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" Given who we had in the past , Parrikar is a Gem of Wisdom "

Indo-guy

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'Given who we had in the past, Parrikar is a gem of wisdom' - Rediff.com India News


There is no stopping retired army colonel and strategic affairs, defence and diplomacy expert Ajai Shukla when it comes to Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar.
Colonel Shukla demolishes Parrikar's arguments defending the Coast Guard operation off Porbandar when it sunk an alleged terrorist boat with a Pakistani crew, or when he holds fort on the sacking of Defence and Research Development Organisation Director General Avinash Chander.
Prasanna D Zore/Rediff.com spoke with Colonel Shukla for his insights on the sinking of the Pakistani boat, the DRDO chief's dissmisal and his expectations from the defence minister.
In your report in Business Standard you mentioned that the Coast Guard intercepted the target vessel deep inside international waters, thereby violating international law.
If this is a violation, then who has the jurisdiction to take action against the Coast Guard and why wasn't any action taken?

There is a very grey, murky area in international law.
Territorial waters start 12 nautical miles (22.224 km) outside a country's base line; beyond that are international waters. This is mandated by the United Nations Convention on the Laws of the Seas.
Then up to 200 nautical miles (370.4 km) out from your base line is your Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).
These (where the Coast Guard sunk the Pakistani boat) are not territorial waters, these are international waters. You just have the right to exploit them economically.
There is really no convention; there is really a grey area; that's why you saw when those Italian marines killed Indian fishermen, we arrested them and brought them to India. Prosecuting them is going to be difficult because there aren't clear cut laws and conventions (about such incidents -- the sinking of the Pakistani boats and the Italian marines killing Indian fishermen).
The question of jurisdiction is very unclear on all these aspects.
What is absolutely clear, without any doubt is they (the Coast Guard and Italian marines) were in international waters (outside of 12 nautical miles from India's base line when they sunk the Pakistani boat), not in our territorial waters.
The UNCLOS does not specifically lay down if these are the violations like it is spelt out in the Indian Penal Code.
UNCLOS just mandates that these (waters beyond 12 nautical miles from the base line) are international waters and everybody is free to make use of them.
It's all very grey.
Are we clear that no action can be taken against the Coast Guard given the murky areas you spoke about?
There is nobody who can take action against the Coast Guard. The people who will pay the price are Indian fishermen who will face reprisals from the other side.
Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar has been categorical in saying that the Pakistani boat sunk by the Coast Guard had terrorists who went down with the boat. Shouldn't one take him at face value?
There were many newspaper reports that pointed out flaws in the defence minister's version. While it is nobody's case that the media should 'kill' such stories that questions the actions of any government, do you think the media went overboard with the coverage of the sinking of this boat off Porbandar?
Do we need to draw a line while reporting incidents of this type?

We certainly need to draw a line; and that line is the line between truth and lies.
Defence Minister Parrikar told lies in this case.
Any objective evaluation of every facet of what is claimed and what is possible would show that Manohar Parrikar is trying to justify a botched operation.
One should certainly not take what he says at face value, nor should one entirely dismiss what he is saying without careful consideration.
What I am saying is the careful consideration of the facts of the case and the claims made by the defence minister don't hold water.
Do you get a sense that based on what the defence minister put forward or his ministry put forward, that this was a botched operation...
This was, in my opinion, clearly a botched operation. And the defence minister, poor man, had no choice but to justify it. He has not done a very good job
When you come out to justify a botched operation as the defence minister of a country, it's your job to prepare facts , gets your facts accurate, get a credible story in place and disseminate it credibly.
He has done a botched job of botching up a botched operation.
Are the gaps pointed out by the media in the defence minister's version valid? Like the one in your report about the Coast Guard chasing the ship for almost an hour, despite the Coast Guard's interceptor boat being more technologically advanced compared to the Pakistani boat it chased and later sunk?
He (Parrikar) said at one part of his interview that the Coast Guard officers saw that they were not dressed like normal fishermen. Then he says they did not come closer than one kilometre to this boat.
Are they observing these people wearing half pants in the middle of the night from a one kilometre distance?
Then he says, they (the coast Guard) fired warning shots.
From a distance of one kilometre, how can you fire a warning shot with any degree of accuracy or any certainty that you are not going to hit the boat?
His arguments were just puerile.
They are an insult to the intelligence of any military person who is evaluating the situation.
What about the sacking of DRDO chief Avinash Chander? Is this a UPA versus NDA game being played on DRDO's turf? The UPA gave him an extension. The NDA sacked him.
I wouldn't say that. I have no evidence to say that.
If one were to argue it from the other viewpoint, then (V K) Saraswat (the former DRDO Chief who is now a full-time member of the NITI Aayog that replaced the Planning Commission) was also a UPA appointee.
It is true that Saraswat turned around and joined the VIF (Vivekananda International Foundation, a New Delhi-based think-tank once headed by current National Security Adviser Ajit Doval) after retirement and overtly waived the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party) flag.
But I don't think this is as simple as a BJP versus UPA game.
I think there are also components of a genuine wish to try and reform the DRDO... to try and bring in younger people, to try and recreate accountability for platforms (that the DRDO builds indigenously), and so on. There is all of that.
But in trying to send a signal, the government has actually shot one of the most visible symbols of success of the DRDO.
Avinash Chander has enjoyed success in almost every project that he has handled; both at the individual and chief controller level.
True, once you become chief of the DRDO, you become responsible for every project of the DRDO and as soon as you go out of the missile field and encompass all the other fields you then encounter a lot of lack of success which is not so common in the missile field.
The missile field has more success than lack of success. In the rest of the DRDO there is more lack of success than success.
To that extent, Avinash Chander was responsible for those projects that missed time deadlines and budgets.
But given his personal record it seems a little hard on the man.
So the defence minister saying he wanted somebody younger to take care of DRDO sounds puerile to you?
He is most welcome to take my six-year-old daughter!
Is the man actually trying to say that the line on which the chief (of DRDO) should be chosen is not competence versus incompetence, but youth versus age?
There are plenty of scientists who are productive and extremely useful and whose age is well beyond 75 and there are plenty of nincompoops, of the age of 35.
This is not a mature argument. One is to choose people and sack them based on the lack of competence or competence. Not based on their age. It is the same old problem.
There is a wish to reduce complex issues to a simple formula and you end up going wrong every time you try to do that.
You have to deal with complex issues as complex issues. Issues in the DRDO are not youth versus age. Issues there are competence versus incompetence. And I think that's what they have not recognised well.
Do you think Parrikar, given his clean image, will weed out middlemen from all the defence deals that take place on his watch ?
No. Parrikar is not trying to weed out middlemen. He is trying to bring back middlemen.
Parrikar is reintroducing middlemen on the assumption that middlemen are not always bad. Middlemen serve a useful purpose and they need to be regulated.
Here, I believe, Parrikar has a valid viewpoint.
Just drumming out local representatives of international arms companies only drives the trade under the blanket. It is not like companies don't have representatives, or companies can do without them.
If you are doing business in India, foreign companies currently only have two alternatives: They set up an office here at enormous costs, and all that cost, make no mistake, is loaded on to the weapons system they sell to you. They are not going to pay from their own pocket. So, you end up paying more for your weapons system.
The other alternative the companies use is to have some kind of shady representatives who are never acknowledged or who lobby and act on behalf of your company, which is also counterproductive. Why do you want that to happen?
Rather have them out in the open; have a registered agent who is monitored and who can perform certain laid down functions and is prohibited from performing other functions (indulging in corrupt practices).
Do you think the regulation of these middlemen, the lobbyists, in arms deals will weed out corruption from defence deals that take place in India?
I think, once again, we are trying to reduce an extremely complex problem to a simple formula.
Corruption takes place due to multiple reasons.
Isn't that the reason the defence minister wants middlemen regulated, because he wants to curb corruption, clean up the system?
What the defence minister would do well is to start regulating his own officials in his ministry rather than regulating the middlemen.
This is like the Indira Gandhi school of thought that all corruption comes from outside, the 'foreign hand' argument.
The reason why there is corruption is because the ministry of defence is corrupt to the core. And just removing or regulating foreign arms agents is not going to do away with that corruption.
What Parrikar needs to do is track down corruption all round and especially within his ministry.
What are the three things you expect from Defence Minister Parrikar?
I expect lots of mis-statements based on his demonstrated records.
His sort of extremely terminological inexactitude is a serious problem with him. He doesn't seem to understand the difference between exclusive economic zones, territorial waters... these are technical terms... the ministry of defence is a technical ministry.
And I think if he goes on like this it is going to be very difficult for the people to get a signal of what exactly he means.
First thing I am expecting from him is a lot of confusion because of this.
The second thing I am expecting is unless Parrikar, sort of, starts going into the depth of the problems, he is only going to compound the problem rather than resolve it.
He needs to understand that problems of the ministry of defence are extremely complex and you cannot reduce it to a simple formula.
Like, a minister should not come out and say, 'Oh, all problems are because we have not been buying weaponry' and go out there, open the door and start buying weaponry, and open the coffers. That is not going to solve the problem either.
The next expectation is that Parrikar is going to have to realise the complexity of the problem other than finding simple fixes that he thinks will solve problems in his ministry.
The third thing that I am expecting is sort of more emphasis on the human dimension of the military: Pay and allowances, pensions, welfare measures, personnel policies, harassment or ex-servicemen by courts and so on... all of that is going to stop now.
He has already signalled that and that is one of his thrust areas. That's one area where he has taken useful measures and done good; that is one area that shows encouraging signs.
You said if Parrikar delves into complex issues, he will further compound them. Do you think the defence minister is a misfit?
No, I won't say he is a misfit. Given who we had in the past, given the track records of past (defence ministers), Parrikar is a gem of wisdom and light. It is just that we have our standards so low that anybody looks good now.
I am not saying Parrikar is useless; I am saying Parrikar is going to have to take time and effort to understand the complexity of the problems.
I do not discount that he has a sincere wish to change things. I don't discount that he has the ability to change things.
I just hope that he doesn't think that he has already started changing things because so far he has changed very little.
He has made lot of statements and most of them smack of simplicity rather than complex understanding of a complex problem.





@sancho , @Star Wars @Guynextdoor2
Interesting analysis by Mr Ajai Shukla @jbgt90
 
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Excellent interview. Shukla is bang on.

I believe he has been quite objective ...
He has given credit where it is due ..and he tears through the flaws where sees ones ...

It is quite balanced .

I agreed with part about Parrikar's stance on botched up operation as well as his act of terminating DRDRO chief
 
It seems any tom dick and harry becomes a minister in India.:rofl:
 
I agreed...as well as his act of terminating DRDRO chief

I think you have a different stand than he has:

True, once you become chief of the DRDO, you become responsible for every project of the DRDO and as soon as you go out of the missile field and encompass all the other fields you then encounter a lot of lack of success which is not so common in the missile field.
The missile field has more success than lack of success. In the rest of the DRDO there is more lack of success than success.
To that extent, Avinash Chander was responsible for those projects that missed time deadlines and budgets.
 
I think you have a different stand than he has:

I meant the reason that was given to terminate DRDO chief ..to bring someone younger .

Mr Ajai Shuklas goes in this kind of behavious in detail.

You can't reduce all complex problem to such simplistic solutions ....

That line of reasoning ..he points out is flawed .

He also says the manner in which he was removed was also not befitting ...

those points I agree ....

Let us see what young blood Mr parrikar brings to transform DRDO

Believe me after 5 years we can ...reopen this thread again


you will find that nothing has really changed with DRDO .
 
I meant the reason that was given to terminate DRDO chief ..to bring someone younger .

Mr Ajai Shuklas goes in this kind of behavious in detail.

You can't reduce all complex problem to such simplistic solutions ....

That line of reasoning ..he points out is flawed .

True, but one can't leave him out of his responsibility as the DRDO chief, based on past success as a program manager either. So it's not like he was sacked only to get younger people in, but for good reasons. What needs to be seen now, is if the new Chief can change things to the positive side, then the DM made everything right in this case.

On the article, surprisingly good and interesting, maybe because Ajay Shukla didn't wrote it by himself and was an interview partner. ;)
I'm kind of surprised though by the strong statements, of calling the DM a liar. The DM clearly didn't looked that well in the whole issue, but neither was any foulplay proven so far.
 
True, but one can't leave him out of his responsibility as the DRDO chief, based on past success as a program manager either. So it's not like he was sacked only to get younger people in, but for good reasons. What needs to be seen now, is if the new Chief can change things to the positive side, then the DM made everything right in this case.

On the article, surprisingly good and interesting, maybe because Ajay Shukla didn't wrote it by himself and was an interview partner. ;)
I'm kind of surprised though by the strong statements, of calling the DM a liar. The DM clearly didn't looked that well in the whole issue, but neither was any foulplay proven so far.

The reason that was cited by parrikar for terminating contract was that because he wanted someone younger ..

that's what he has repeatedly said to media or on TV ...

He did not say that Parrikar was sacked due to delay in projects ...That's the first point .

Ajai Shukla tears through this argument superbly ....well you can have someone younger ...but this is not just matter of old or young . Previous govt gave extension to Mr Chander ...there must have been some reasons to do that .

But No Mr parrikar wants somebody new ...so let us see .

He had his way ...and he exercised his power . so now onus is on him ...

As far as Mr ajai Shukla is concerned . we should give credit where it is due . I personally liked it ...because it is by and large balanced analysis .

as far as boat episode is concerned ...Mr Parrikar ..I do not know why he had to give media bytes , press releases before ascertaining all facts ....You saw how he came up with ridiculous cyanide theory ... so I will not blame Me Ajai Shukla for calling DM a liar ...because A lie is a lie ....
 
as far as boat episode is concerned ...Mr Parrikar ..I do not know why he had to give media bytes , press releases before ascertaining all facts ....You saw how he came up with ridiculous cyanide theory ... so I will not blame Me Ajai Shukla for calling DM a liar ...because A lie is a lie ....

Yes that's what I wondered too, it looked more like a PR show, that got a U turn. If the operation was boched though, a simple MoD press release would had been better to not reveal to much and keep the DM's credibility. Lets say he was new in the game and has to learn. Other than that he does have some interesting views and ideas though, lets see how far he gets and what actually will come out of it.
 
This thread has a bunch of Congress supporters who are blinded by their support for Sonia and Rahul. Hearing this dimwit Shukla stating we are wrong for going after that ship makes me very annoyed. Has he forgotten how many times, our country has been attacked because of inactive alzy politicans who force our defence forces to lie down? I rather be proactive at all costs than see any Indian die as a result of it. That ship blew up....and sank. It wasn't an accident and the size of the explosion reveals there was much more than fuel!
 
In comparison Mr.Parikar is Great grand father of MoD :D

Bloody kangaroos party spoiled our nation for many decades. We deserve to in much better position than we are today .
 
In public Parikar is require to stand by the Coast Guard so he did the right thing.

He is free to act against incompetence away from public glare. (if any) Those who do not get this are either stupid or biased :coffee:

BTW here is an article that says "real story".

Real reasons behind DRDO chief Avinash Chander's sacking | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis

Three major complaints against Defence Research andDevelopmentOrganisation (DRDO) chief Avinash Chander, including two anonymous ones, were pending before the Prime Minister's Office in November 2014, when he was given a contract of 16 months on his retirement. It is reliably learnt that investigations into the complaints went against him and thus he was summarily sacked two months after the extension in service.

What were the complaints about?
According to RTI by Uttarakhand-based Prabhu Dandriyal in December 2014, and accessed by dna, PMO had stated that it had received three complaints against Avinash Chander. The details of the two complaints could not be ascertained. The third complaint was filed by R K Gupta of Advance System Laboratory, Hyderabad. According to PMO sources, Gupta had made an allegation against DRDO chiefAvinash Chanderfor favouring his junior. Gupta was apparently superseded by his junior scientist by bending the rules, sources added.

Why was the PM peeved?
Chander had to face PM's ire also because of the mess in the DRDO. As per the PMO estimates losses worth around Rs 29,000 crore were accrued due to time and cost overruns in acquisitions/developmental projects. For example, the indigenousAircraft Carrierwill now cost Rs 19,341 crore from its original cost of Rs 3,241 crore. Similarly, in case of the Stealth Guided Missile Destroyer, the cost has been revised from Rs 3,850 crore to Rs 11,662 crore and timelines have been revised from 2010-11 to 2015-16.

What did dna report highlight?
In December, dna had exposed how Parliament Standing Committee on defence had rapped up DRDO for its shoddy research, inordinate delays, corruption and its fancy for reverse engineering.

What's Parrikar's justification for sacking Chander?
On Wednesday, defence ministerManohar Parrikarsaid, "It was my recommendation that the DRDO chief's post should be held by a young person and not by someone on contract."

Interestingly, thegovernmenthas taken action against Chander, but there are many more scientists in DRDO working under extension rules even after their retirement. As on September 1, 2014, around ten scientists in category of distinguished scientists i.e. special secretary level and over a dozen scientists on grade H -- outstanding scientists i.e. additional secretary level – are still working in DRDO. But no termination orders have come against them.

The government's reason seems to be also ironical as it has recently appointed Vijay Kumar Saraswat, former DRDO chief, as full-time member of newly formed Niti Aayog. Saraswat had worked as DRDO director general post 60 years. He had got an extension of two + two years and finally retired on May 31, 2013. Saraswat is Chander's predecessor and according to a senior scientist in DRDO, "both have ideological differences which was known to scientific fraternity."

What are Chander's credentials?
Avinash Chander is an IIT Delhi graduate and joined DRDO in August 1972. He has won several awards, including DRDO medal for scientist of the year for AGNI I, and is called the chief architect of the long range ballistic missiles in India. He had retired on November 1, 2014 but was given an extension, on contractual basis, till May 2016.
 
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He is what we have. Is he what we need? Certainly not. Neither is a single leader of ours, not a single one. But, we the people of this nation have never been good enough, not near good enough, to do justice to the vision that is Bharat so why quibble. You will get what you deserve, and our leaders are drawn from us, why do we assume that they will be better than the "national average", we are after all not a meritocracy.
 
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