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DRDO policy gaffes attract international flak

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Broadsword: DRDO policy gaffes attract international flak

by Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 22nd June 10


New Delhi’s moral and ethical protestations that India’s space programme is entirely peaceful are facing embarrassing questioning after the Defence R&D Organisation (DRDO) --- apparently oblivious of the policy implications of its statements ---- publicly announced a roadmap for its ambitious military space programme.

Last month, the DRDO published its “Technology Perspective and Capability Roadmap” or TPCR, which declared that the “development of ASAT (anti-satellite weaponry) for electronic or physical destruction of satellites in both LEO (low earth orbit) and Geo-synchronous orbit” can be expected to be completed by 2015.

Now, in a web article demanding that the US should rein in India’s “defiant military space programme”, Matthew Hoey of the Military Space Transparency Project (MSTP) --- a US-based NGO that tracks the weaponization of space --- has pointed out that the DRDO’s statement “blatantly contradicts statements by Indian political leaders that deny any intent by their nation to pursue space weapons”.

The MSTP report asks why India is being allowed to adopt double standards. In January 2007, after China had launched a kinetic kill vehicle (KKV) to smash into its own aging Fengyun (FY-1C) satellite, then-foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee had protested, “the security and safety of assets in outer space is of crucial importance for global economic and social development. We call upon all States to redouble efforts to strengthen the international legal regime for the peaceful use of outer space.”

India’s prime minister had criticised China’s test as forthrightly. The MSTP report points out that, at a joint press conference with Russian president Vladimir Putin on 27th Jan 2007, Dr Manmohan Singh had declared, “Our position is similar in that we are not in favour of the weaponization of outer space.”

Matthew Hoey scathingly describes this contradiction: “While top Indian military officials (i.e. DRDO) set ambitious milestones for destructive military space systems, Indian political leaders make contradictory claims about the nation’s peaceful intentions for outer space”.

This is not the first time that the DRDO has openly repudiated New Delhi’s official line. Hoey points to a report entitled “Military Dimensions in the Future of the Indian Presence in Space”, published in 2000 by Dr V Siddhartha, an officer on the personal staff of the DRDO chief, which indicated that India could deploy a directed energy weapon in space by 2010, and also a system called the KALI (kinetic attack loitering interceptor).

Like so many DRDO programmes, the KALI’s development time frame has turned out to be wildly optimistic. But the MSTP report alleges that the Siddhartha’s report “is testament to, at the very least, a clear intention within the Indian military of deploying not only a space-based laser but also an ASAT system.”

Equating the DRDO’s defiance of international norms with that of North Korea and Iran, Hoey’s article declares that the setting of “target dates for the development of anti-satellite systems by any nation should be considered shocking particularly given the scrutiny that was paid to nations such as China and the US when they each demonstrated a direct-ascent ability to strike satellites in space.”

The Outer Space Treaty, which entered into force on October 10, 1967 and has been ratified by about a hundred countries, including India, bans the placement of weapons of mass destruction in space. The Space Preservation Treaty, which seeks to extend this ban to all weapons, has found no support from any major country. Only the city of Berkeley, California, has signed this treaty, and a tiny portion of the University of California has been declared a “space-based weapons-free zone”.


An ASAT treaty --- which would ban the development of ground-based weapons that could shoot down satellites in space --- is even more improbable. Technologically capable countries, including India, pay lip service to the peaceful use of outer space, while going ahead with developing ASAT weapons. But such activities are masked, not flaunted, as the DRDO has done. In 2002, the provocatively named US Space Command was quietly merged with the US Strategic Command.
 
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Why Ajai Shukla couldn't think the positive implications of the DRDO announcement? Its well known that China betrayed the world with test of ASAT and tried their best to hide it. But in our case its opposite. When India's BMD system was under development no one knew about it until first tested on December 2006. DRDO kept it secret as there is no serious implication of developing a BMD but that not the case with ASAT. If India suddenly come up with an ASAT system than it can hurt our relations with certain countries. So its better to give a hint that our system is purely for defensive actions. As of now I think no country officially raised question about this new development other than those so called 'arms control' goons.
 
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Why Ajai Shukla couldn't think the positive implications of the DRDO announcement? Its well known that China betrayed the world with development of ASAT and trying their best to hide it. But in our case its opposite. When BMD system was under development no one knew about it until it was first tested on December 2006. DRDO kept it secret as there is no serious implications of developing a BMD but that not the case with ASAT. If India suddenly come up with an ASAT system than it can hurt our relations with certain countries. So its better to give a hint that our system is purely for defensive actions. As of now I don't think no country officially raised question about this new development other than those so called 'arms control' goons.

buddy the problem is if some one does something our media blindly exploits the cause without a clue about the future consequenses
now a days it has been common in indian media
 
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buddy the problem is if some one does something our media blindly exploits the cause without a clue about the future consequenses
now a days it has been common in indian media

Yeah, bashing govt organisations specially scientific ones are very easy way of getting some PR now a days. Above all our media is really crazy what the West think about them specially US. Some times they give unnecessary importance to totally useless staffs as they are from US!
 
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This , article seems wrong in so many ways

also a system called the KALI (kinetic attack loitering interceptor).

That can't be right , any one who thinks that's what KALI stands for is daft.
 
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KALI (kinetic attack loitering interceptor).

huh..:hitwall:
 
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Yeah, bashing govt organisations specially scientific ones are very easy way of getting some PR now a days. Above all our media is really crazy what the West think about them specially US. Some times they give unnecessary importance to totally useless staffs as they are from US!
They are absolutely going crazy now days.... That too in terms of defense news horrible......... Where is the double standard as mentioned in the article?
When others are developing weapons what do u expect the DRDO to do? Keep shouting like the politicians?
 
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what kind of double standards,where was this media and the self declared protectors of world when china tested the ASAT,what happened to the same media when the protectors themselves shoot down their own satellite

this is a totally :blah::blah::blah:
 
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