Tuesday, November 22, 2016

INDO PAK LOC : ANSWER TO BEHEADINGS PAKIS UNDERSTAND ONLY THIS LANGUAGE




SOURCE:
http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/newsindia/body-of-soldier-mutilated-after-3-were-killed-near-line-of-control-in-jammu-and-kashmir/ar-AAkBSpc?li=AAggbRN&ocid=iehp












                                      PAKIS  UNDERSTAND

                  ONLY THIS LANGUAGE















                   

 

  Indo-Pak Standoff


Body of Indian Soldier Mutilated after 3 were killed near LoC in J&K

  • File: India's Border Security Force (BSF) soldiers patrol along the fencing of the India-Bangladesh international border ahead of the general election on the outskirts of Agartala, capital of India's northeastern state of Tripura April 4, 2014.

    An Indian soldier in Kashmir was beheaded and two others killed by Pakistani commandos who crossed the Line of Control at Machil. Just three weeks ago, Sepoy Mandeep Singh was beheaded not far from the spot; the army has, just like then, vowed revenge.


  • WATCH:

  • Soldier Beheaded near LoC in J&K

 


  •  

  •  

  •  


    "Retribution will be heavy for this cowardly act," the army said in a statement. The intruders, believed to be from the Border Action Team of the Pakistan army, have allegedly escaped. In the Machil sector, Indian posts are closer to Pakistan and the rugged terrain and thicker forests gives infiltrators an advantage.
    Full Coverage: India-Pak standoff


  •  Last month, terrorists mutilated the body of 27-year-old Mandeep Singh before running back into Pakistan Occupied Kashmir, under cover fire provided by the Pakistan army. The army said the incident reflected barbarism in official and unofficial organisations in Pakistan and asserted, "the incident will be responded to appropriately."


  • Seventeen soldiers have died in firing from Pakistan in less than a month.


  • There has been a spurt in ceasefire violations since the September surgical strikes, when Indian soldiers crossed over the Line of Control and destroyed staging areas for terrorists who were getting ready to enter India to carry out a series of attacks. The strikes were seen as India's response to the Uri attack in which 19 soldiers were killed by terrorists from Pakistan.

  •  


  • WATCH: What is Line of Control?

  •  

  •                    


Published on Oct 3, 2014
 
 
an exclusive one-hour programme on the 740 kilometer Line of Control (LOC), the military frontline between India and Pakistan.

Watch what it takes to keep the Line of Control efficiently managed, secure and peaceful. The programme looks at the formidable challenge of managing the treacherous frontline in that region starting from the plains and weaning its way into hills and jungle terrain and ending at the snowy heights short of a glacier.
In the programme, viewers will travel with the Indian officers and soldiers to understand how they defend the LOC, with training manoeuvres and border patrols. Moving along the LOC from Jammu till Poonch and then from Uri to Keran, where the terrain ranges from the plains near Jammu to hills and jungles, until the start of high altitude mountains north of Uri, the programme looks at what the LOC means in that sector.

Throughout the one-hour, viewers will meet soldiers on the ground and record their experience in defending this military frontline. It includes interviews with senior commanders discuss how soldiers are continuously trained in new tactics, equipment and technology.




















Nirbhay Subsonic Cruise Missile

SOURCE:
http://www.defencenews.in/article.aspx?id=39351



REF TO ;

http://bcvasundhra.blogspot.in/2016/12/nirbhay-subsonic-cruise-missile-utter.html



After MTCR Membership, India to once again test Nirbhay Cruise Missile in Dec
                                  By
                   SPUTNIK  News   


Tuesday, November 22, 2016

What is a Cruise Missile : For details CLICK url  to read

  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cruise_missile 




Weapons: Why is India keen on developing the subsonic cruise missile Nirbhaya, when it already has the supersonic cruise missile Brahmos?



What can a subsonic cruise missile do that a supersonic cruise missile cannot?



The answer is the range of the missile which differs significantly from subsonic to Supersonic. As you may heard about tomahawk cruise missile, it’s a subsonic missile.


Let’s just compare Tomahawk and BrahMos missiles.

Range:
  • Tomahawk-: 1300KM - 2500KM
  • BrahMos-: 300 KM- 500 KM (only 20% of Tomahawk’s max range)
Weight:
  • Tomahawk-: 1600 Kg
  • Brahmos-: 3000Kg(Just double of Tomahawk)
From above comparison we can say that just to achieve the supersonic speed brahmos need to burn double fuel than the Tomahawk but it could only reach the 20% of max range of tomahawk.

That’s why India is keen to develop a subsonic missile.

for further reference you might go through these links

Tomahawk (missile)?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomahawk__(missile
A sub sonic missile travels vastly slower than a supersonic missile. Therefore it'd take much longer to reach a target. And the efficient engine it has, compared to the supersonic missile would allow it to 'loiter' over a target area. In other words, once the missile is overhead and is put on a "loiter" pattern, the government can make a decision as to whether a strike still needs to be carried out or not. If they choose not to, the missile can be safely self destructed well above the target. Also, as explained  above  you do not need as much fuel and therefore as much weight to strike the intended target. This means that a sub-sonic missile can either travel much farther than a supersonic one or carry more ordnance.

(An image of the famous Tomahawk cruise missile. It is a long-range, all-weather, subsonic cruise missile named after the Native American word for 'axe.' Introduced by McDonnell Douglas in the 1970s, it was initially designed as a medium to long-range, low-altitude missile that could be launched from a surface platform. It has been improved several times, and due to corporate divestitures and acquisitions, is now made by Raytheon.)



(an image of the world's only in-production supersonic cruise missile, Brahmos. It is a short range ramjet supersonic cruise missile that can be launched from submarines, ships, aircraft or land.
It is a joint venture between the Russian Federation's NPO Mashinostroeyenia and India's Defence Research and Development Organisation(DRDO) who have together formed BrahMos Aerospace Private Limited.)
In cases where speed is not of essence, and to reach a target farther away or more heavily "hardened," (such as command and control buildings, Headquarters etc.,) a sub-sonic missile is necessary. In a hypothetical situation where we need to strike a terrorist camp, a sub-sonic missile can loiter over the intended target area and wait until it is appropriate to strike, inorder to minimise collateral damage and civilian casualties.

Also, by virtue of their slower speed, the sub-sonic missiles can fly closer to the ground using the "terrain hugging" (or 'nap of the earth') tactic and more efficiently evade enemy radar detection (because of the earth's curvature, radar waves after a certain distance will be unable to detect low flying aircrafts or missiles). While the advantage of a supersonic missile is its speed, which means reduced reaction time for the enemy, the advantage for the sub-sonic missile is greater range/payload and greatly reduced odds of detection.

The enemy cannot run from a supersonic missile, and similarly he would not realise what just hit him if its a sub-sonic missile
                                                




Has India’s recent membership of the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) made a difference in the indigenously designed and developed long range sub-sonic cruise missile ‘Nirbhay’?


India has to depend on indigenous technology so far because it was not a member of MTCR. This led to two failures and one partial success. The missile has recently undergone changes and Indian scientists are geared for a fourth test in December this year.

“A low-flight trial (Of Nirbhaya) will be held next month. This will be followed by two more flights. Work on the air variant is on,” said Aeronautical Development Establishment Director M V K V Prasad.

India’s Defense Ministry had claimed success in some operations that the missile had performed during its last test lasting over 11 minutes.

“DRDO needs to get over the critical challenges experienced in stability of the missile in flight over long range which has led to abortion of the mission twice so far,” defense analyst Brigadier Rahul Bhonsle (retired) said.

India had sanctioned the project in 2010 with plans to complete it after three years. Later on, Government had extended the date of completion and adds extra cost to the project.

Of late, it was speculated that plans to extend the range of Indo-Russian BrahMos missile may sink the Nirbhay project.

“Technically speaking a BrahMos with extended range and Nirbhay are two separate projects by different agencies. Thus the move to extend the range of BrahMos should not impact the development of the Nirbhay. What is to be decided is do we want two sets of cruise missiles – one with a range of 600 and another 1,000 kms? Is there an operational requirement of the two categories of missiles for the armed forces and is there enough money to develop both?” asked Bhonsle.

However, the Governments wants to provide full backing to a completely indigenous project as it will give the defense planners greater autonomy in production and deployment.






Monday, November 21, 2016

Tracking Ties Between Pakistan’s ISI & India’s NortEeast Militant Groups

SOURCE:
http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/newsindia/tracking-ties-between-pakistan%e2%80%99s-isi-and-india%e2%80%99s-northeast-militant-groups/ar-AAkzghc?li=AAggbRN&ocid=iehp








         Tracking Ties Between Pakistan’s ISI 
                                         &
               India’s NortEeast Militant Groups


Major General
Sir Walter Joseph Cawthorn, CB, CIE, CBE
         (11 June 1896 – 4 December 1970)
   [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Cawthorn]


Established in the wake of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947-8 by the Australian army officer Major-General Walter Cawthorne, then Deputy Chief of Staff in the Pakistan Army, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) for years remained an under-developed and obscure agency. In 1979, the organisation's growing importance was felt during the Soviet war in Afghanistan , as it worked hand in glove with the CIA to support the mujahideen resistance, but its activities received little coverage in news media.Since that time, the ISI has projected its influence across the region - in 1988 its involvement in Indian Kashmir came under increasing scrutiny, and by 1995 its mentoring of what became the Afghan Taliban was well attested. But it was the organisation's alleged links with Al Qaeda and the discovery of Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, at the heart of Pakistan's military zone, that really threw it under the spotlight. These controversies and many more have dogged the ISI, including its role in Pakistan's testing of a nuclear weapon in 1998 and its links with A.Q. Khan.Offering fresh insights into the ISI as a domestic and international actor based on intimate knowledge of its inner workings and key individuals, this startlingly original book uncovers the hitherto shady world of Pakistan's secret service.
 
Several groups of United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) cadres travelled to Pakistan during the 1990s to receive training with the help of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), according to a new book on the spy agency.

Links between Pakistan and militant groups in India’s northeastern states date back to the 1960s, when the neighbouring country had supplied weapons to Naga militants, author Hein G Kiessling writes in his book ‘Faith, Unity, Discipline: The ISI of Pakistan’.

WATCH: 2 jawans martyred in encounter with ULFA in Assam's Tinsukia

Kiessling, a historian who forged contacts with Pakistani military and intelligence officials while living in the country between 1989 and 2002, writes there was a temporary halt to weapons supplies after the 1971 war that led to the birth of Bangladesh.

However, ties between Pakistan and militant groups in the northeastern states were never completely broken off and they were revitalised in the 1980s.

“In 1990, via the Pakistan embassy in Dhaka, the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN) and United Liberated Front of Asom (ULFA) developed contacts with the ISI… In January 1991, with the help of the ISI, several high-ranking ULFA leaders travelled to Pakistan to sign a training agreement for ULFA cadres,” he writes.

In 1991, two six-member ULFA groups arrived in Islamabad for training and a third 10-member group followed in 1993.

“The ISI’s auxiliary support for operations of this kind covered more than just the training courses in Pakistan. Well in advance, new identities and fake passports had to be procured, travel routes determined and the financing of the whole operation had to be secured,” the book says.

“In this way, the Pakistan embassy in Dhaka became an important ISI station, the hub of its operations in northeast India. In the ISI directorate in Islamabad, they must have been content with the results of the first training courses for ULFA fighters, since they continued through the 1990s and were extended to include other underground groups.”

The ISI procured weapons for the northeastern militant groups from countries such as Thailand and Cambodia, from where they were shipped to Bangladesh before being smuggled into India.

“In Thailand, after the collapse of the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia from the 1980s onwards, light weapons and light machine guns awaited prospective buyers, so new supply opportunities opened up. Thus in 1991 the ISI provided weapons from Thailand to a group of 240 NSCN members,” the book says.

Small boats brought the weapons to the Bangladeshi port of Cox’s Bazaar, which “became the hub for weapon supplies in the region”. NSCN and ULFA fighters fetched the weapons from Bangladesh and took them back to their bases.

The book quotes an unnamed prominent Naga militant, imprisoned by Indian authorities, as saying that he received $1.7 million in three instalments from the ISI in the 1990s for weapon purchases. The ISI also received support in arms procurement “from their Chinese colleagues”, the book adds.

“As far back as 1993, ULFA had contacts with the Chinese military. The first weapons supply came from a Chinese ship in 1995, another in 1997 by a land route through Bhutan,” the book says.

© Provided by Hindustan Times
   Kiessling writes there are indications that the “ISI is still present and active in northeast India”. In August 1999, Assam Police announced the arrest of two ISI officers and two local agents. “The officers came from Karachi and Lahore,” he writes.

“The ISI uses such agents for special missions, constructs sleeper cells, infiltrates local organisations, brings counterfeit money into the region and is responsible for acts of terror. Nor could they pass up the chance to expand their influence over madrasas in northeast India through their network of contacts and confidants,” the book adds.

Sunday, November 20, 2016

INDIAN ARMY : THIRD GRADE MANAGEMENT SECOND GRADE LEADERSHIP & FIRST CLASS MANPOWER

SOURCE:  CURTSEY THE TRIBUNE
http://www.tribuneindia.com/news/sunday-special/people/soldier-s-life-no-cheap-sir/325511.html

 RESULT OF  ABDICATION OF CIVIL

GOVERNMENT CONTROL OF ARMED

FORCES TO BUREAUCRATIC SETUP ON
  
              
                INDIAN ARMED FORCES  

                       IN  PARTICULAR :



                             THIRD GRADE        

            BUREAUCRATIC MANAGEMENT 

              SECOND GRADE LEADERSHIP

                                        

                 FIRST CLASS TRAINED  
                                          &            
      DISCIPLINED JUNIOR MANPOWER

                                                                         -  VASUNDHRA


           *************************


              Soldier’s Life No Cheap, Sir

                                  BY

                    DINESH KUMAR

             TRIBUNE CHANDIGARH


Delays & Deficiencies

 

  • Rifle: Tenders floated to acquire 1,85,000 assault rifles

  • Delay: The Army decided to issue the new tender following rejection of Excalibur rifle that was offered by the DRDO-Ordinance Factory Board combine

  • Light-weight helmets: The Army has been demanding this for over two decades. Plans reportedly afoot to buy 1.58 lakh ballistic helmets

  • Bullet-proof jackets & gadgetry: Projected as urgent operational requirements over the last 15 years. The defence ministry is now looking at the enormity of accumulated deficit

  • Shoes: Over a decade later, Army continues to await 8 lakh superior quality PT shoes for its troops








 





Ever wondered about the plight of the Army’s Infantry soldier! Dressed in battle fatigues, the semi-literate rifle-wielding soldier from a rural or semi-urban part of the country spends much of his career patrolling and guarding disputed borders with China and Pakistan in tough terrains that range from hilly jungles to very high-altitude barren, rocky mountains and glaciers and in extreme weather conditions.


For the last 60 years, starting the Infantry soldier has been fighting a bleeding and fatiguing irregular war against terrorists and insurgents. Soldiers have silently suffered hostility, at best, indifference of sections of people in parts of J&K and some states in the northeast. Plus, they have to help in times of natural disasters such as earthquake, floods and landslides.


Yet the Infantry’s 382 battalions, which comprise the largest arm of the Army, are also among the most neglected and lacking even in some basic equipment. Lost in the race for acquiring the more glamorous and highly expensive ‘big ticket; items such as tanks, artillery, surface-to-air missiles, helicopters etc, the not-so-glamorous Infantryman does not evoke the same level of urgency even though it is the public face of the Army and bears the maximum casualties whether during war or peace. 


In April 2005 the Army conceived a major modernization plan for the Infantry with the fancy title of F-INSAS (Futuristic Infantry Soldier as a System). The project, spread over three phases and originally scheduled to have begun rolling out in stages from 2012 to 2020, is meant to upgrade, if not altogether revolutionize, the Infantry into an ultra-modern fighting machine. The aim is to provide the soldier with lethality, mobility, survivability, communications and situational awareness. The F-INSAS is based on five major technologies: (i) modular weapons; (ii) body armour and individual equipment; (iii) weapon sights and hand-held target acquisition devices; (iv) communication equipment to enable soldiers to transmit and receive complex voice, data and video systems; and (v) portable computers for soldiers and officers. 


The ambitious programme has made little progress and compares poorly with the ground realities 11 years after the project was conceived. Let alone modular assault rifles with interchangeable barrels (7.62 mm for counter-insurgency operations and 5.56 mm for conventional warfare), the Army has been unable to replace the existing and flawed 5.56 mm indigenously produced INSAS (Indian Small Arms System) rifle. A global tender floated in 2011 has been cancelled as all the competitors failed to clear the trials. 


The Infantry needs 1,85,000 new and better assault rifles which continue to remain elusive. But let alone buying new rifles, the Army has been unable to even change the orange colour of the existing INSAS rifles which compromises the camouflage of the soldiers thus putting them to risk.


The Infantry presents a microcosm of the existing deficiencies in the Army which includes even basic and non-lethal items. Starting from 1,26,270 mosquito nets, 1,86,092 brown canvas rubber sole shoes with laces and 2,17,388 high-ankle boots, the Infantry is suffering a shortfall of 4,47,000 ski masks (required in the mountains) and three lakh bullet-proof vests, which can help protect the lives of soldiers in counter-insurgency operations and along the Line of Control. There is uncertainty over the current tenders for 44,600 carbines and 4,097 light machine guns that the Infantry is in dire need of even as about 1,000 Infantry combat vehicles need an upgrade. One other ‘small stuff’ is the need to replace the existing thin brown canvas shoes with proper sports shoes. Over 10 years later, the Army continues to await 8 lakh superior quality PT shoes for its troops. 


The Army is already suffering a woeful shortfall of ammunition including the Armoured Corps, Artillery, Air Defence and Infantry. So severe is the deficiency in ammunition that the Army’s War Wastage Reserve (WWR) has fallen from the required 40 days to between 15 and 20 days.

                                       In other words,

 the Army does not have ammunition enough to fight a war for more than 15-20 days. 


The depletion of the WWR is partly also because the Army is being forced to divert resources to raise a new Mountain Strike Corps (17 Corps). The first of its kind Mountain Strike Corps, sanctioned in July 2013 and to be raised by 2021, is being established at a cost of Rs 65,000 crore and will add 90,274 more soldiers and 32 new Infantry battalions. This will increase the number of existing Infantry battalions to 414. The WWR is expected to reach 100 percent only in 2019. Owing to delays in the F-INSAS project which has since been restructured and modified, the Infantry is a long way from becoming a fully networked all-terrain, all-weather personal-equipment platform with enhanced firepower and mobility for the digitalized battlefield of the future. The Infantry soldier’s wait has only become longer.



dkumar@tribunemail.com































 

Friday, November 18, 2016

PANGS OF DEMONETISATION : RANT OF FILTHY BANDICOOTS

SOURCE: 


                                                   BASED  ON

http://www.huffingtonpost.in/2016/11/14/we-need-to-stop-holding-up-the-army-as-the-sole-repository-of-al/



                   RANT OF  FILTHY
ANTI - NATIONALISTS COMMIES 
                                AND
                FIFTH  COLUMNIST                                                                                                                                        BLACK  MONEY HOLDERS 



              RANT OF THE MORONS                                                                

     We Need To Stop Holding Up The Army
                                    As
    The Sole Repository Of All Nationalism

           A nation is not just a territory
                that needs defending.

                  14  NOVEMBER 2016





 
 
Baba Ramdev, right, seated next to retired former Indian Army chief General V.K. Singh during a protest in New Delhi in 2012. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh)
 
 
 
Stay hungry, stay patriotic. That's what Baba Ramdev wants ordinary Indians to be. Why? Because members of the army, who are protecting our borders, routinely go without food for days, especially when they are on active duty. Such is his logic.

"During war, our soldiers fight without eating food for seven to eight days. So, can't we do the same for our nation?" one of India's most successful yoga-guru-turned-entrepreneurs said to the media yesterday.

 "Many people are showing their opposition to the prime minister but nothing is bigger than the nation," he added.

As a defence of the government's move of currency demonetisation to curb corruption and black money, Ramdev's statement may warm the cockles of his devotees, especially those who believe nothing is bigger than the prime minister (to them, also known as the nation), but the comment is shockingly pernicious on several levels.
 
As the promoter of Patanjali, an FMCG enterprise which has already recorded a ₹5,000 crore turnover in F16, it is despicable of Ramdev to undermine the pain of hunger, that too in a country which ranks below some of its neighbours — China, Nepal and Bangladesh — in the
 
 
 
We don't need to look up statistics to register the endemic poverty that afflicts India's heartland. But we do need to appreciate the bleak irony of asking millions of hungry people to put nationalist sentiments before their right to have three square meals a day.
 
 
 
Hindustan Times via Getty Images
People stand in long queues to exchange their old currency at the Bank of Baroda in Pahar Ganj, New Delhi, on November 13, 2016. (Photo by Arvind Yadav/Hindustan Times )

 
 
Wasn't it Swami Vivekananda, often appropriated by card-carrying Hindutva activists to serve their own interests, who pointed out the futility of preaching religion to those left with an empty stomach? And so, by what right could a nation expect undying patriotism from those it has failed to guarantee two square meals a day?

Worse still, due to the acute cash crunch unleashed by the sudden revocation of old currency, even people with means to buy food have been reduced to looting stores,
 babies have died to lack of healthcare, senior citizens have collapsed in queues to get their money changed. The prime minister, who Ramdev wants the rest of the country to put before their lives, has mocked the plight of the people and then quickly followed it up with public histrionics. The worst elitism, especially among privileged Indians, is on shameless display on social media these days.

                             FIRING THE RIFLE
 FROM THE SHOULDER OF POOR
                                   TO
 HIDE THE BLACK HOARDED FILTH

 
 
VASUNDHRA]
 
 
 
 
: Demonetisation Has Brought Out The Worst Form Of Elitism Among India's Privileged Classes
 
 
THE   BANDICOOTS SHOULD KNOW THAT IF A SOLDIER COMMITS A MISTAKE IN WAR IT IS NOT THAT HE  LOSES HIS LIFE BUT THE NATION ALSO SLIDES INTO A PERPETUAL  SLAVERY OF HUMILATION   WHERE AS IF A BANDICOOT FALLS IN THE RAT TRAP  HE LOSES ONLY HIS HOARDED  LOOTED  WORTHLESS PAPER -Vasundhra
 
 
RANT OF A BANDICOOT
 
 
For Ramdev to drag the army into this unfolding crisis, as the exemplar of nationalism, is not only insidious (as an attempt to cover up for the ruling government's spectacular mess), but also disrespectful to the vast majority of Indians who are not part of the defence establishment.


The service rendered by the armed forces to the nation is, without a doubt, fraught with risk and hardship, demanding deeper reserves of courage and fortitude than, say, a school teacher's or a bus driver's. And yet, in a sense, the job of defending the country against enemies and keeping it safe from internal incursions is also a job like any other — with benefits and a salary.

To weigh it against other professions or to rate it on a scale of relative importance is unwarranted, unless one believes different kinds of work merit different levels of respect, according to a perceived hierarchy of dignity in labour. That would amount to claiming that some citizens are less important to the nation than others.


 
Women come out the State Bank of India, Nuh branch, with new Rs 2000 rupee note, on November 13, 2016 in Gurgaon, India. (Photo by Parveen Kumar/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
 
 
TRUTH   IS
 
SEGMENT OF SOCIETY MENTIONED BELOW HAVE WATCHED HELPLESSELY THEIR FRUITS BEING LOOTED BY THESE BANDICOOTS  &  NOW ARE EMPLOYING GHOST WRITERS TO DEFEND THEIR LOOT (Vasundhra)
 
 
 
Why must the contribution to society by a scientist who develops a life-saving vaccine or by a doctor who cures hundreds of suffering patients or by an economist whose policy has a tangible effect in improving the conditions of millions be regarded as any less noble or patriotic than those guarding our borders?

A great musician may soothe many a troubled mind, a writer may give hope to those who have turned away from life, an educator may enable hundreds of young minds to look beyond their immediate circumstances and to dream big.

As far as critical services go, what about those who dispose of our daily refuse, without whom we would be drowning in our own garbage? And, most pertinent under the circumstances, what about the bankers, who are tirelessly working weekdays and weekends, trying to serve a nation desperately seeking cash?

By valorising the services of the army to the exclusion of others, Ramdev's ends up shaming the ordinary, salaried, tax-paying citizens of India, part of whose hard-earned incomes, ironically, go into funding the defence budget. In doing so, he too, along with the supporters of the ruling government, harks back to a relic from the past: to a moment in history when the military was the be-all and end-all of a nation's sovereignty as opposed to the sum total of many ancillary parts that create a complex, modern economy.



 
People in queue to change their 500 and 1000 currency notes in Allahabad. (Photo by Prabhat Kumar Verma/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)
 
 
 
The appropriation of the army to advance political interests has only been gaining momentum since the surgical strikes along the Line of Control (LoC), after the terrorist attack on military headquarters in Uri, Jammu and Kashmir.

Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar, who has been described as "one of the nine jewels" of his cabinet by PM Modi, has brazenly politicised the counter-attacks waged by India's security forces in the LoC. Among the many explosive comments he made after the operations, he attributed the core ideology of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) as the driving force behind the counter-strike. He also believes that true Indians must be unquestioningly loyal to the government's decisions and never doubt the official version of any event.

     BRATHEREN  bandicoot   YOU  ARE DITTO ON THE BULL(Uncastrated adult male )  "INDIAN  BANDICOOTS  MUST BELIEVE  & SUPPORT 'ALLAHAS'  VOICE BEING  EMANATED FROM  RAWALPINDI WHOSE  CURRENCY PRINTING PRESSES  AT KARACHI & PESHAWAR ARE MINTING INDIAN  CURRENCY TO BE DEPLOYED FOR THE LIBERATION (enslavement) OF BANDICOOTS IN INDIA"                                                                                         Vasundhra
 
 
 
EK  JAICHAND  KI  PUKAR 
 एक  जयचंद  की  पुकार 
 
 
Why must the contribution to society by a scientist who develops a life-saving vaccine or by a doctor who cures hundreds of suffering patients or by an economist whose policy has a tangible effect in improving the conditions of millions be regarded as any less noble or patriotic than those guarding our borders?