable of attacking targets at a range of 300 km. It is India’s first indigenous surface-to-surface strategic missile.

The terrain-hugging subsonic Nirbhay missile has been tested and can be deployed along the Ladakh border in limited numbers.

“The Shaurya missile would be next,” an official said about the new-age weapon that can carry a nuclear warhead weighing around 200 kg and flies at 2.4 km per second.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3fMuJwW
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Siachen lessons give India an edge

SOURCE: Hindustan Times

The Indian Army’s decades-long experience in high-altitude warfare — particularly the lessons learnt in Siachen — bestow a tremendous advantage on Indian soldiers holding inhospitable and rugged heights in eastern Ladakh to prevent the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) from altering status quo in the sensitive theatre that has been at the centre of border tensions between India and China for nearly eight months, officials familiar with mountain warfare said on Saturday.

The Indian Army has an upper hand over PLA as the latter lacks combat experi ence in high-altitude warfare and has not permanently deployed troops to extreme heights the way India has to secure its farthest frontiers, said one of the officials cited above, asking not to be named.

With military and diplomatic talks to reduce tensions along the contested Line of Actual Control (LAC) deadlocked, India and China are prepared for a long haul in the eastern Ladakh theatre where rival troops are holding towering heights including deployments at an altitude of nearly 20,000 feet in the mountains near Pangong Tso.

The Indian Army has perfected its mountain warfare drills over decades and its soldiers possess the tenacity and resilience to overcome the toughest challenges that extreme altitudes pose, said a second official.

Apart from the tough physical and mental makeup of soldiers, the Indian Army’s demonstrated ability to support frontline military operations with superior logistics, advances in high-altitude medicine, critical understanding of acclimatisation in mountains and air support are factors that put the army in an advantageous position in eastern Ladakh, experts said.

“Conditions at Siachen are infinitely more challenging than eastern Ladakh. The lessons learned in terms of survival, health care, protection from cold injuries and avalanche rescue will be of tremendous help,” said former Northern Army commander Lieutenant General DS Hooda (retd).

The army and air force helicopter pilots are the lifeline of troops deployed at Siachen. “These pilots are very familiar with high-altitude operations and their role in supporting troops in eastern Ladakh will be a great plus for us,” Hooda added.

In eastern Ladakh, Indian soldiers are holding positions at heights of almost 20,000 feet in the Finger Area on the northern bank of Pangong Tso.

The IAF has decades of air maintenance experience in high-altitude areas — heights in excess of 15,000 feet — and standard operating procedures are in place to serve as templates for both helicopters and transport aircraft, said Air Vice Marshal Manmohan Bahadur (retd), additional director general, Centre for Air Power Studies, commenting on the IAF’s role in supporting forward deployed troops in the Ladakh sector. “Hill flying is tricky, and every helipad in the mountains has its own peculiarities. We have a bank of aircrew experienced in such operations. The aircrew is backed up by a dedicated band of technicians who slog continuously to keep helicopters and transport aircraft flying-fit,” Bahadur said.

India is determined to hold forward positions in Ladakh till the PLA withdraws and restores status quo ante of early April. With no solution to the border row in sight, the Indian Army has completed the setting up of modern habitat for thousands of soldiers deployed in forward areas to deal with any misadventure by the PLA.

Temperatures in some pockets where the Indian Army is holding posts can dip to minus-40 degrees Celsius.

At the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit on November 26 in the backdrop of the persisting stalemate at LAC, defence minister Rajnath Singh said that India would not allow the PLA to take any unilateral action at the contested border and the government had given full freedom to its armed forces to challenge, with all their might, any attempt to change the situation along the LAC in any manner.

The Chinese military is grappling with the difficulties of mobilising and deploying tens of thousands of troops during the harsh winter — something that it hasn’t done in the past, officials previously told HT.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/36jGCY2
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Debris of MiG-29K located in Arabian Sea during search operation, no sign of missing pilot: Indian Navy

SOURCE: TIMES NOW

Debris of MiG-29K has been located in the Arabian Sea during the search operation carried out by the Indian Navy. However, there is no sign of missing pilot Commander Nishant Singh and the search operation is on. “Some debris of the aircraft including landing gear, turbocharger, fuel tank engine and wing engine cowling were located,” the Indian Navy said in its statement.

In addition to nine warships and 14 aircraft engaged in search efforts, Indian Navy’s Fast Interceptor Craft are also deployed to search waters along the coast.

Fast Interceptor Craft are also deployed
Apart from that, the Marine and Coastal police are on the lookout and nearby fishing villages have been sensitized.

“Indian Navy’s search and rescue effort to locate the second pilot of the MiG-29K trainer aircraft which ditched off Goa on 26 Nov continues with extensive deployment of naval ships and aircraft,” the statement read.

Commander Nishant Singh has been missing since a MiG-29K fighter aircraft of the Indian Navy crashed into the Arabian Sea.

The Indian Navy has pressed more surface and air assets for the search of the missing pilot.

The MiG-29k went down at around 5 pm on Thursday
The Russian-origin jet had taken off from aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya and went down at around 5 PM on Thursday, ANI quoted officials as saying.

One pilot of the aircraft had been rescued while search operation is on for Commander Singh.

The Indian Navy had procured a fleet of 45 MiG-29Ks from Russia over a decade back at a cost of around USD 2 billion to operate from INS Vikramaditya.

An all-weather carrier-based multirole fighter aircraft, the MiG-29K has been developed by Russian aerospace company Mikoyan (MiG).



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3oa9EQi
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Pakistan’s lost asymmetric war in Kashmir against Doval’s defensive offence

SOURCE: WION

If ever an objective history of South Asia’s major strategic events is written, the year 2019 will be remembered as a watershed year. The chain of events that began with the Pulwama suicide bombing (February 2019) and that finally led to the abrogation of Article 370 (August 2019) significantly tipped the strategic balance in India’s favour. 

2014 onwards, India left the debris of ‘strategic restraint’ behind and redefined the conflict dynamics in terms of its new National Security Advisor (NSA) Mr Doval’s ‘doctrine of defensive offence.’ It was a significant doctrinal shift which found its first manifestation in Uri surgical strikes (2016). Fed on India’s decades of defensive force posture, Pakistan did not realise it until Balakot happened. 

Further, in its more sophisticated form, venturing beyond the strict military domains, the doctrine of ‘defensive offense’ found its finest expression in the abrogation of Article 370, leaving Pakistan and China, the expansionist and revisionist brotherhood of Asia, in a quandary; a state of fix, rendering them not only increasingly clueless about a future course of action but also extremely vulnerable to strategic and tactical blunders. 

If ever an objective history of South Asia’s major strategic events is written, the year 2019 will be remembered as a watershed year. The chain of events that began with the Pulwama suicide bombing (February 2019) and that finally led to the abrogation of Article 370 (August 2019) significantly tipped the strategic balance in India’s favour. 

2014 onwards, India left the debris of ‘strategic restraint’ behind and redefined the conflict dynamics in terms of its new National Security Advisor (NSA) Mr Doval’s ‘doctrine of defensive offence.’ It was a significant doctrinal shift which found its first manifestation in Uri surgical strikes (2016). Fed on India’s decades of defensive force posture, Pakistan did not realise it until Balakot happened. 

Further, in its more sophisticated form, venturing beyond the strict military domains, the doctrine of ‘defensive offense’ found its finest expression in the abrogation of Article 370, leaving Pakistan and China, the expansionist and revisionist brotherhood of Asia, in a quandary; a state of fix, rendering them not only increasingly clueless about a future course of action but also extremely vulnerable to strategic and tactical blunders. 

The 1980s brought the much-needed American support for Pakistan in arming and training Mujahideens against the Soviets and facilitated Pakistan with a firm foothold in Afghanistan. The American GIs were leaving Kabul in 1988 after the Soviet withdrawal. for Pakistan, the stage was ripe for diverting the Afghan Jihadis towards Kashmir. Massive petrodollar funding and a decade-long Afghan experience in running proxies came in handy to stir up an armed insurrection in Kashmir.

The ISI-sponsored bloody phase of jihadi terrorism that began in the 1990s continued unabated, costing thousands of innocent lives. Over the last three decades, Pakistan’s proxy war increased in intensity and ideological fervor. 

During the last three decades, the militancy in Kashmir, although it had its phases of ups and downs, was strategically planned and executed by masterminds located on the other side of the Indian border. India experimented with a range of counter-terrorism measures, bringing sporadic periods of relief. 

However, the broader trajectory was about Pakistan creating and strengthening a supporting constituency thriving in a fertile ecosystem of Islamism, separatism, and terrorism. Adversary’s success manifested itself in its complex yet robust capabilities to shake the Indian state during the unrest of 2016, post-Burhan Wani’s encounter death. The Kashmir valley was engulfed with massive civil unrest and agitation within a few days, with casualty figures of 42 in the first week itself.

Moreover, something entirely financed and orchestrated by Pakistan’s deep-state was projected by Pakistan as gross human rights violations by an occupied force in Kashmir. Burhan Wani, a self-proclaimed supporter of the Islamic Caliphate in Kashmir and Hizbul Mujahideen commander, was portrayed as a young and innocent hero dying for a cause in front of Kashmiris and the world community. Pakistan had not only created a highly radicalized social milieu that made Jihadism a dominant narrative but also excelled in the war of narratives, convincingly selling its lies for years to an array of civil rights activists, governments, and scholars in the west. 

However, in one masterstroke of August 2019, India gave a crushing blow to Pakistan’s three decades of investment in Kashmir. It was something that Pakistan’s intelligence machinery did not anticipate. As a result, they were handicapped from achieving their ‘Destabilizing Kashmir project’ in the absence of Article 370, which acted as a catalyst till then. Article 370 was an edifice, an overarching umbrella under which Pakistan’s proxy jihadists, assets in the media, academic, religious, cultural bodies, mainstream politics, academia, and the administration thrived and flourished. 

Though India displayed some clarity about its understanding of how detrimental Article 370 was to safeguarding its key interests in Kashmir, when it denuded the article of much of its teeth in the 60s, over time, Delhi lost the clarity and became increasingly myopic in its understanding. A narrow vision led the focus on eroding Sheikh Abdullah’s base and install a pliable government through democratic means, even if that involved pampering radical Islamists and separatists. 

In parallel, Pakistan’s propaganda machinery and its assets in the mainstream politics of Kashmir had skillfully crafted the narrative of Article 370, being the bedrock of Kashmir’s identity. Its proxies instilled the popular consciousness with the imaginary fears of central government populating the state with outsiders in the absence of 370. 

On the Indian side, successive political dispensations increasingly became entrapped in the narrative mentioned above sold by Pakistan’s proxies. As a result, Delhi could never give serious thought on India’s strategic interests in Kashmir. For decades, Article 370 was an untouchable default status that was supposed to be guarded till eternity. 

Today, a year after its abrogation, Pakistan has lost the patronizing, protective, and enabling superstructure. The Pakistani proxies in Kashmir face the most significant existential crisis. The ecosystem of Islamist radicalization, separatism, and terrorism carefully created with lies, deceit and violence appears to be collapsing like dominos.

Interestingly, the façade of Article 370 under which Pakistan’s proxy movement thrived was in itself fragile. Article 370 was a temporary and transient feature of the Indian Constitution, which could be amended or abrogated within the Indian parliamentary framework. 

The autonomy guaranteed to Kashmir under the provisions of the article helped Pakistan in propagating its agenda to sell the fabricated story of Kashmir being a disputed territory. 

Further, the militancy and separatist movement, which flourished under the patronage of Article 370, strengthened Pakistan’s version of Kashmir as a disputed territory in the eyes of the world community and the local Kashmiris. 

However, after its demise, the smokescreens have vanished, and not only the strategic experts but also the ordinary voices of Kashmir have openly started questioning, discussing, and condemning Pakistan’s illegal and violent annexation of a part of Kashmir in 1947, the genesis of the Kashmir conflict. 

Contrary to the annual condemnation of October 26, 1947, the day when Indian armies entered Kashmir, as a ‘black day,’ this year, to everyone’s surprise, public squares of Srinagar were spattered with hoardings condemning October 22 as a ‘black day’, the day when Pakistan’s Kabailis attacked Kashmir 

The post-370 Kashmir has witnessed an intense crackdown on Pakistan-supported radical Islamist organizations like Jamaat-i-Islami and separatist organizations. National Investigation Agency’s (NIA) onslaught on terror financing has cracked the financial backbone of terrorism. 

The security forces have neutralized the entire terrorist leadership of the local and foreign terrorist orgaizations. The recruitment of new terrorist cadres has drastically come down. Infiltration has become nearly impossible. The mainstream politicians and separatists like the Hurriyat stand exposed as entities who sustained the widespread resentment against India by indulging in massive corruption and mal-governance on the one hand and squarely putting the blame on Delhi’s step-motherly treatment. 

NIA’s action against many of them in terror-related cases further confirms their dubious loyalties in the popular perception.

In Kashmir, a new political leadership with a nationalist outlook is emerging at the grassroots. Pakistan’s desperate attempts to orchestrate terror attacks, civil unrest, and rally the diplomatic community against India on global platforms, have failed miserably. Organisation of Islamic Co-operation (OIC) has disappointed Pakistan and refused to bandwagon with it on several occasions. 

There are no buyers in the Western World for Pakistan’s foul cries over the abrogation of Article 370. The United States and most European states convincingly approved India’s Kashmir move as a dire necessity to prevent Jihadist terrorism from taking deeper roots in Kashmir on the pattern of Syria and Iraq.  

Except for the backing of Turkey and China, Pakistan stands isolated. Further, the residents of Gilgit-Baltistan have become fiercely vocal against Pakistan’s demographic engineering and in its decision to declare the region as its sixth province, in an abject surrender to China’s dictators. 

Local resistance against the forcible occupation of Gigit-Baltistan and flooding the area with Sunni extremists has not only intensified, but it has also become a subject-matter of serious discussion in the western capitals. In Pakistan Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK), similar fears have given rise to a strong resistance movement. 

On the issue of cross-border terrorism, Pakistan knows it well that post-2014, India’s approach has changed.  Now Delhi responds with surgical strikes and air raids, and one more Pulwama will most certainly be reciprocated with something way bigger than Balakot, which Pakistan cannot afford. 

Further, the post-370 Kashmir has also started seriously questioning China’s illegal possession over Aksai Chin. Recent India-China stand-off and Pakistan’s continuous ceasefire violations have cleared the vestiges of any doubts lasting about the China-Pak duo’s collusion and expansionist threat in the near future. 

Internally, India’s Kashmir move has led to a massive embarrassment for Imran Khan’s government and the Pak army. The Opposition has alleged Imran Khan’s government of surrendering to India. Today, in the form of Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), Pak army and the ‘selected’ PM Imran Khan’s government face a compelling popular protest movement. 

The situation has turned alarming for Pak army because, in addition to the mainstream political parties, it also includes ethical nationalist entities such as Pashtun Tahafuz Movement and Baluchistan National Party, hitherto seen as antithetical to the very idea of Pakistan. 

Further, PDM is demanding minimising the role of Pakistani army and intelligence agencies from the political and developmental matters, a direct challenge to the mighty army. Bajwa and Imran, both, are at the lowest ebb of their credibility. 

For decades, the Pakistan army used Kashmir to grab a disproportionate share in the national budget and cultivate hyper-nationalism and Islamism. Under the latter as a cover, GHQ Rawalpindi crushed all the religious, cultural, and linguistic minorities. 

The ghosts of those massacres in Baluchistan, Pashtun lands, and Sindh are returning to haunt Pakistan.  It is a reminder for Pakistan that internal turmoil is rooted in its birth and the fundamental philosophy of its existence, and a redux of 1971, is possible. 

Nevertheless, Pakistan’s generals refused to learn from the past and continue to publish substandard conspiracy theories blaming India for its internal problems. It appears as though Rawalpindi’s is pushed back to the pavilion since the abrogation of Article 370, and Pakistan’s grand new strategy is concocting lies of India aiding terrorism on Pakistani soil from Afghanistan. 

Some Pakistani generals blame India’s intelligence brass for reversing the ‘paradigm of terror’ by inciting Pashtuns, Baluchis, and Sindhis. However, the fact is that the ‘paradigm of terror’ created by ISI masterminds has boomeranged and backfired, something which was bound to happen. 

Despite the turn of events, a frustrated Pakistan openly advocates the revival and strengthening of a terrorist base against India. By doing so, they stand exposed as sponsors of terror in the region.


Why everyone missed the elephant in the room?

Today, one feels astounded why even the astute strategic analysts could not foresee the aftershocks of abrogating Article 370

The answer lies in the fact that the overwhelming political posturing surrounding BJP’s long-held objective of repealing Article 370 more or less precluded an objective and scholarly analysis of its long-term strategic implications in South Asia and beyond. 

India’s intelligence czars, diplomats, and mighty bureaucrats of North Block saw it as a political prop, an unrealistic and unattainable dream, finding its best utility in garnering votes during elections. Such a notion was firmly entrenched in their minds when the last Vajpayee-led BJP government refrained from tampering with article 370. 

Among India’s civil society, security experts, IR scholars, and public intellectuals making even a reference to abrogating Article 370 was shunned and led to condemnation and banishment as a right-wing fascist. For Pakistan, it came handy to believe that Indians would never think of this far-fetched dream given their three-decade-long vulnerabilities to the complex web of false and fictitious narratives projected by their deep-state and doing so quite successfully with the western capitals, activists, scribes, and scholars. 

As a result, serious scholarly analyses of scraping Article 370, more or less, remained a taboo in the academic and strategic world.  At best, it remained a fanciful dream of Hindu-nationalist groups, and at worst a strategic blunder something which the majority of India’s diplomats, spies, scribes scholars, and bureaucrats, trained in the socialist left-overs of cold-war era traditions, would abhor as totally uncharacteristic of India’s idealistic approach in strategic affairs.  

Such a trend continues even after more than a year has passed since the abrogation of Article 370. In India’s strategic and political community, one still comes across a tendency to condemn the move as an ill-thought action resulting from the lack of strategic vision, which will only add to India’s security challenges. 

Maybe dubious loyalties, ulterior motives, vested political interests, individual biases, ideological barriers, and nonetheless inadequate analytical skills can provide a better explanation for this aversion to engaging in an objective analysis of the strategic implications of Delhi’s Kashmir move and give the due credit to those who planned and implemented such a master strategic and diplomatic stroke. 

It can be stated with an absolute certainty that post-2014, New Delhi has changed, and the change is firm, decisive and irreversible.  Nevertheless, the doctrinal shift in India’s strategic approach is still evolving in its myriad aspects hence; maybe it is too early to define its long-term strategic implications. 

However, it is certain that under no circumstances Pak establishment can indulge in Pulwama or Mumbai like adventures anymore. Whether one more Mumbai or Pulwama will cost Pakistan Baluchistan or not, is yet a matter of conjecture and grapewine in the intelligence world. Nevertheless, it is giving sleepless nights to Pakistani generals.

To conclude, Pakistan’s Kashmir Project has lost its steam. In the global arena, it will not be long before General Bajwa’s Pakistan is blacklisted. In the future, maybe the situation could turn worse, with Pakistan facing a threat from internal unrest and revolts. 



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3fQghnW
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

India Irked as China Plans to Build Major Dam on Brahmaputra River, But Beijing Downplays Anxiety

SOURCE: PTI

China will build a major hydropower project on Brahmaputra river in Tibet and a proposal for this has been clearly put forward in the 14th Five-Year Plan to be implemented from next year, the official media on Sunday quoted the head of a Chinese company tasked to build the dam as saying. Yan Zhiyong, chairman of the Power Construction Corp of China, said China will “implement hydropower exploitation in the downstream of the Yarlung Zangbo River (the Tibetan name for Brahmaputra) and the project could serve to maintain water resources and domestic security, the Global Times reported.

Speaking at a conference on Thursday, Yan said the project was clearly put forward in the proposals for formulating the country’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) and its long-term goals through 2035 made by the Central Committee of the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC), it quoted an article on the WeChat account of the Central Committee of the Communist Youth League of China on Sunday. “There is no parallel in history, it will be a historic opportunity for the Chinese hydropower industry,” Yan told the conference organised to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the founding of the China Society for Hydropower Engineering.

The 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025) and National Economic and Social Development and the Long-Range Objectives Through the Year 2035 were adopted by Plenum – a key policy body of the CPC – last month. Details of the plan were expected to be released after the formal ratification by National People’s Congress (NPC) early next year.

Proposals for dams on the Brahmaputra have evoked concerns in India and Bangladesh, the riparian states, and China has downplayed such anxieties saying it would keep their interests in mind. As a lower riparian State with considerable established user rights to the waters of the trans-border rivers, the Indian government has consistently conveyed its views and concerns to the Chinese authorities and has urged them to ensure that the interests of downstream States are not harmed by any activities in upstream areas.

China has already operationalised the USD 1.5 billion Zam Hydropower Station, the largest in Tibet in 2015. About the new dam, the Global Times report said that speculation about China planning to build a “super hydropower station” in Medog county, where the Yarlung Zangbo Grand Canyon is located, have circulated for years. Medog is the last county in Tibet which borders Arunachal Pradesh.

In his address, Yan said that the hydropower exploitation of the Yarlung Zangbo River downstream is more than a hydropower project. It is also meaningful for the environment, national security, living standards, energy and international cooperation. According to the report, the mainstream of the Yarlung Zangbo River has the richest water resources in Tibet Autonomous Region, about 80 million kilowatt hours (kWh), while the 50-kilometer section of the Yarlung Zangbo Grand Canyon has 70 million kWh that could be developed with a 2,000-meter drop, which equals more than three Three Gorges power stations in Hubei province.

Tibet has about 200 million kWh of water resources, accounting for 30 per cent of the total in China. The 60 million kWh hydropower exploitation at the downstream of the Yarlung Zangbo River could provide 300 billion kWh of clean, renewable and zero-carbon electricity annually. The project will play a significant role in realising China’s goal of reaching a carbon emissions peak before 2030 and carbon neutrality in 2060, he said.

“It is a project for national security, including water resources and domestic security,” he said, noting that the project will also smooth cooperation with South Asia. The hydropower station could generate income of 20 billion yuan (USD three billion) annually for the Tibet Autonomous Region, he said. India and China established Expert Level Mechanism (ELM) in 2006 to discuss various issues related to trans-border rivers.

Under existing bilateral Memorandums of Understanding, China provides hydrological information of Brahmaputra River and Sutlej River to India during the flood seasons. Under the arrangement, China provides flood season data of the Brahmaputra river between May 15 and October 15 every year.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/37kt6Tp
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

India Slams OIC for Making Unwarranted References to J&K; Advises to Refrain from Repeating It

SOURCE: PTI

India on Sunday strongly hit out at the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) for making factually incorrect and unwarranted references to Jammu and Kashmir in resolutions adopted by the grouping at a meeting in Niger, and asserted that the union territory is an integral and inalienable part of the country.

In a strongly-worded statement, India advised the OIC to refrain from making such references in future and said it is regrettable that the grouping continues to allow itself to be used by a certain country “which has an abominable record on religious tolerance, radicalism and persecution of minorities”, a clear reference to Pakistan. The 47th session of the Council of Foreign Ministers (CFM) of the OIC in its meeting on November 27-29 at Niamey in Niger had made a reference to India over its policies on Jammu and Kashmir.

“We strongly and categorically reject the factually incorrect, gratuitous and unwarranted references to India in resolutions adopted by the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) at the 47th CFM Session in Niamey,” the MEA said. “We have always maintained that OIC has no locus standi in matters strictly internal to India including that of Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir which is an integral and inalienable part of India,” it said.

The OIC is a grouping of Muslim majority nations. “It is regrettable that OIC continues to allow itself to be used by a certain country, which has an abominable record on religious tolerance, radicalism and persecution of minorities, to indulge in anti-India propaganda,” the MEA said. It said India strongly advises the OIC to refrain from making such references in future.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3fLldKG
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Why Kashmiris, Palestinians are left pondering what realism, better governance could’ve brought

SOURCE: THE PRINT

In the Kashmir valley, as with Palestine, it would be doubly cruel to blame the victims of history and circumstance for what has befallen them. The people in these now (but not always) benighted places have endured alienation, the abuse of civil liberties, constant humiliation, and even torture, and the loss of their homes and even lives.

In Kashmir, this encompasses both Muslims and Hindus, though the majority is of course Muslim. In both parts of the world, history now seems to be marching on, leaving the losers to ponder over what might have been.

The world is increasingly coming to terms with a Zionist Israel that has stood stubborn in the face of global opinion and refused to encompass what many had hoped for, a two-state solution. As one Arab country after another starts to deal more openly with Israel, Palestinians are left to their devices in over-crowded Gaza and grotesquely carved-up areas of the West Bank.

It is no different in Kashmir. A great many in the valley (whose population constituted the majority in the once-united but religiously and culturally diverse state of Jammu and Kashmir) dreamt of an “azaadi” (freedom) whose definition changed from one phase to the next, and from one person to the next. Some thought of complete political independence along with a merger with Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, others of outright merger with Pakistan, and yet others of an irredentist reversion to radical autonomy, with the state having its own flag, currency, and prime minister.

All of these demonstrated a lack of realism that has also been the feature of Palestinian politics and aspiration over the decades. The people in both places have lived in a state of denial, refusing to accept the bald fact that resorting to violence against an infinitely superior force is suicidal. It is, of course, true that people driven to desperation will turn to violence, no matter how futile. But it is no less true that they have suffered in the bargain from the excesses of quasi-police states, and also that both have ended up with less than what they might have got away with once upon a time if their aspirations had been tinged with greater realism.

This could be said of Indian diplomacy too, in the context of the border dispute with China. The deal that was on offer up to 1960, and which was possibly re-offered in the early 1980s (swapping Arunachal Pradesh for Aksai Chin), is off the table. Beijing has gained in power and military traction, and now wants to eat further into territory that India has held in Ladakh, while laying claim also to at least the Tawang corner of Arunachal Pradesh. The thing about power, after all, is that it feeds the appetite for more.

And so has it been with Israel and Palestine. The deal that was on offer 70 years ago would have given the Palestinians a much bigger homeland than what they are now left with. Israel has since established more and yet more illegal settlements in territory that it has occupied. India, in turn, has bitten the bullet and scrapped two crucial Articles of the Constitution through which the people of the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir had special rights. Local politicians now ask for a restoration of the status quo ante, which they won’t get. Separatist militants hope to keep the fight going for “azaadi”, but they are tools in a hostile country’s hands and have made little headway for 30 years.

There is another lesson to be learnt, or question that waits for an answer. The Palestine authority’s governance norms always compared poorly with Israel’s. Jammu and Kashmir’s governments have long been a byword for sloth, incompetence, and corruption, though its people are on average much better off than in the rest of India, in part because of generous central transfers. As for India, it has been unable to match China’s super-impressive record. How much of the loss of relative power, in some cases of legitimacy, and of autonomous volition, flows from such internal failures? Do the people in these places have it in them to face the question?



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3fNG1RG
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Criticism of military in Pakistan’s Opposition rallies is unprecedented

SOURCE: ENS

For a country as famously unpredictable as Pakistan, the regularity of its dispiriting pattern of politics can be hard to explain. Periodic waves of popular protest, each riding on the back of ever-higher expectations of democratic change, soon recede to expose an entrenched pattern of power, which has remained broadly constant for more than seven decades.

There is little to suggest that the latest round of opposition protests against Prime Minister Imran Khan will be any different.

The familiar ring is hard to miss. Midway through its term of office, an elected government faces demands to step down from disaffected parties, who accuse it of corruption or electoral malpractice. The memory of Khan’s container driven politics, which led to the ousting of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif in 2017, is still fresh.

This time a loose alliance under the banner of the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), led by the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and the Jamiat-ul Ulama i- Islam-Fazlur Rahman (JUI-F), is again seeking the resignation of the government before the end of its term in 2023.

Opposition parties have accused Khan of complicity in rigging the 2018 elections to favour his “selection” as prime minister — accusations that have been amplified by claims of widespread irregularities in recent polls held in Gilgit-Baltistan, where Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) party is set to form the government.

As in the past, the current protests have met with the familiar drumbeat of a military-security establishment, which has warned opposition leaders against acting as agents of “foreign interests” looking to exploit chinks in Pakistan’s armour. And as before, these insinuations of treason have been rejected by opposition parties insisting on their right to protest against an illegitimate government and a prime minister they describe as a “puppet”.

Other tried and tested methods from the past are also in play. A crackdown on dissent, the harassment of opposition activists, the orchestration of divisions in opposition ranks, and the use of religious parties to diffuse attention or fuel the fire, are all in evidence.

In October, the body responsible for issuing media licences (the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority or Pemra), barred television channels from broadcasting the speeches of “proclaimed offenders”. The Opposition dismissed it as a ploy to stifle publicity for Sharif, who is currently in London for medical treatment, and vowed to defy the ban.

In one of the most egregious cases of harassment, security officials also forced Karachi’s police chief to sign an arrest warrant for Sharif’s son-in-law, Safdar Awan, who was seized in his hotel room at night after attending an opposition rally in the city in October. The arrest triggered outrage prompting the army chief, General Javed Bajwa, to order an inquiry. However, details of the action taken against the offending officials remain firmly under wraps.

Since then reports have emerged of defections in opposition parties orchestrated by the security forces. In Balochistan, where the pro-military Balochistan Awami Party (BAP) heads the government, two senior PML-N leaders are said to have broken ranks with Sharif over his “narrative” against the army, which they claim is a call to “mutiny”.

Well-worn tactics to use religious parties close to the military-security establishment have also resurfaced. The radical Barelvi group, the Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), which shot to political stardom in 2017 after working with the security establishment to oust former prime minister Sharif, has made a fresh appearance.

In a series of rallies in early November, which served to distract attention from opposition demands, the TLP blocked main routes to the capital, Islamabad, and called for Pakistan to sever relations with France over alleged Islamophobia.

Notwithstanding these familiar patterns, the latest opposition protests do break some new ground. The most significant departure from previous movements has been to call out senior members of the military hierarchy for exceeding their constitutional remit and interfering in politics.

The tone was set by Sharif who, in a dramatic video address from London to a mass rally in Gujranwala which kicked off the movement on October 17, named General Bajwa and the current head of the ISI, General Faiz Hameed, as conspiring to oust him from office. The unprecedented intervention has left the military scrambling to salvage its reputation as a neutral arbiter above party politics.

But Sharif’s decision to take the bull by its horns has also opened up cracks in the opposition, which could spell a loss of momentum. The first indications appeared on November 6 when, in the course of an interview with the BBC, the co-chairman of the PPP, Bilawal Bhutto, confessed that he had been “shocked” by Sharif’s decision to single out individual members of the military establishment as culprits for bringing Imran Khan to power. “We don’t talk like this in rallies,” he declared. Sharif’s daughter, Maryam, de facto head of the PML-N, was quick to respond saying Bilawal had offered his personal opinion.

These differences reflect each party’s differing stakes in the existing dispensation. While the PPP retains control of the provincial government in Sindh, the PML-N is still confined to political wilderness. This may explain Maryam Sharif’s recent offer of talks with the military in which she set as a condition for Khan’s dismissal but refrained from demanding the resignation of either Bajwa or Faiz Hameed.

But the military’s options also seem to be constrained at the moment. While it may be inclined to negotiate with opposition parties, Khan’s unwillingness to do so has proved awkward and, arguably, something of an irritant. Yet the military is clearly not ready to impose its will or to alienate Khan for fear he may also “go rogue” like its erstwhile protégé, Sharif.

Khan, however, is far from invulnerable. Nourished by the military and increasingly exposed as inept at governance, his political fortunes can be expected to last only as long as it takes to cobble together a more dependable “King’s Party”.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/36lxXo6
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Sailing on the big blue

SOURCE: THE HINDU

Who I am: I am the Indian Navy, the naval branch of the Indian Armed Forces.

My Supreme Commander: The President of India.

My beginnings: My story began in 1612 when Captain Thomas Best of the English East India Company (EEIC) was defeated by the Portuguese, in the Battle of Swally. The EEIC decided it needed a naval force to protect its interest. It built a port in Surat, Gujarat.

Change of name: Till 1830, I was known as the colonial navy. Later, I was named His Majesty’s Navy. In 1934, my name was changed to the Royal Indian Navy. When India became a Republic in 1950, I was once again renamed. This time, as the Indian Navy.

My job: To safeguard the nation’s maritime borders.

My strength: As of 2019, I have 67,252 active and 55,000 reserve personnel in service. I have a fleet of 300 ships and boats and 300 aircraft.

My specialities: All my in-service ships and naval bases have a prefix INS, which stands for Indian Naval Ship or Indian Naval Station. My sail boats are prefixed with INSV — Indian Naval Sailing Vessel.

My pride: INS Vikramaditya. It means ‘brave as the Sun’. It is a modified Kiev-class aircraft carrier and is my flagship. It entered my service in 2013.

My secret weapons: As of October, this year, my sub-surface fleet includes one nuclear-powered attack submarine, two ballistic submarines and 15 conventionally-powered attack submarines.

My adventures: My ships go on many expeditions. For example, on January 23, 2003, INS Tarangini began circumnavigating the world to foster good relations with various other nations. She came back to India May 2004, after having visited 36 ports in 18 nations.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/3fPLnvM
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

Japan to help India with 5G to counter China’s growing influence

SOURCE: Nikkei Inc

Japan and India will tie up in the field of information and communications to counter China’s growing influence on telecommunications and digital infrastructure, Japanese government officials said. The two governments will support the introduction of 5G wireless networks, submarine fiber-optic cables and other technologies to India from Japanese companies, the officials said. In addition, Japan will receive cooperation from India in nurturing professionals well versed in digital technology.

The tie-up will involve projects totaling tens of billions of yen (hundreds of millions of dollars).

Preparations are underway to sign a memorandum of understanding for concluding a comprehensive agreement at an online meeting in December between Japanese Internal Affairs and Communications Minister Ryota Takeda and Ravi Shankar Prasad, India’s telecommunications minister. Japanese and Indian cabinet ministers have not signed such an MOU before.

Following a border clash between India and China in June, the Indian government introduced tit-for-tat retaliatory measures including a ban on the use of TikTok, the popular Chinese video-sharing social networking service, in the country.

Increased tensions with China are prompting India to promote cooperation with Japan in the field of communications.

The coming alliance will include the use of 5G technology, whose commercial application has yet to start in India, as well as the development and international standardization of 6G technology, which is planned to be put into practical use in the 2030s. It will also include laying an undersea fiber-optic cable. The governments of the two countries will support Japanese companies’ pursuit of Indian orders in these fields.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has announced a plan to lay a submarine fiber-optic cable to connect mainland India with the Lakshadweep islands, located to the southwest of the subcontinent. NEC, which is about to complete the construction of a submarine cable for another group of Indian islands, will seek the order with the two governments’ support.

For 5G technology, Rakuten is planning to export a cloud-based mobile network that will reduce the cost of installation and operation. The company has already opened a laboratory in the southern India city of Bengaluru to sell the technology to local carriers.

HAPSMobile, a Tokyo-based subsidiary of SoftBank, is holding talks with a leading Indian telecom company to sell technology for stratospheric telecommunications by means of a solar-powered unmanned aerial vehicle.

In the current fiscal year, a consortium of Japanese concerns, such as Olympus and Showa University, has begun supplying hospitals in India with its newly developed artificial intelligence-based software to assist doctors in analyzing endoscopic images of the bowel.

The two countries will also cooperate in educating and securing professionals familiar with digital technology. Although Japan is stepping up efforts to reinforce cybersecurity and advance the digitization of government services, it is short on professionals familiar with information technology and other digital tools. As India has a large number of qualified people in the digital field, Japan hopes to gain Indian know-how to produce such people as part of the alliance.

China is strengthening economic tie-ups with countries in the Asia-Pacific region through its Belt and Road Initiative infrastructure development strategy. Chinese companies such as Huawei Technologies are reinforcing their presence in the markets for telecom equipment and undersea cables.

The government of U.S. President Donald Trump has been trying to remove Chinese companies under its “Clean Net” program. A Japanese government official said the U.S. will remain tough on China after President-elect Joe Biden takes office in January.

India is a core country, along with Japan, the U.S. and Australia, in the “Free and Open Indo-Pacific” strategy. Amid the prolonged struggle for hegemony between the U.S. and China, the importance of Japan’s grip on the bedrock of telecom infrastructure is growing. Although India has retreated from negotiations for the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership free trade agreement signed by Japan, China and 13 other countries, the coming Tokyo-New Delhi alliance will serve to retain India in a bloc to hold China in check.

Takeda will also sign an MOU with Chile, similar to the one between Japan and India. In October, furthermore, Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said Japan, the U.S. and Australia will finance an undersea cable to the Pacific island nation of Palau.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/39seILq
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org

From being a Pakistan-trained militant to a soldier in Indian Army: The journey of Ata Mohamed Lather

SOURCE: NATIONAL HERALD

This is a human interest story which must be told to the nation at large. It’s a story of compassion and love from one son of India to another, which created bonds of love and affection across regions and religions. In a nation being divided along communal lines, with many openly seeking blood and revenge on perceived wrongs of history, it comes out as a shower of first rain drops on parched lands of hatred.

This happened in December 2001 in Kokernag village of South Kashmir. I was company commander of a Rashtriya Rifles unit stationed in Anantnag district engaged in very intense counter terror operations. A local source gave a tip off about a militant convalescing in a house for treatment of his injured leg. The information was of a house in village Zalangaon, famous for being associated with Kashmiri separatist leader and former militant Yasin Malick. A small team was dispatched immediately to the house and the injured terrorist was apprehended in broad daylight.

The information turned out to be correct: the individual was a listed terrorist named Ata Mohmed Lather from Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HuJI). A brief interrogation was sufficient to get all details about him. He had a gunshot wound on his left leg below the ankle and was recovering from the injury. He belonged to Kishtwar region and had got shot in an operation a month ago in a firefight with the Army. In spite of his injury he managed to escape. In order to recoup and get fit, he was transported on horseback across the Sinthan pass, a desolate area on the Pir Panjal ranges to Kokernag. Since the intelligence agencies would not know much about him in this region, this appeared to be a safe hideout.

His apprehension was reported to the higher headquarters of the Army and the J&K Police. As per the instructions, he was taken to the Joint Interrogation Cell in Srinagar by the police. In a few days he was returned back to us to recover his weapon and conduct operations based on information provided by him. I met him on the same day in the evening and found him broken down physically and mentally. Seeing his condition, I asked my medical staff to first take care of his physical

In a few days he started recovering slowly, I made it a routine to meet him once a day. We got talking after initial hesitation. Over the next few sessions of this conversation, I came to know everything about him. He belonged to a humble family and was educated up to tenth class. He narrated his life story from his village in Kishtwar to joining HuJi and further travelling over very inhospitable terrain to cross over to Pakistan for training and indoctrination. He returned back from Pakistan after two years and again traversed through difficult tarrain, narrowly escaping Army patrols, to fight for HuJI tanjeem in Doda and Kishtwar regions.

His fear was that his parents would be in grief assuming he would be killed by the security forces on being caught. By now we had developed a special bond as we started spending more time together. I asked him to write a letter to his father and tell him that he is safe with the Army. He wrote a letter in Urdu and I was impressed by his brilliant handwriting. It took some time, but one day his father came all the way from Kishtwar to Jammu to Anantnag and to the Army camp in Kokernag. The joy to see a father meet his son whom he had given up as dead was an unforgettable experience.

Ata Mohd soon became healthy and I tasked him to be employed in the company cook house to help in the cooking. By now our close bond grew stronger and he started giving us tips on how to operate in the jungles and high mountain tops of the ragged terrain in south Kashmir. Once he became fully fit, he confessed to me that the image of the Indian Army painted in their minds was totally wrong. He made friends with many soldiers and on special occasions narrated many anecdotes from his life as a jehadi as well as his experiences in Pakistan training camp.

With his life back on track, I decide to find gainful employment for him. At the same time the Army had started the process of rehabilitation of the erstwhile Ikhwans who had worked for the forces for a long time. Sensing a good opportunity, we ensured that the case against him for terror activities was dropped. We started his training to become fit to join the Indian Army as a jawan. Very soon with his passion and hard work he got selected and joined the Army.

This perhaps is the only case of a Pakistani trained militant being saved from certain death and getting recruited in the same Army which he was brain washed to fight against.

Ata Mohd never looked back and soon started his military career with great passion and zeal. Today he has become a Havildar (sergeant) and in a couple of years may be promoted to the rank of Junior Officer (JCO). He got married meanwhile and has three kids. He has built a decent house for himself in Kishtwar town for the education of his children. Every Diwali and Eid we speak to each other. All these years I have felt the blessings of his parents and family.



from Indian Defence Research Wing https://ift.tt/33rmIc3
via IFTTThttp://idrw.org