Monday, December 14, 2020

National Security Strategy : Need for a Comprehensive National Security Strategy

 SOURCE: https://cprindia.org/news/7832#:~:text=An%20NSS%20for%20India%20needs,disciplinary%20and%20multi%2Dsectoral%20interventions.

 


National Security Strategy India Needs- Abhijit Iyer Mitra

                                                     ( https://youtu.be/_GC525Sk7vc )



Dr Happymon Jacob speaks with Col (Retd) Ali Ahmed about doctrinal thinking in the Indian armed forces and the need to devise a comprehensive national security strategy.

                                             ( https://youtu.be/N6fK182w3VA )





4 June 2019

     Need for a Comprehensive National
                 Security Strategy

                            By

                      Shyam Saran


AS PART OF 'POLICY CHALLENGES - 2019-2024: THE BIG POLICY QUESTIONS FOR THE NEW GOVERNMENT AND POSSIBLE PATHWAYS


In the recent general elections, national security has emerged as a major political issue. However, the discourse over national security has been limited to dealing with specific security-related episodes such as terrorist attacks at Pathankot, Uri and Pulwama on the Line of Control with Pakistan; the stand-off with Chinese forces on the India-Bhutan-China border; and the security operations in the disturbed state of Jammu and Kashmir. A holistic discussion of India’s national security rarely occurs in the public space or even within the government. The Indian state does not possess an overarching national security strategy (NSS) that comprehensively assesses the challenges to the country’s security and spells out policies to deal effectively with them; of course such a strategy must be executed within the parameters laid down by the Constitution of India and the country’s democratic political dispensation. In the absence of an overall strategy, the state relies on ad hoc responses of questionable utility. Moreover, it possesses no mechanism that permits it to learn from its experiences. Ad hocism also neglects the broader political, social and economic context within which specific episodes must be located and understood.

A modern state confronts multiple and simultaneous challenges across several domains. National security cannot be confined to the use of the state’s coercive power to overcome domestic and external threats. For example, threats to domestic peace and stability may arise from economic and social grievances. A knee-jerk reaction may leave these grievances unaddressed while the use of coercive power exacerbates rather than ameliorates the situation. For instance, left-wing extremism in India is rooted in the persistent exploitation of tribal populations. 

Similarly, the vulnerability of our borders is linked to a large-scale smuggling and contraband trade that permits channels through which terrorists and criminals find easy access. Such threats cannot be dealt with solely through enhanced military capabilities without addressing the drivers of illegal trade. It is recognized that the prolonged use of subsidies for ostensibly social welfare purposes creates arbitrage opportunities for cross-border smuggling. Such criminal activities often entrench powerful mafia groups with close links to politics. While groups of this sort constitute a serious threat to domestic security, the solution lies as much in the economic domain as in strengthening the state’s law and order machinery. The NSS will need to acknowledge such cross-domain linkages and policy interventions. 

For a modern state operating in an increasingly globalized world, the line between what is domestic and what is external is becoming increasingly blurred. For example, terrorism is a threat to domestic security but may have external links. Dealing with terrorism may require not only domestic interventions but also action on the external front. Issues related to water security may involve dealing with neighbouring countries with which India shares its major rivers. Thus a combination of domestic and external interventions may be necessary. It is only within a comprehensive NSS that such complex inter-relationships between domestic and external dimensions can be analysed and coordinated policy responses formulated. 

We live in a technology-driven world; new technologies such as the Internet and digitization are enabling powerful tools for states to enhance national security but also creating new and serious vulnerabilities and security risks. Cyber security has become a major concern and it is only through developing advanced technological capabilities that a state has a chance of defending itself against cyber attacks. The NSS would enable the identification of critical infrastructure that may be vulnerable to cyber attacks, and the development of human resources capable of identifying attacks and protecting and restoring critical systems. Anticipating cyber attacks and hardening systems against them become ever more necessary as economic and governance activities increasingly rely on digital technologies. Ad hoc responses would be grossly inadequate. A critical aspect is that in a democracy like India, the state’s use of advanced digital technologies for surveillance and intelligence gathering must not violate the citizens’ right to privacy and freedom of expression. There is a trade-off between enhanced security and the citizens’ rights guaranteed by the Constitution, and this must be clearly spelt out for the people of the country and well-considered solutions put forward. National security must not become a justification for a surveillance state. The danger of relying on ad hoc responses is that they may cumulatively lead to a predatory and authoritarian state that limits the exercise of democratic rights. The NSS must deal with this dilemma upfront.

Technological change and geopolitical shifts are also impacting India’s nuclear security. The country’s nuclear deterrent must deal with the challenge of two nuclear-armed neighbours: China and Pakistan. Furthermore, the nuclear domain is becoming closely interlinked with cyber and space-related capabilities. The development of India’s nuclear deterrent must take into account the impacts of such technological change. The overall nuclear security environment is also being affected by geopolitical shifts with the gap between the US and Russia on the one hand and China on the other reducing significantly. The older nuclear order anchored in bilateral US-Russia arms control arrangements is now unravelling because China remains outside these arrangements. A new nuclear order is becoming essential as we move into a world of multiple nuclear states. India will need to determine what role it should play in the shaping of this new nuclear order. 

Ecological degradation and climate change have significant impacts on national security. There may be direct consequences of the melting of glaciers on the deployment of troops at high-altitude locations on India’s mountainous borders. Sea-level rise as a result of global warming may inundate naval bases along the coasts. There may be large-scale migration of populations from low-lying coastal plains towards higher ground, and this may lead to social disruptions and economic distress, undermining domestic security. Therefore, the NSS must anticipate the consequences of ecological degradation and climate change, and formulate coping measures. 

Another oft-neglected dimension of India’s national security that must be integrated within the NSS is strategic communications. It relates to the indispensable need, particularly in a democracy, to shape public perceptions through constant and consistent public outreach and to provide a channel for public opinion or feedback. This would enable the government to explain its policies, garner public understanding and support, and review and adjust policies on the basis of feedback received. This has become a far more difficult and complex challenge due to the spread of social media, the phenomenon of fake news, and the instant nature of news gathering and dissemination. Governments need to stay ahead of the news cycle, establish credibility as a source of authentic and reliable information, and shape public opinion rather than be reactive all the time. National security may be adversely impacted by the spread of false news by hostile elements within and outside the country using social media. This will require strong and advanced cyber capabilities, which may have to be constantly upgraded to keep pace with rapid technological advance.

An NSS for India needs to take a comprehensive approach, encompassing domestic and external and economic and ecological challenges, highlighting the inter-linkages and feedback loops among them and on that basis formulate a coherent template for multi-disciplinary and multi-sectoral interventions. Such a template would serve as a guide for a whole of government approach, ensuring that intervention in any one domain does not contradict or even negate intervention in another domain. It is only by having a big picture constantly at hand that contradictory and wasteful policies can be avoided. We should move towards a pattern of governance where interventions in one domain reinforce interventions in other domains. 

Drawing up an NSS for India must be a key item on the agenda of the new government. This may be tasked to a group of eminent persons from different disciplines who could consider India’s national security in its multiple dimensions. In a democracy, an NSS should be citizen-centric and must reflect the values and beliefs of the people; at the same time, it must seek to raise public awareness of and shape public perceptions about national security issues. The proposed NSS must take the Constitution of India as its guide and its objective should be the safeguarding and consolidation of India’s democracy. This approach would, for example, reject intrusive governmental intrusions into the lives of ordinary people, violating their rights enshrined in the Constitution.

In every domain of national endeavour there must be pursuit of excellence and high standards to enable India to compete successfully in a highly competitive and globalized landscape. Islands of excellence cannot be sustained in an ocean of mediocrity and low quality. This need not conflict with properly designed policies for affirmative action designed to reduce and eventually eliminate the consequences of long-standing social and economic disabilities suffered by sections of India’s citizens. What is critical is the state’s capacity to design, execute and evaluate interventions in different domains, and for this the institutions and processes of governance may need to be altered and strengthened. New institutions may be required to deal with newly emerging challenges. This, too, must be included in the NSS.  

Previous exercises undertaken to promote national security could serve as useful reference material for the NSS. These include the Kargil Review Committee report (2000), the Report of the Naresh Chandra Task Force on Security (2012), and the document entitled ‘Building Comprehensive National Power: Towards an Integrated National Security Strategy’ prepared by the National Security Advisory Board (2015). Only the Kargil report has been made public. It is recommended that these reports and the NSS prepared by the new government should be public documents and open to public debate and review. A well-informed, vigilant and educated public opinion is the best assurance of national security. 



Sunday, December 13, 2020

Battle Honour ‘Fatehpur’: A War Veteran’s Memories Of 11 December 1971

 SOURCE: https://swarajyamag.com/ideas/battle-honour-fatehpur-a-war-veterans-memories-of-11-december-1971

Battle Honour ‘Fatehpur’: A War Veteran’s              Memories Of 11 December 1971

                            By 

                             Harsha Bhat



Dec 11, 2020


Battle Honour ‘Fatehpur’: A War Veteran’s Memories Of 11 December 1971
The Sikh light Infantry as the Anti Tank Gun  After the Battle of Fatehpur

Snapshot
  • As India marks 49 years of the 1971 war, a war veteran describes a fierce battle that was fought at the western front on the intervening night of 11-12 December.

Come December 11, our defence forces celebrate Fatehpur day - marking a key victory that saw the Indian Army capture this crucial post between Amritsar and Lahore in the 1971 India-Pakistan war.

For the 8 Sikh Light Infantry it was its first tryst with bloodshed, just five years into its raising.

The 8 Sikh LI was entrusted with capturing the diamond-shaped Fatehpur post that was fortified on four sides with mammoth Dussi Bundhs. Even at costs of many of its men, this young battalion made history winning the heroic battle that won them the Battle Honour “Fathepur”.

Among the surviving heroes of this battle is I N Rai, who was then 2nd Lieutenant.

All of 22, this young soldier trembled as he prepared to bury 42 bodies of his brothers in arms. Sorrow, anger, pain, and many other nameless emotions flooded him as he saw his fellow soldiers lying down covered in the national flag.

Just then he heard an elderly voice say dukhi na ho sahabji. Badey bhagyashali hai ye. Aise goli chaathi main liye, tiranga odhkar oopar jaarahe hain. Aisa mauka sabko nahin milta(Do not be sad. These are fortunate - To go with bullets in their chest and wrapped in the tricolour. Not everyone gets a chance like this). It was an old Subedar Jodha Singh giving him the courage to lay to rest those who had until a few days ago been ‘waiting for war’.

Of the 46 men martyred that night, two were his closest friends - 2nd Lieutenant H P Nayyar and Captain Karam Singh - with whom he had the ‘hot meal’ before India went to war with Pakistan on the night of 11 December 1971. It turned out to be their ‘last supper’ together.

The images are all vivid in the eyes of Brigadier (Retd.) I N Rai and come alive as he takes us down memory lane in his living room in his house in Mangaluru, almost five decades later.

Brigadier I N Rai
Brigadier I N Rai

On the 49th anniversary of the Indo-Pak Bangladesh war, Brigadier Rai recounts for Swarajya the war that was through the people who fought it.

After completing training from OTA Chennai, I N Rai was posted to the 8th Sikh Light infantry in Jalandhar and was greeted by a host of Sardars in May 1970. Finding himself among soldiers who spoke only chaste Punjabi, this southern Indian, whose dream to join the army had finally come true, wouldn't have imagined that in 16 months time he would be part of an event that would redefine the history of the subcontinent.

With Mujibur Rehman winning the elections in the still-united Pakistan, and the atrocities in East Pakistan that had lakhs of refugees flee to India, the political situation in Islamabad and Dhaka had turned fluid by September 1971.

“Which is when they asked us to mobilise, leave the peace station in Jalandhar and move to Amritsar - next to Ravi river - we were the reserve battalion for the entire division,” explains Rai, taking us back to where it all started from.

But staying put for the next few months was like tying horses in the stable, he muses. Although, unlike other battalions that had their areas defined, the reserve battalion was required to recce the entire stretch - from Dera Baba Nanak, Ajnala, Ramdas, Fategarh Chudiya - the whole sector.

This is when the Commanding Officer took him out of Charlie Company and made him his intelligence officer. The battalion spent the next three months there. Since their task was not to start an offensive operation in the Western Sector - although by then the Indian Army had entered Bangladesh - they were posted there to only stop any misadventure by Pakistan. “But staying put was making us desperate thinking ladai nai ho rahi’ he laughs, narrating how the battalion brought in the evening of 3 December 1971.

Brigadier I N Rai as Second Lieutenant during the 1971 War (left); With the Ceremonial Turban of the Sikh Light infantry (Right)Brigadier I N Rai as Second Lieutenant during the 1971 War (left); With the Ceremonial Turban of the Sikh Light infantry (Right)

Around six o’clock, on 3 December, as they were seated in their bunkers, the men heard the sound of fighter jets flying over their head.

“In those days we could see the night lights of Lahore where the sky meets the earth from where we were. And suddenly there were flares. The artillery had started firing. The whistling sound of shells flying over our heads meant they were not falling on us but going over. We all got ready and said ‘thank god the war has begun’. Some of us even ran out to the officers' mess in the bunkers and said let us have one scotch whiskey”.

When they asked the mess havaldar for a glass of scotch each, he quizzed kyun sahab’., ‘Cause we are celebrating that the war has finally begun’ they valiantly told him.

But that it would end up taking away many of those that raised a toast that night was not a thought that crossed their minds.

In moments though, ”we saw their jets return. They were being chased by our aircrafts as their plans had been foiled. They wanted to attack our air force on the ground itself but our aircrafts were prepared and ruined their plans of a blitzkrieg,”.

But in the days that followed, Pakistan managed to capture certain weak areas pushing back the BSF and other forces. They also managed to capture the Fatehpur post - that was giving them a vantage position given their location in the plains.

The 8 Sikh LI now had its task cut out - to capture Fatehpur back - not just the Indian post but the Pakistani one too.

This was a post the battalion had never seen. But the order was there - By 12 December 1971, Fatehpur post had to be captured and the enemy thrown beyond the Ravi.

“Intelligence kept changing because the reconnaissance that was sent out initially said there was one platoon of Pakistani soldiers and one platoon of Mujahid, then it became two platoons of regulars.”

Pakistani soldiers had attacked a post that was manned by non-Sikh battalion troops. But by the time they could capture it and settle down, there was a commando platoon of 8 Sikh LI, led by ‘dare devil young officer’ Second Lieutenant J J Singh, that was lying in there along the Dussi Bund that attacked them - leaving them shell shocked.

There was a daring counter-attack that left Rai’s good friend 2 Lt JJ Singh wounded. Recollecting some of the earliest incidents that left a strong mark on him, Rai recalls one where Naik Subedar Surjit Singh pulled a machine gun of a Pakistani soldier and gave him one kick on his head. ‘He held a barrel which was firing, he went and snatched it and kicked the Pakistani officer on his head’.

Another havaldar was hurt such that his full intestine was gutting out. ‘We reached there just then, shoved his intestine back into his stomach, removed his turban and wrapped it around his stomach and evacuated him,‘.

Meanwhile, ‘I was watching this Surjit Singh, he was walking around as if nothing had happened, busy instructing the boys to pick this and that. But I saw something was wrong with him. Then I suddenly saw that his thumb and three fingers were missing - they were burnt and singed - which means there was no bleeding - like sutures- and the last finger was hanging with the skin - but that fellow was not even aware that it had hit him - he was just going about his duties”.

And the man whose intestines they shoved inside too miraculously survived. ‘These were the first things I saw,’ he reminisces.

And then came the D Day - 11 December. The H-Hour was 2300 hours. As they prepared for the attack later that night, they had their ‘hot meal’ at the assembly area.

Hot Meal

The truck with the hot meal arrived. ‘Nayyar being the junior-most brought the dal in the mess tin.’

Nayyar who was in Bravo, and Karam Singh who was in Alpha sat with Rai under a tree in the darkness and had the ‘hot meal’ - a mess tin full of dal and a lump of chapatis. The three had shared a room back in Jalandhar.

‘We knew we were going to attack in the next three hours but we never spoke or thought of life and death and the like,’ he muses. Post the meal, the trio shook hands and they joined their respective companies while Rai joined his commanding officer.

The battle that ensued that night was a fierce one. What started at 11 pm on 11 December went on till the wee hours of 12 December with the battalion suffering huge casualties.

‘It was a hand to hand fight, in the hour of darkness. The para illumination by the Pakistanis had the whole area illuminated, there was dust smoke, shelling screaming. This was the first stage,’ he explains, as he takes us through the hours moment by moment.

Both Bravo and Charlie teams who were leading the assault had suffered huge casualties. Rai was behind them with the CO followed by the Alpha and Delta company. If both of these would not succeed, ‘it was going to be a failure. And a failure is the biggest insult for a soldier. He will be disgraced,’ he says.

Rai then chose to lead and pull up the fallen soldiers. ”The company commander had fallen sick. I said no falling back, just follow me. I was flashing the torch on their faces, kicking them to move but we had to see it through. The para flares were giving a ghostly shadow to the ghastly scene around,” he describes.

The hand to hand fight went on up to 1.30 in the night. “You are stabbing someone on a bayonet, hurling a grande. Somebody is shouting ‘ya Ali ya ali’ and cursing in Urdu. But finally, we went and captured the objective and so did Bravo followed by Alpha and Delta,” he says reliving all the moments that made that fateful night.

Red Red Red

Rai recounts the tale of yet another soldier whose sacrifice and daredevilry he says was characteristic of a Sikh soldier.

‘Alpha company had one daredevil named Major Tirath Singh. When he reached the head of the diamond after capturing it he was left with just about 15 men - others were staggering behind or lost.

Pakistanis also didn’t want to give up. It was about 3 in the morning - they launched a counter-attack - as he was the closest to the Pakistanis - he repulsed them, they fell back - after half an hour again they regrouped and attacked him - he was left with just six men.

At this point, Major Tirath Singh knew that if he were to withdraw at that point for the head of the diamond, the balance would be lost.

In those days, explains Rai, there was a thing known as ‘red red red’, which is no longer part of the Indian army operations. ‘Red red red’ meant you asking the artillery to fire on you - ‘you give your position and say here I am at the head of the diamond and say 'fire on me' - because I am having ten men but I am surrounded by 50 enemy soldiers which means if one of us die - at least five die there.’

Getting nostalgic about Singh’s family back in Jalandhar, with two sons who were then aged four and two and his newborn daughter, Rai reminisces the sacrifice that Singh made with utmost pride and honour. Even though the higher commanders asked him to reconsider his decision but he said loud and clear ‘I am asking you red red red’.

So the artillery guns fired on him. And it is during this firing that one of the artillery splinters hit him and he died.

It is because of such men who dared to die that we are sitting here to tell the tale, muses Rai remembering the action-packed night.

‘There is no greater honour for a Sardar than to die on the battlefield. It is true for every warrior but more so for our Sikh soldiers,’ he adds quoting words of Guru Gobind Singh, which, during Rai’s journey with the Sikh Regiment and to this day, fuel his urge to live and die for the nation. ‘Sura so pehchaniye jo lare din ke heth, purja purja kat mare kabhun na chhade khet,’ - the real hero is the one who fights for the weak and even if his limbs be severed bit by hit, he flees not the battlefield’.

In the Line of Duty

As casualties began to rise, the CO sent an officer to get the medical supplies. Recollecting the unfortunate incident where a nursing assistant, KC Mathew was burnt alive, Rai narrates how the entire 3-tonne truck carrying the medical supplies was blown up as it came on an anti-tank mine.

‘The doctor was thrown out of the driver's cabin - his leg was all shattered. The havaldars were all thrown out - one nursing assistant Mathews went up and fell down back in the truck - and the truck got fire - so he was burnt while being semi-conscious. So many soldiers died because medical assistance could not reach them in time,” he laments.

The next morning, he had to do the duty of paying last respects to those who had fallen in the line of duty and the first sheets he lifted revealed the bodies of his two roommates.

Photo taken after the capture of Pakistani Fatehpur post. 2nd Lt I N Rai is second from right.
Photo taken after the capture of Pakistani Fatehpur post. 2nd Lt I N Rai is second from right

Brig(Retd) I N Rai

“Nayyar was leading the men into an MMG bunker that hit his head slicing it like a watermelon. There was no injury anywhere else on his body. But Karam Singh's body was in two pieces as he was hit directly by an anti-tank gun.”

(From Left to Right) Capture Karam Singh, 2nd Lt H P Nayyar, Maj Tirath Singh SM
(From Left to Right) Capture Karam Singh, 2nd Lt H P Nayyar, Maj Tirath Singh SM
Brig.(Retd) I N Rai

For Rai it was the beginning of a long and action-packed career that saw him move from being a second lieutenant to a major to retiring as a brigadier. He also was an instructor at both the premier military institutes in the country, led various troops of soldiers in different parts of the country from Nagaland to Jammu, including leading the same Sikh battalion in its 25th year of raising as its Commanding officer, and was part of the peace keeping force in Sri Lanka, which is when he suffered massive injuries, being in the ICU for three months, among others.

To this day, he is involved with inspiring youth to join the armed forces, take up defence for a career, and is disappointed that the place he comes from has not many youngsters taking pride in wanting to don the olive green.

To those that cite ‘risk to life’ as a deterrent to joining the forces, he says, there were family members who had said aye sayyera popey when he announced his decision to join the army back in 1968, implying he was going to the army to get killed.

But 52 years later, while all those who sneered have left, including his ’siblings who chose safer terrain’, he still is alive and kicking and roaring to do whatever it takes to inspire those that wish to live for the nation, to not fear dying for it. ‘For there can be no better death than that of a soldier’, he signs off.


Saturday, December 12, 2020

Landmark Bills free the Farmer: The Modi Government is Heralding the Path for Farmers to be Atmanirbhar

 SOURCE:  https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/blogs/toi-edit-page/landmark-bills-free-the-farmer-the-modi-government-is-heralding-the-path-for-farmers-to-be-atmanirbhar/


     FARMING IN INDIA IS A WAY OF LIFE. 

   ONLY WAY FOR FARMING TO PROSPEROUS IS BY ENSURING THE INTEREST OF ALL STAKE HOLDERS AND NOT ONLY THE SHARE HOLDERS. - Vasundhra


PART ONE

                       (https://youtu.be/Re7rzoYDdmY)

 VIDEO:  Click / Google to open


OPINION FROM TOI PRINT EDITION

Landmark Bills free the Farmer: The Modi Government is Heralding the Path for Farmers to be Atmanirbhar 

                        By                                           in TOI Edit Page










September 23, 2020.


Indian agriculture has for long suffered from apathy and policies rigged to benefit others at the cost of the farmer. Under successive Congress governments, ringing tributes were ritualistically paid to the industry of “kisan”, but the loudly declared intent to help farmers never translated into ground reality. Committees were formed with the avowed objective of developing agriculture and improving farmers’ lot, only to consign the recommendations of experts commissioned for the job to the growing pile of files never acted upon.

The sickeningly dishonest and dreary pattern was junked in 2014, with the BJP government under Prime Minister Narendra Modi determinedly trying to remove the fetters which kept farmers from fully harnessing the potential of Indian agriculture. From the focus on improving the acreage under irrigation and encouraging farmers to diversify into allied activities such as dairying and beekeeping, to hikes in MSP and direct financial assistance worth thousands of crores, a series of measures have marked a fresh approach which stands out from the false, populist pronouncements made by previous governments.

This approach has now seen the passage of two landmark bills by Parliament: Agricultural Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Simplification) Bill and Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Price Assurance Bill. The protests against them represent political dishonesty and the influence of middlemen, considering that they together with changes in Essential Commodities Act to remove cap on stock holdings can herald a New Deal for the agriculture sector.


The first bill is aimed at liberating the farmer from the oppressively unjust situation he had been locked in. He was forced to sell his produce at the local market, where factors such as the domination of a cartel, price information asymmetry, and poor infrastructure worked to his detriment. If the ordeal of having to wait endlessly in adverse and humiliating conditions forced him to submit to the ruthless mandi mafia, high transportation costs ate into his already meagre profit. This virtually amounted to a state sanctioned heist.

Once the first legislation is enacted, farmers will be freed from the grip of the middleman, and able to sell their produce to buyers from across the country at a price they deem to be fair and at a time of their choosing. Freedom to sell at the farm gate will do away with transportation expenses, and thus boost incomes. This is a giant stride towards the fulfilment of the dream of ‘One Nation, One Market’ 73 years after Independence.

The second soon-to-be enacted law will help farmers go for contract farming with agriculture trade firms, wholesalers, big retailers and exporters. The provision of market linkages at the sowing stage itself will insulate them from production and price vagaries. It will also lead to introduction of better technologies, technical assistance, crop insurance and credit facilities. Contract farming will also encourage private investment in the financially starved sector and open the way for growth of agro-based industries and better storage, thus removing shackles which caused stagnation. This will lead to higher income for farmers who will be able to modernise farming methods and innovate to suit the demand for cash crops and agro-industry.

In many states, affluent farmers have already been reaping the benefits of collaboration with the corporate sector. This law will help small farmers derive similar gains. They will have the freedom to withdraw from this agreement at any point without penalty, while sale, lease and mortgage of the land will be completely prohibited.

The allegations that the twin legislations are anti-farmer are baseless and have been raised by Congress and others as a smokescreen to cover their failures. Congress promised to repeal the APMC Act in its 2019 manifesto, but is now putting the interests of middlemen over those of farmers.

The conduct of these political parties in Rajya Sabha during passage of these bills is a dark blot on Indian democracy and parliamentary decorum. It reflects their frustration over loss of support and anti-farmer mindset. That alone can explain the propaganda that has been unleashed that enactment of the two laws will lead to abolition of MSP. The lie has already been exposed with the announcement of MSP for rabi crops this week and with the government’s solemn declarations inside and outside Parliament that MSP will continue.

Since 2013-14, MSP for wheat and paddy has increased by 41% and 43% respectively, while there has been up to 65% rise in MSP for pulses and oilseeds. The quantity of wheat and paddy procured has also increased by 73% and 114% respectively, compared to 2014. In the case of pulses, the increase has been a staggering 4,962%. Increased agriculture credit, higher loan subsidy, soil health card to 16.38 crore farmers, increased support for mechanisation and launch of the Rs 1 lakh crore Agriculture Infrastructure Fund etc have been hallmarks of the Modi government’s effort to help farmers. During this government’s tenure, production of foodgrain has increased by 7.29%, horticulture by 12.4% and pulses by 20.65% respectively. The Modi government has also provided security cover to 13.26 crore farmers under PM crop insurance scheme and direct cash benefit of Rs 94,000 crore to 10.21 crore farmers through PM Kisan Samman Nidhi.

Sardar Patel had famously said, “If anyone has the right to walk on this earth with their head held high, it is the farmer of the country, who produces the wealth of the earth.” Today, I feel proud to say that BJP government under Modi’s leadership has taken historic and bold initiatives to empower the country’s farmers and make them ‘Atmanirbhar’.


Thursday, December 10, 2020

ASSASSINATION PART - 2 Assassinated By Remote Control : Mohsen Fakhrizadeh: Father of Iranian N-Bomb :

 IN THE REALM OF ASSASSINATION , ESPIONAGE 

                                          AND

 TARGET KILLING THE TRUTH IS THE FIRST CASUALTY. 


                  IT MAY OR MAY NEVER COME OUT

Jael and Sisera, by Artemisia Gentileschi.


SOURCE:  (a)  https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/37882/lets-talk-about-remote-controlled-gun-turrets-and-the-killing-of-irans-top-nuclear-scientist

( b )      https://www.google.com/search?safe=active&rlz=1C1ZKTG_enIN928IN928&sxsrf=ALeKk01He9GvE8biWfqgWIN9KsG42566hw:1607665137141&source=univ&tbm=isch&q=he+SMASH+2000+gunsight,&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj52aqrm8XtAhUDzjgGHajuCnEQjJkEegQIDBAB&biw=1536&bih=780


INDEX

 ( B)   SER 2 - ASSASSINATION PART 2 :-      https://bcvasundhra.blogspot.com/2020/12/assassination-part-2-assassinated-by.html

( A)     SER 1 - ASSASSINATION PART 1 :-     https://bcvasundhra.blogspot.com/2020/12/assassination.html







Video : Click / Google to open ( https://youtu.be/pyXdB_AYiDs )


             ASSASSINATION PART - 2 

Assassinated By Remote Control : Mohsen Fakhrizadeh:  Father of Iranian N-Bomb :


How a Nissan pickup with enough explosive in it to kill 150 metres away (besides a remote controlled machine gun with ammunition that could be accurately aimed and used) was positioned at the exact spot on one of many routes Fakhrizadeh could have taken definitely suggests local collaborators within Iran. The full details will emerge months and years later, if at all. Luck, bad for the victim and good for the perpetrator is also a factor, If Fakhrizadeh had not got out of his armoured vehicle, the outcome could have been different.

This is the second killing of Iranian leadership this year by Israelis/ US using remotely controlled devices. 

On 9 January 2020, Qassem Soleimani, a General of Iran Revolutionary Guards stepped off a Cham Wings flight at Baghdad airport, He was paranoid about security for months if not years, being on US kill lists. He was met by a familiar face, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, deputy head of the Hashd al-Shaabi Iraqi paramilitary, a long standing ally of the Iranian general and a close friend.

With him was a small reception party and two vehicles, ready to whisk the head of Iran's Quds force back to Muhandis' Green Zone home, his usual address when on one of his frequent visits to the Iraqi capital. This time, something was very different. A US Reaper drone was hovering and ready to strike, and within minutes the two men would be dead on a road right next to Baghdad airport.

Such folks do not pass through the regular formal channels and get their passports stamped at airports. They do not use smartphones. They move in ordinary cars with the fewest possible number of people knowing date of time of their arrival or routes they would take. Obviously, there were fatal security leaks which allowed precise and exact knowledge of not just their whereabouts but also their intended and real-time movements. Occasionally, as on this Friday, Soleimani would land at Baghdad International Airport. Sometimes he would arrive at Najaf's instead, or cross from Iran at the Munthiriya border crossing in Diyala governorate, some 120km east of Baghdad. Increasingly, he flew into northern Iraq's Kurdistan region, before travelling south to Baghdad by car. Sensible precautions that ensure security. From analysis of experts none of those other routes would have saved Soleimani as per a leader of the Iran-backed Lebanese Hezbollah movement. "He had been betrayed by his itinerary during the final 36 hours of his life".

Overall, it was extremely difficult to track them. But Damascus and Baghdad airports are full of pro-American intelligence sources, and because of this they were located by the metre and by the minute. Either through a planted tracker or an on-ground observer or both. A Reaper has 14 hours endurance and has to be 'on target' for a designated window of no more than a few hour or so, suggesting use of multiple drones in a relay deployment.




Graphic is clearest and best viewed when enlarged on a laptop or desktop screen

The method used last week is different than the January killing. Instead of using Drone(s) flying thousands of feet above ground, the killer device was located on ground. In both instances the cost, time and effort is huge because of the kind of intelligence needed/ used. Over weeks and months security measures, movement and habit profiles of the victim are developed. Finally intelligence assets have to be present physically on ground near the intended target to locate and track the target of assasination.

Defence against such attacks will rarely come from physical measures like bodyguards or convoys of (armoured/ protected) vehicles. The targets will, like Osama bin Laden, will have to change routine and habits and be in deep protection. That too as in OBL's case did not work in the end.

Let's Talk About Remote-Controlled Gun Turrets And The Killing Of Iran's Top Nuclear Scientist

The scenario sounds like something straight out of a Hollywood blockbuster, but lightweight remote-controlled gun turrets do indeed exist.



A senior Iranian official has now claimed that Israel killed top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh last week using a gun in either a remote-controlled or entirely automated mount on a pickup truck and that no actual human assassins were involved. No hard evidence has been provided to substantiate this assertion, which sounds like it was ripped straight from the 1997 action movie The Jackal, but it's not entirely implausible. In July, an Israeli company unveiled a man-portable gun turret that it says can scan for and lock on to targets automatically and then be fired by an operator using a wireless, tablet-like device.

Ali Shamkhani, a General in Iran's powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) who serves as Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, made the claim during the funeral procession for Fakhrizadeh earlier today. Iran's semi-official Fars news agency, which has ties to the IRGC, appears to have first reported these details about the purported remote assassination yesterday. The attack that killed the Iranian nuclear scientist, himself an IRGC officer and who U.S. and Israeli intelligence have assessed to have been in charge of Iranian nuclear weapons development efforts for decades, took place in the city of Absard, less than 50 miles east of the Iranian capital Tehran, on Nov. 27. You can read more about what was known at that time in The War Zone's initial reporting on this incident.



"The enemy used a completely new method, style, and professional and specialized way to succeed in reaching its goal," Shamkhani subsequently declared at Fakhrizadeh's funeral. 

IRGC General Ali Shamkhani, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.

Per Shamkhani's remarks and Fars' report from Sunday, as well as other news stories from Iranian outlets, Fakhrizadeh was headed with his wife for a weekend in Absard at the time of the attack. The black Nissan sedan they were driving in was part of a four-vehicle convoy. 

Shortly after the convoy made a turn, an electronically-controlled gun turret located inside a parked blue Nissan pickup truck shot at the sedan carrying Fakhrizadeh. The car came to a stop and the scientist is said to have gotten out, apparently unaware that the sounds he heard of objects hitting the vehicle were actually gunfire.






The gun then continued to fire, with bullets hitting Fakhrizadeh in the side and back, including at least one that left his spine severed, according to Fars. A bodyguard, who may have also been in the car, tried to save him by jumping on top of him and was also wounded, per the report. 
The pickup truck then exploded.




It's unclear how many other casualties there may have been in total. Fakhrizadeh was reportedly rushed to a local medical clinic before being flown by helicopter to a military hospital in Tehran, where he succumbed to his wounds. Other reports have asserted that the gun turret was “controlled by satellite" and that the weapon was recovered and had "the logo and specifications of the Israeli military industry." No pictures have been released, so far, claiming to show any remains of the gun or its automated mount.

What is absolutely important to note here is this version of events almost entirely contradicts Fars' own initial reporting of the incident, which said that the explosion had occurred first and that a team of gunmen had then killed Fakhrizadeh. This scenario seemed to suggest a complex attack in which the explosive-laden truck was used to first bring the convoy to a halt. 

That report also claimed that three to four people had died at the scene, including all of the attackers. Other Iranian media reports later said that a dozen gunmen had been involved in the assassination and that a 50-person support team had also been in the country to help carry out the attack. Previous assassinations, including of other Iranian nuclear scientists, attributed to Israel have involved a mixture of bombs mounted on cars and other vehicles, as well as gunmen on motorcycles.

The gun turret story feels better suited to a Hollywood blockbuster. It is perhaps most reminiscent of 1997's The Jackal, in which the titular hitman, played by Bruce Willis, attempts to assassinate the First Lady of the United States using a remote-controlled heavy machine gun concealed inside a minivan.

Video : Click / Google to open  ( https://youtu.be/pyXdB_AYiDs )




Video : Click / Google to open  (  https://youtu.be/v3e2maV8MlQ )



At the same time, as already noted, in July, Israeli company Smart Shooter debuted the newest addition to its SMASH product family, the SMASH Hopper, also known as the Light Remote-Controlled Weapon Station (LRCWS). This system combines a gun equipped with the SMASH 2000 computerized gunsight and a remotely operated mount that the company says can be installed on a tripod or a pedestal mount on the ground or on a vehicle. You can read more about this system in this past War Zone piece all about it.

Video : Click / Google to open

https://youtu.be/DNej1dwTjW4
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 The SMASH 2000 Computerized Gunsight and a Remotely Operated Mount 
The SMASH 2000 gunsight, which doesn't require an automated gunmount, already has the ability to automatically detect targets and lock on to them, only allowing the operator to fire when they are most likely to score a hit. You can read more about this sight in this previous War Zone story





What are the anti-drone Israeli SMASH 2000 Plus systems Navy has ordered?


SMASH Hopper builds on the inherent capabilities of the SMASH 2000, giving an operator the ability to set the turret to automatically scan and then lock on to targets and then giving the command to fire. The user can also manually operate the turret, if desired. All of this can be done using a tablet-type device either physically connected to the turret via a wire or through a wireless connection. 

An even lighter weight remotely-operated system, SMASH Hopper Light, is also available with many of the same capabilities. It uses a special, proprietary tripod and has a more limited field of fire than the standard SMASH Hopper when deployed, but it can be carried and emplaced by a single person.

Smart Shooter's promotional images show SMASH Hopper and SMASH Hopper Light fitted with 5.56mm AR-15/M16 pattern carbines. Its product material says that the full-size system, at least, can also accommodate 7.62mm caliber weapons based on the Stoner SR-25 pattern rifle.

As such, it's certainly possible that the hit team could have set up a remotely-operated turret, such as SMASH Hopper, in the Nissan pickup and operated it remotely from somewhere nearby, or even set it to function in a semi-autonomous fire mode, although that seems less likely. Of course, it's equally possible, if not far more plausible, that Iran, embarrassed that a top nuclear scientist was killed in broad daylight in the middle of the country, is effectively asserting that the assassination succeeded only because its enemies employed "a completely new method" as Shamkhani put it.

It's also possible that both scenarios are partially true. That this new technology was leveraged as part of the hit, but that actual hitman also took part in making sure Iran's prized scientist didn't live to see another day. Often times, some sort of diversion can be beneficial in these types of attacks. Having a vehicle ahead open fire with a remote gun turret would certainly qualify for such a diversion. 

All this being said, the Iranian government has yet to provide any hard evidence to support any of the reported chains of events that led to Fakhrizadeh's death, whether the attack involved some kind of remote-controlled turret or not. It remains to be seen whether or not any such additional information, including supposed pictures of any weapons used in the attack, will emerge given the broad consensus, inside Iran and elsewhere, that Israel was responsible, regardless of the method.

It's still important to note that the idea that Fakhrizadeh was killed in a remote-controlled ambush of some kind is not entirely out of the realm of possibility. Precisely this type of capability does exist, and not in a big heavy form, and it is indeed manufactured in Israel. This could be all the more reason for Iranian officials to point to this technology as the culprit of the assassination, regardless of any proof it was actually present or not. 








Using sophisticated algorithms, the technology calculates the movement of a target and predicts where it is likely to be via advanced image processing. 


 lighter weight remotely-operated system, SMASH Hopper Light,
 
Mini Variant of SMASH 2000 Plus



The theatre of modern warfare is constantly evolving with today's infantryman facing a whole host of new threats that never existed previously. Drones, for instance, have revolutionised the ways in which states carry out attacks, often offering inexpensive and highly effective solutions to undertake strikes without the need to risk personnel. 

But in the same way that nation-states can use drones, adversaries may also benefit. Weaponised drones pose an increasingly clear and present threat to soldiers stationed at sensitive or vulnerable locations. Identifying and taking out a fast-moving unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) can prove a futile challenge even for the greatest of sharpshooters. 

In order to address this threat, weapons designers across the world have developed a whole slew of solutions ranging from the use of trained eagles to locate and latch on to drones in mid-air to radio jamming technology. 



N THE REALM OF ASSASSINATION , ESPIONAGE 

                                          AND

 TARGET KILLING THE TRUTH IS THE FIRST CASUALTY. 


                  IT MAY OR MAY NEVER COME OUT