SamantK
SENIOR MEMBER
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@Joe Shearer Sir you are better off answering @Dungeness than replying to someone who is enjoying all the attention.
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Joe, thank you very much for your long write up, and I have to admit I am actually flattered for you good words, as you are one of only few PDF members who's posts I will read carefully with respect. You left PDF a while ago for the treatment you received from your countrymen, maybe for the very same reasons that I respect you, intelligent, cultivated, well read, and not being a Hindu Chauvinist.
I do not hesitate to admit that I have engaged in many emotional discussions with many Indian members, including some usually more level-headed Elite members in the last few day since this NSG fiasco broke out , and I am not always cool and calm. Sometimes I use the same fault logic of my opponent to shoot back.
I understand perfectly India's desire to be in the so called "elite club" of NSG, and I also understand Indian members angry towards China, the only evil in the eyes of many your countrymen. What I can not comprehend is why Indians got this sense of Entitlement while asking for an unprecedented exception to the existing rules. Through NSG issue really did not come to hot topic in various Chinese forums, it is a very big deal in India society and on PDF. Reading those endless UNIFORM China bashing, I feel the desire to voice my view and ask questions to our Indian friends. Unfortunately, besides abusive language, I have not got any straight answer from Indian members, including some with elite title.
While you are pointing finger at me, would you also exam your own countrymen's behaviors and their reasoning in the last few days? This time, I failed to hear your dissenting voice in this fiasco
I put it to you that India has gained access to both nuclear technology and to missile technology without a sponsor or a big brother, and has scrupulously refrained from clandestine sharing of these technologies with others, even though there was as little possibility of a bar on doing so as there was for other proliferators. Look at how Pakistan acquired both technologies, through a combination of industrial larceny and surreptitious assistance by her sponsors in the two communities.
I would vehemently disagree. A long list can be compiled of foreign assistance and interest in the development of India's nuclear and missile systems. While you could say that India did not purchase anything that violated treaties like the MTCR; entire teams of advisors and assistants have traveled to India to help kick start its missile and nuclear programs.
Various establishments in the UAE are testament to both Indian and Pakistani representatives sitting the same waiting room of the Arms dealer for restricted tech; both trying to guess what the other is there for.
Again, that essentially only implies that India tried its best to avoid violating any treaties. However, lots of bits and pieces that go into each of those major systems came from various blackmarket folks and so did the technical support.Well, it is quite true that we didn't develop everything from the ground up, in terms of missile technology. The roots of the booster rocket adoption, modification and enhancement are, after all, part of the record in every single confidential brirefing about our scientist-President, but we didn't get them through favours from one big brother, any member of the MTCR. If you look at the record, we shopped for technology, individual bits and pieces, nothing even at a system level, and put things together ourselves. The exception was the cryogenic engine and the nuclear power plant for submersibles.
It's an unbeleivably stupid strategy that has held back the NE for decades, thankfully this GoI has seen the light and is investing heavily in developing that region. The economic security and development of India will not be sacrificed because of this pathetic attitude of the IA, it is their job to defend every square inch of Indian territory, not b!tch and moan.High time Army should discard this stupid strategy
Agreed, high time this strategy is junked
your thoughts @Abingdonboy
Again, that essentially only implies that India tried its best to avoid violating any treaties. However, lots of bits and pieces that go into each of those major systems came from various blackmarket folks and so did the technical support.
Sure, unlike our good ol Dr AQ or as I like to call him "Heere is a Rolex fer yau" went ahead and purchased the Nodong.. the Shaheen series is despite all naysayers very much an adapted in house effort. Point being, sometimes the burden of cautious bureaucracy can be a problem rather than a blessing. Take A.Q Khan out of it, and every other accusation on Pakistan for violations of proliferation have no track record to hold a grip on.
After all, it is Indian bureucracy that is the hold for so many strategic lackings of India; is it not?
Or rather.. the proverbial "stamp chaap" babus both in and out of uniform?
Again, that essentially only implies that India tried its best to avoid violating any treaties. However, lots of bits and pieces that go into each of those major systems came from various blackmarket folks and so did the technical support.
Sure, unlike our good ol Dr AQ or as I like to call him "Heere is a Rolex fer yau" went ahead and purchased the Nodong.. the Shaheen series is despite all naysayers very much an adapted in house effort. Point being, sometimes the burden of cautious bureaucracy can be a problem rather than a blessing. Take A.Q Khan out of it, and every other accusation on Pakistan for violations of proliferation have no track record to hold a grip on.
After all, it is Indian bureucracy that is the hold for so many strategic lackings of India; is it not?
Or rather.. the proverbial "stamp chaap" babus both in and out of uniform?
It's an unbeleivably stupid strategy that has held back the NE for decades, thankfully this GoI has seen the light and is investing heavily in developing that region. The economic security and development of India will not be sacrificed because of this pathetic attitude of the IA, it is their job to defend every square inch of Indian territory, not b!tch and moan.
The IA doesn't want to fight the PLA, again.
Everything else is just an excuse.
The Chinese would simply argue that those that formed the MTCR in the first place were some of the most prolific violators of the principles they supposedly now champion. The same can be said of the NPT and other laws.My argument is more about what we did AFTER we put together the whole jigsaw puzzle than about what we did BEFORE. It is more about China's actions in comparison with ours than about Pakistan's.
..
It is necessary to take some time about the elements that go into our general attitude of 'strategic restraint', what you have rather uncharitably called India's 'strategic lackings' (!!).
I think the babus, in and out of uniform, were our saviours in some ways. Our politicians were, in the collective, a very useful organism to be found in the bowels of democracy, a necessary organism, even. But as individuals, I doubt that they, any one of them, had the morality of even a Messalina. Left to them, from what insiders tell me, bits and pieces of secret stuff would have been available from a sleazy individual in a grubby raincoat on a Benghazi street corner.
This reference is to the civilian babus; you will probably be astonished to learn how little the military had to do with the development of either missiles or the bomb. It was AFTER these were developed, not just at the conceptual level, but at the prototype level, that the military were brought in (fully - information kept going out to them) and asked to include them in their strategic planning. Then a phase of dialogue between civil and military followed, and that phase is now in its post-mature part of the life-cycle.
It is possible to be much more informative, but I hesitate, for obvious reasons.
Going back to the influence of the babus, there is a parallel of the Pakistani experience here, in India, since you have made the point about Pakistan and about the similarities with Pakistan. That parallel is that there is a tussle between the civil and the military administrations about what is to be done. In Pakistan, apparently, it goes on until a point when the military guillotines the matter; in India, the discussion goes on until the civilians guillotine the matter.
Except for the acquisition of the nuclear propelled submarine, much of our work in building technology - almost all the work - has been achieved by the civilian side.
As for the babus, yes the bureaucracy has also had its positive effects in restraint that has not led to India being overly aggressive in certain areas; but certain programs are good examples of why they have also stymied development projects by treating them as step children in lieu of this caution.