kenchabhai
BANNED
- Joined
- Jan 24, 2009
- Messages
- 216
- Reaction score
- 0
New Delhi: It's the first official admission that India is not ready for war. The stunning acknowledgment came from none other than Defence Minister AK Antony on Wednesday.
Antony complained that he's unable to spend money on weapons desperately required for national security despite his pockets being full
"Even though our Government is earmarking huge budgets, it is not being fully reflected in our modernisation efforts. Allocation of money has never been a problem. The issue has rather been the timely and judicious utilisation of money allocated, he said.
And, believe it or not, Antony blamed it on Red Tape in the ministry he heads.
"We need to cut down on unnecessary procedural delays, bottlenecks and red-tapism in our procurement mechanism," he said.
Under the present regime, Defence spending has fallen below two per cent of the GDP, despite mounting challenges.
India's rivals spend between three and five per cent.
26/11 too seems to have shaken up the authorities. The UPA Government, which had spent less than 10 per cent of its defence procurements budget till the Mumbai attacks, has now suddenly stepped on the accelerator.
For example, the critical air defence requirements which were stuck in the system for years, have now been cleared in one go.
Big effort to plug gaps in India's air defence cover post 26/11, government has cleared years of backlog, says Chief of Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal Fali Major.
The Defence Minister has identified the problem. But nobody seems sure who will fix it, as thousands of crores of defence money are returned unspent, year after year.
War ready? Defence Minister says snap red tape first
Antony complained that he's unable to spend money on weapons desperately required for national security despite his pockets being full
"Even though our Government is earmarking huge budgets, it is not being fully reflected in our modernisation efforts. Allocation of money has never been a problem. The issue has rather been the timely and judicious utilisation of money allocated, he said.
And, believe it or not, Antony blamed it on Red Tape in the ministry he heads.
"We need to cut down on unnecessary procedural delays, bottlenecks and red-tapism in our procurement mechanism," he said.
Under the present regime, Defence spending has fallen below two per cent of the GDP, despite mounting challenges.
India's rivals spend between three and five per cent.
26/11 too seems to have shaken up the authorities. The UPA Government, which had spent less than 10 per cent of its defence procurements budget till the Mumbai attacks, has now suddenly stepped on the accelerator.
For example, the critical air defence requirements which were stuck in the system for years, have now been cleared in one go.
Big effort to plug gaps in India's air defence cover post 26/11, government has cleared years of backlog, says Chief of Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal Fali Major.
The Defence Minister has identified the problem. But nobody seems sure who will fix it, as thousands of crores of defence money are returned unspent, year after year.
War ready? Defence Minister says snap red tape first