India's missile deal with Israel in controversy, Marxists demand probe, Congress rejects
Wed, 2009-04-01 03:10
By M Rama Rao, India Editor, Asian Tribune
New Delhi, 01 April, (Asiantribune.com): (asiantribune.com): Indias Rs. 10,000 crore deals with Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) for a medium range surface to air missile, has hit an air pocket. The Marxist Communists allege that there were kickbacks in the deal. They also argue that the Israeli missiles are unnecessary.
In a letter to the Prime Minister, the Left parties have demanded that the government should not proceed ahead with the deal since the CBI is investigating an earlier deal with IAI for Barak missiles for kickbacks.
Both the government and the Congress have rejected the demand. The defence minister AK Antony is however worried about the impact of the allegation on Congress partys electoral prospects. According to local media reports, he is considering placing all the IAI missile deal details on the internet to nip the controversy in the bud.
What spurred the Comrades into opposing the deal was an investigative report in Mumbai based DNA newspaper. The report said that the Israeli missile deal involved a "business charge" which is six per cent of the total value (approximately Rs. 600 crore). The Left naturally smells a scam and believes that the scandal may be ten times more than the Rs. 64 crore Bofors kickbacks that had rocked the Rajiv Government.
Given the Barak missile stink, the IAI deserves to be blacklisted and not rewarded with a new deal, the Left maintains. They also believe that the Israeli missile would mean throttle the indigenous missile system developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).
The DRDO doesnt have an enviable track record in the indigenization of armaments and is in fact at the receiving end of the ire of three services and also of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG), the statutory auditor of all government spending.
The Left parties nevertheless have rallied in favor of DRDO saying that DRDO developed missile system is superior to the one being offered by the IAI for
co-production. They reiterated that IAI should have been blacklisted just like the South African firm Denel after it came under investigation for kickbacks.
In their letter to the Prime Minister, the Left parties have raised the following serious questions:
1. The IAI had got the contract for the supply of Barak missile in 2000 during the NDA regime. The FIR lodged by the CBI in October 2006 names IAI as an accused besides naming the Delhi-based arms dealer, Suresh Nanda and other family members as agents of the Israeli firms, IAI and Rafael Corporation. Why was the IAI not embargoed from further supplies till the case was disposed off?
2. Was the Government not aware that the Israeli authorities had investigated the IAI for malpractices in contracts with other countries? Such charges led to the head of the IAI stepping down in 2005.
3. Was the Ministry of Defence not aware that an Indian agent of the Israeli company replaced by another petitioned the Israeli defence ministry claiming additional commissions were due to him?
4. What does the Manmohan Singh government have to say about the DRDO having developed and field proven its Advanced Air Defence (AAD) missile capacity? Why was the DRDO compelled to enter into the so-called "joint development" of the IAI air defence missile when it already has its own superior AAD missile?
5. Was the Manmohan Singh government not aware of the fact that like in the Barak missile deal, there are middlemen and intermediaries involved who are being paid commissions/kickbacks? Was the government not aware of identity of these agents?
6. How does the Manmohan Singh government explain the six per cent "business charges" on the total value of the deal? Is this not contrary to the stipulations against engagement of agents and payment of agency commissions?
7. Why is it that the contract was signed on February 27, 2009 and the fact was kept a secret? The information about the date of signing has now become known from the IAI which has claimed that the Indian government wanted the signing of the contract to be kept secret.
8. Why did the government get the contract signed on February 27, 2009, just two days before the announcement of the Lok Sabha elections?
Wed, 2009-04-01 03:10
By M Rama Rao, India Editor, Asian Tribune
New Delhi, 01 April, (Asiantribune.com): (asiantribune.com): Indias Rs. 10,000 crore deals with Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) for a medium range surface to air missile, has hit an air pocket. The Marxist Communists allege that there were kickbacks in the deal. They also argue that the Israeli missiles are unnecessary.
In a letter to the Prime Minister, the Left parties have demanded that the government should not proceed ahead with the deal since the CBI is investigating an earlier deal with IAI for Barak missiles for kickbacks.
Both the government and the Congress have rejected the demand. The defence minister AK Antony is however worried about the impact of the allegation on Congress partys electoral prospects. According to local media reports, he is considering placing all the IAI missile deal details on the internet to nip the controversy in the bud.
What spurred the Comrades into opposing the deal was an investigative report in Mumbai based DNA newspaper. The report said that the Israeli missile deal involved a "business charge" which is six per cent of the total value (approximately Rs. 600 crore). The Left naturally smells a scam and believes that the scandal may be ten times more than the Rs. 64 crore Bofors kickbacks that had rocked the Rajiv Government.
Given the Barak missile stink, the IAI deserves to be blacklisted and not rewarded with a new deal, the Left maintains. They also believe that the Israeli missile would mean throttle the indigenous missile system developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).
The DRDO doesnt have an enviable track record in the indigenization of armaments and is in fact at the receiving end of the ire of three services and also of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG), the statutory auditor of all government spending.
The Left parties nevertheless have rallied in favor of DRDO saying that DRDO developed missile system is superior to the one being offered by the IAI for
co-production. They reiterated that IAI should have been blacklisted just like the South African firm Denel after it came under investigation for kickbacks.
In their letter to the Prime Minister, the Left parties have raised the following serious questions:
1. The IAI had got the contract for the supply of Barak missile in 2000 during the NDA regime. The FIR lodged by the CBI in October 2006 names IAI as an accused besides naming the Delhi-based arms dealer, Suresh Nanda and other family members as agents of the Israeli firms, IAI and Rafael Corporation. Why was the IAI not embargoed from further supplies till the case was disposed off?
2. Was the Government not aware that the Israeli authorities had investigated the IAI for malpractices in contracts with other countries? Such charges led to the head of the IAI stepping down in 2005.
3. Was the Ministry of Defence not aware that an Indian agent of the Israeli company replaced by another petitioned the Israeli defence ministry claiming additional commissions were due to him?
4. What does the Manmohan Singh government have to say about the DRDO having developed and field proven its Advanced Air Defence (AAD) missile capacity? Why was the DRDO compelled to enter into the so-called "joint development" of the IAI air defence missile when it already has its own superior AAD missile?
5. Was the Manmohan Singh government not aware of the fact that like in the Barak missile deal, there are middlemen and intermediaries involved who are being paid commissions/kickbacks? Was the government not aware of identity of these agents?
6. How does the Manmohan Singh government explain the six per cent "business charges" on the total value of the deal? Is this not contrary to the stipulations against engagement of agents and payment of agency commissions?
7. Why is it that the contract was signed on February 27, 2009 and the fact was kept a secret? The information about the date of signing has now become known from the IAI which has claimed that the Indian government wanted the signing of the contract to be kept secret.
8. Why did the government get the contract signed on February 27, 2009, just two days before the announcement of the Lok Sabha elections?