anant_s
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Govt may cut down on defence budget: PM
timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Govt-may-cut-down-on-defence-budget-PM/articleshow/26225794.cms
He hasn't mentioned categorically how much the cuts may be and which projects are likely to get affected, but my guess is big ticket capital expenditures might not be touched.
NEW DELHI: India must strive to develop "comprehensive national power" to tackle the challenges posed by the shift in global strategic focus towards the Asia-Pacific region, marked by jostling between the US and China, as well as the intense competition among nations in the security arena despite growing inter-dependence triggered by globalization.
This, in short, was Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's message to the country's top military brass on Friday. But he also warned that India might have to trim its defence budget due to the economic slowdown over the last two years. The armed forces will have to exercise greater "prudence" and "cut our coat according to our cloth" in their defence acquisition plans.
"While we must take into account the capabilities of our adversaries, we have to plan our long-term acquisition on the assumption of limited resource availability. This is an exercise that has to be done with a high degree of priority and urgency," he said, addressing the combined commanders' conference.
But the major chunk of his speech, the last before his government completes its term, was devoted to the impending strategic challenges ahead. The PM said while globalization has induced growing and complex inter-dependencies among states and multinationals on the economic front, it has also nurtured "intense competition and rivalries" in the security domain.
"Managing this contradictory tenor, highlighted by the global surveillance mounted by the US National Security Agency, is also a policy imperative for us. Naturally, our objective must be to acquire tangible national capacity, or comprehensive national power. This is the amalgam of economic, technological and industrial prowess, buttressed by the appropriate military sinews," he said.
Just as the economic pendulum is shifting inexorably from the west to the east, so is the strategic focus. "This is exemplified by the increasing contestation in the seas to our east and the related 'pivot' or 'rebalancing' (of military forces) by the US in this area," he said.
"This, to my mind, is a development fraught with uncertainty. We don't yet know whether these economic and strategic transitions will be peaceful, but that is the challenge this audience must grapple with institutionally," he added.
Even as it ramps up strategic cooperation with Washington, New Delhi has already cold-shouldered the US move to anoint India as a "lynchpin" in its impending "pivot" towards the Asia-Pacific. It is keen to be seen as a neutral player in the geopolitical shadow-boxing between the US and China for supremacy in the region.
India also does not want any third-party intervention in the contentious South China Sea, where China is locked in disputes with countries like the Philippines, Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia and Singapore over territorial claims. Defence minister A K Antony has held that it was "desirable" that the "parties concerned themselves should settle contentious matters in accordance with international laws".
timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Govt-may-cut-down-on-defence-budget-PM/articleshow/26225794.cms
He hasn't mentioned categorically how much the cuts may be and which projects are likely to get affected, but my guess is big ticket capital expenditures might not be touched.
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