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When President Pranab Mukherjee lands in Mauritius on Monday, he will be buttressing a relationship with an Indian Ocean country that is so central to Indias security interests that it went to the extent of planning a military intervention to ensure an Indian-origin Prime Minister remained in power.
The Top Secret Operation Lal Dora which remains highly classified to this day was conceived in 1983 with Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's approval and called for the deployment of major naval assets including as many as six destroyers with Alouette helicopters and MK 42C Sea Kings for slithering operations, as well as military and civilian oil tankers.
India called off the military part of the operation after the Mauritian Prime Minister Anerood Jugnauths erstwhile challenger Paul Berenger got wind of Indias plans and backed off, according to the first detailed account of the events in a scholarly article, Operation Lal Dora: Indias aborted military intervention in Mauritius, written by Australian academic David Brewster and former Naval Intelligence officer Ranjit Rai for the journal Asian Security.
Instead, the then chief of the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), Nausher F. Suntook, was dispatched to Port Louis by Mrs. Gandhi to supervise a largely intelligence-led operation to reunite the Indian community whose fracturing along ideological and communal factions had allowed Mr. Berenger to mount a political challenge.
The matter remains highly classified to this day, a retired intelligence official familiar with the operation told The Hindu on condition of anonymity. But it was a huge success. As a result, Jugnauth stayed on as PM for more than ten years. We produced this outcome by political means.
A measure of this success was Mr. Jugnauths decision to request an Indian officer as his national security adviser. He wanted an intelligence officer but we sent an army man, General J N Tamini, who remained there for many years, the retired officer recalled.
Indias first intervention in the Indian Ocean came four years later in `Operation Cactus. Commandos and naval ships were rushed to the Maldives after armed mercenaries sought to unseat the then President Abdul Gayoom in 1987.
But India has never acknowledged its 1983 plans for `Operation Lal Dora to save the Jugnauth government in Mauritius. There has been no public account of this operation till the article written by Prof. Brewster and Cmd Rai. In his book on the RAW, former intelligence official B Raman mentioned Suntook's role but did not name the country.
According to Dr. Brewster and Cmd Rai, the Indian military was divided on the planned operation with the then Navy Chief, Admiral O.S. Dawson backing the idea and General S.K. Sinha, who was the deputy Army chief at the time, telling Mrs Gandhi he did not have confidence in the planned operation requested that a senior RAW official rush to Port Louis and help defuse the crisis. So the matter was taken out of the Navy's hands and given over to the R&AW, recalled a veteran intelligence officer.
Suntook died in 2006 but one intelligence officer who was around at that time called the operation a ``very fine piece of intelligence and operational work by the RAW chief who was pitchforked into Mauritius by Mrs Gandhi on the day he was to retire.
Operation Lal Dora when seen in conjunction with the ease of Indias naval interventions in Seychelles and Maldives, both in 1987, points to the vulnerability of small island nations to military intervention by larger countries. But it also shows the ease with which the Indian Government agreed to conduct military operations when a political solution as it eventually happened was more feasible.
Soon after that operation, Mauritius became a listening post for the Indian Navy which buttressed a 1974 agreement of sending Indian defence officers on deputation to its coast guard and helicopter squadron. Today 35 to 40 Mauritian police officials train every year at Indian defence training academies.
Though eventually aborted, Operation Lal Dora has a special resonance today because of the Indian strategic communitys focus on promoting the Indian Navys role in the wider neighbourhood, especially the Indian Ocean.
This call for a blue water navy has been helped by the improved budgetary allocation for the Navy to buy military hardware.
Mrs. Gandhi planned top secret military operation in Mauritius - The Hindu
The Top Secret Operation Lal Dora which remains highly classified to this day was conceived in 1983 with Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's approval and called for the deployment of major naval assets including as many as six destroyers with Alouette helicopters and MK 42C Sea Kings for slithering operations, as well as military and civilian oil tankers.
India called off the military part of the operation after the Mauritian Prime Minister Anerood Jugnauths erstwhile challenger Paul Berenger got wind of Indias plans and backed off, according to the first detailed account of the events in a scholarly article, Operation Lal Dora: Indias aborted military intervention in Mauritius, written by Australian academic David Brewster and former Naval Intelligence officer Ranjit Rai for the journal Asian Security.
Instead, the then chief of the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), Nausher F. Suntook, was dispatched to Port Louis by Mrs. Gandhi to supervise a largely intelligence-led operation to reunite the Indian community whose fracturing along ideological and communal factions had allowed Mr. Berenger to mount a political challenge.
The matter remains highly classified to this day, a retired intelligence official familiar with the operation told The Hindu on condition of anonymity. But it was a huge success. As a result, Jugnauth stayed on as PM for more than ten years. We produced this outcome by political means.
A measure of this success was Mr. Jugnauths decision to request an Indian officer as his national security adviser. He wanted an intelligence officer but we sent an army man, General J N Tamini, who remained there for many years, the retired officer recalled.
Indias first intervention in the Indian Ocean came four years later in `Operation Cactus. Commandos and naval ships were rushed to the Maldives after armed mercenaries sought to unseat the then President Abdul Gayoom in 1987.
But India has never acknowledged its 1983 plans for `Operation Lal Dora to save the Jugnauth government in Mauritius. There has been no public account of this operation till the article written by Prof. Brewster and Cmd Rai. In his book on the RAW, former intelligence official B Raman mentioned Suntook's role but did not name the country.
According to Dr. Brewster and Cmd Rai, the Indian military was divided on the planned operation with the then Navy Chief, Admiral O.S. Dawson backing the idea and General S.K. Sinha, who was the deputy Army chief at the time, telling Mrs Gandhi he did not have confidence in the planned operation requested that a senior RAW official rush to Port Louis and help defuse the crisis. So the matter was taken out of the Navy's hands and given over to the R&AW, recalled a veteran intelligence officer.
Suntook died in 2006 but one intelligence officer who was around at that time called the operation a ``very fine piece of intelligence and operational work by the RAW chief who was pitchforked into Mauritius by Mrs Gandhi on the day he was to retire.
Operation Lal Dora when seen in conjunction with the ease of Indias naval interventions in Seychelles and Maldives, both in 1987, points to the vulnerability of small island nations to military intervention by larger countries. But it also shows the ease with which the Indian Government agreed to conduct military operations when a political solution as it eventually happened was more feasible.
Soon after that operation, Mauritius became a listening post for the Indian Navy which buttressed a 1974 agreement of sending Indian defence officers on deputation to its coast guard and helicopter squadron. Today 35 to 40 Mauritian police officials train every year at Indian defence training academies.
Though eventually aborted, Operation Lal Dora has a special resonance today because of the Indian strategic communitys focus on promoting the Indian Navys role in the wider neighbourhood, especially the Indian Ocean.
This call for a blue water navy has been helped by the improved budgetary allocation for the Navy to buy military hardware.
Mrs. Gandhi planned top secret military operation in Mauritius - The Hindu