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AFT: Convene reassessment medical board for veteran

HANDIGARH: The Chandigarh Bench of Armed Forces Tribunal (AFT) has ordered to conduct reassessment medical board of 1971 war veteran who got injured in Pakistan bombing in the war.

Petitioner Bhag Singh, 72, resident of Mohali, joined the army in 1959 and participated in 1962 war, 1965 war and 1971 war. He was awarded nine medals during his service.

In 1971 war, he suffered injury due to bombing by Pakistan on the Wagah border of Punjab, when bomb shells pierced into his left thigh. He was moved to military hospital, Amritsar, where surgical operation was performed and the petitioner was downgraded to the lower medical category. He was discharged from service on medical grounds and was granted disability pension for two years, from August 1, 1974, to May 15, 1976, for 20% disability.

Bhag Singh was brought before the resurvey medical board in the year 1976, which declared the disability of the petitioner having improved to between 11 % to 14 %. As a result his disability element of pension was stopped.

Later, he developed pain and swelling in his left thigh in the year 1981 and remained under medical treatment for about six years when he was referred to Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, by Command Hospital, Chandimandir. The PGIMER authorities extracted number of embedded bomb shell pieces from his thigh during the surgical operations in 1987.

Since then, he made a number of representations to the defence authorities for war injury pension, but in vain.

Bhim Sen Sehgal, chairman of All Indian Ex-servicemen Welfare Association (AIEWA), who appeared on behalf of Bhag Singh, said Bhag Singh had been fighting for over 40 years and now the AFT had given a ray of hope by ordering director general, Armed Forces Medical Services, New Delhi, to convene a reassessment medical board.


Security up after terror group call intercepted

short by Aarushi Maheshwari / 06:06 pm on 20 Jan 2016,Wednesday
Security has been beefed up in the nation ahead of the Republic Day, as central agencies have intercepted a call from Bangladeshi terror outfit Hizb-ut-Tahrir (HTB). An attack could be reportedly carried out on January 23 by the HTB with the help of Jaish-e-Mohammad, Indian Mujahidin and Lashkar-e-Taiba. Security agencies including the BSF and Indian Army have been alerted.
2 militants killed in encounter in J&K’s Pulwama
short by Smrithin Satishan / 11:39 am on 20 Jan 2016,Wednesday
Two militants, who were reportedly holed up inside a villager’s house in Pulwama district of south Kashmir, were killed on Wednesday in an encounter between militants and security forces, according to a police official. The operation, which started after a brief lull on Wednesday, had begun on Tuesday evening and will continue till the area is secure.
ISRO launches India’s 5th navigation satellite
short by Smrithin Satishan / 11:30 am on 20 Jan 2016,Wednesday
Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Wednesday successfully launched India’s fifth navigation satellite IRNSS-1E from the spaceport at Sriharikota. “PSLV-C31 successfully places navigation satellite IRNSS-1E into the orbit,” ISRO said post the launch. The system which consists of seven satellites will provide real-time data on the position of objects to aid road, air and maritime traffic.
Pathankot attack suspect arrested from Haridwar
short by Aditya Kashyap / 01:08 am on 20 Jan 2016,Wednesday
The Intelligence Bureau (IB) on Tuesday arrested a person, from Manglaur town in Haridwar district, suspected to have links with the recent terrorist attack on the Pathankot air base. Notably, this comes amid intelligence reports which claim Pakistan is yet to arrest Masood Azhar, the prime suspect in the attacks and the chief of the terrorist group Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM).
NCR on alert as IG’s beaconed SUV gets stolen
short by Smrithin Satishan / 08:33 pm on 20 Jan 2016,Wednesday
An alert was sounded on Wednesday in the NCR after a blue beacon fitted Tata Safari SUV belonging to an Inspector General of Indo Tibetan Border Police was stolen from sector 23 on Tuesday. Officials have launched a manhunt owing to the upcoming Republic day alert in the capital. Delhi Police Commissioner BS Bassi has requested the public for assistance.

Sacked IAF official held for spying in Bathinda

TNS & Agencies,New Delhi, December 29

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A dismissed Air Force official, who allegedly shared secret information with intelligence operatives suspected to be backed by Pakistan’s ISI after being “honeytrapped” into an espionage racket, has been arrested from Bhatinda in Punjab by the Delhi Police.The accused, Ranjith KK, was produced before the court and remanded in four-day police custody for interrogation. He could be taken to Jaisalmer and Gwalior for further interrogation. Ranjith was a leading aircraft man with the IAF at Bhatinda. He was dismissed recently and arrested after a combined operation by the Delhi Police’s Crime Branch, Military Intelligence and Air Force Liaisoning Unit (LU), Joint Commissioner of Police (Crime) Ravindra Yadav said.Ranjith, a native of Malappuram district in Kerala, had joined the Indian Air Force in 2010. He has been booked under provisions of the Official Secrets Act, said the police.”With his arrest, the police have come across a honeytrapping module, backed by intelligence agents from across the border, which creates fictitious accounts (cyber entities) in popular social networking sites, pretending to be women, befriend defence personnel and officials from security forces and allegedly lure them into espionage,” a senior police official said.Ranjith was deceived by a cyber entity by the name Damini McNaught, who posed as an executive of UK- based news magazine. She interviewed Ranjith and then assigned him the task of getting the information. She deceived him by saying that the information would  be published and he would get due monetary benefits for this, the Joint Commissioner said.

Honey-trapping module busted

  • With the arrest of IAF official Ranjith KK, the police have come across a honey-trapping module, backed byintelligence agents from across the border
  • The module involves creation of fictitious accounts on social networking sites. Pretending to be women, agents befriend defence personnel and lure them into espionage
  • Ranjith was deceived by a cyber entity by the name Damini McNaught, with whom he shared Air Force-related information, in exchange for money

Dismissed IAF man held in Bathinda for ISI spying

NEW DELHI: Pakistan’s intelligence agencies are using fake social media accounts with female names to befriend, lure and sometimes blackmail India’s defence personnel into committing espionage, Delhi Police told a city court on Tuesday.

The revelations came after the arrest of former leading aircraftsman KK Ranjith from Punjab’s Bathinda airforce base for allegedly sharing secret documents with Pakistani agencies.

“In May 2012, the LAC came in contact with Pakistan intelligence officer Damini McNaught who cultivated the air force man by luring him to work as a defence analyst for a UK-based magazine,” cops told the court.

They said the 24-year-old single man – who was arrested under the Official Secrets Act on Monday — also had another female handler named Alphonsine Davis. Cross-border spies fooled Ranjith by calling his mobile phone over the internet with the other party introducing herself – in a British accent – as McNaught and posing as an executive of a UK-based news magazine.

“She even interviewed LAC Ranjith and assigned him the task of getting the information. She deceived him by saying the information will be published and he will get due monetary benefits for this,” said the team, led by ACP KPS Malhotra.

During the brief hearing, cops said Ranjith passed “sensitive information related to the Air Force and other vital defence information through Facebook and email to Damini and Alphonsine”. For this, he got `30,000 in total in two separate payments of `25,000 and`5,000 made on October 13 and 14, they alleged.

But he may not have been the only one to be trapped. “A few serving defence personnel are being pulled into the espionage network through these honey traps. Some fictitious Facebook accounts of women are being used for this,” joint commissioner of police (crime branch) Ravindra Yadav told IANS.

The court granted four days’ police custody and said Ranjith would be produced before the court concerned on January 2.

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Armored Fist: Russian T-90s Will Be a Welcome Boost To Iran’s Tank Corps

SOURCE: SPUTNIK

With Iran on track to receiving access to about $30 billion of $100 billion in assets previously frozen by sanctions, Russian journalist and military analyst Alexander Sitnikov pondered just how much of the released funds may be spent on upgrading the country’s defense capability, including its tank forces.

Commenting on Central Bank of Iran Governor Valiollah Seif’s recent announcement that Iran would spend much of the $30 billion in freed funds on the import of essential goods, Sitnikov, a columnist for the independent Russian newspaper Svobodnaya Pressa, suggested that it seems likely that a significant portion of the money will go toward upgrading Iran’s military potential, which according to Western experts, has declined in recent years.

“This can be assumed based on the statements of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei on the country’s urgent need to strengthen the country’s military,” the analyst explained.

In accordance with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the international agreement on Iran’s nuclear program reached in Vienna last July, Tehran is not allowed to build or test missile systems, or to purchase advanced conventional weapons from abroad. However, Sitnikov added, “it’s important to note that the JCPOA does not deprive Iran of its right to self-defense.”

“This last formulation,” the analyst recalled, “was controversial from the beginning. US Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain was categorically against lifting the comprehensive arms embargo. Nevertheless, the supporters of only limited restrictions ultimately won on the grounds that older weapons wouldn’t threaten Iran’s neighbors, especially Saudi Arabia.”

Western experts, Sitnikov noted, are in general agreement that Iran’s military potential and fighting capacity have deteriorated significantly as a result of sanctions. The journalist cited IHS Janes defense analyst Ben Moses, who told Politico last year that Iran’s military capabilities are “very weak.”

“Iran, in total weapons procurement last year, spent $550 million,” Moses calculated. “If you look at Saudi Arabia’s defense imports, they were $7 billion last year. The UAE imported $4 billion. Oman [imported] $1 billion, which is twice as much as the Iranian total.”

A “refresh” of the country’s military, according to Moses, would cost an estimated $40 billion. “And Iranian politicians and military officials are putting forth similar figures,” Sitnikov added.

In fact, the journalist suggested, “the urgent need to carry out a military modernization was the main reason Khamenei agreed to the nuclear deal. Influential Saudi political analyst Jama Khashoggi [had earlier] predicted that if Assad’s army were defeated, mobile detachments of the Islamic State (Daesh/ISIL) would invade Iran and spread chaos there. And dealing with them, the Syrian experience has shown, is only possible with the help of a mobile armored force.”

Last month, commenting on the Sputnik article regarding the possible delivery of Russian T-90s to Iran, Veterans Today magazine managing editor Jim W. Dean lamented that the West’s “stupid sanctions policies” had effectively robbed Western weapons companies of potential weapons contracts for the near future.

“Sure, Iran might want some Western technology, which it is openly courting for areas like increased oil recovery help for its older oil wells, but for major weapons that would be very risky,” Dean noted.

“However,” Sitnikov noted, “Iran is not only motivated [to purchase Russian weaponry] by a sense of grievance toward the West. Events in Ukraine and the war in Syria have demonstrated the capabilities of Russian-made tanks, whose reputation had previously suffered serious damage during the disastrous war with Saddam Hussein.”

“On the whole,” the analyst explained, “the choice of weapons is influenced by many factors, including the fact that the T-90 was created on the basis of the legendary Cold War-era T-72 –the very same tank which was supposed to march toward the English Channel through the Fulda Gap…In the 80s, Western experts considered it a very balanced and cost-effective fighting machine, and more reliable than the T-64, which was not very well liked by Soviet tank crews, to put it mildly.”

“The history of the [T-90’s] creation, its characteristics, repairability and ease of operation are all important factors. Nevertheless, military men, including Iranian ones, understand that armor, despite its high cost and formidability, are an ‘expendable’ resource. Over 100 of the 140 M1A1 tanks supplied by the US to Iraq between 2010 and 2012 were destroyed (that is, virtually the entire force; the rest have not seen fighting). Daesh militants claimed that they were easy to destroy.”

“In other words,” Sitnikov explained, “in a real war, when the operation is poorly planned, all tanks, no matter how expensive, will burn. The US now wants $2.4 billion from the Iraqis for the next batch of 170 M1A1s, or approximately the same amount India paid for its 1,000 T-90s.”

In the final analysis, Sitnikov notes, “in a conflict, numbers matter. Out of the 700 old T-72s which Syria bought from the USSR, at least 300 are still in service, despite their obsolete protection and many years of bloody fighting. And what’s important is that in the Syrians’ view, these tanks have played a very important role. In short, Tehran knows what it’s buying.”


Government moves to double MPs’ salary to Rs 2.8 lakh a month

The proposal, currently with the Finance Ministry, also suggests that basic pension should be raised from Rs 20,000 per month to Rs 35,000.

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The government has proposed increasing the monthly salary of an MP from Rs 50,000 to Rs 1 lakh, constituency allowance from Rs 45,000 to Rs 90,000 and secretarial assistance plus office allowance from Rs 45,000 to Rs 90,000.

The central government seems set to double the salaries and allowances of Parliamentarians. If a proposal in this regard is approved by the Finance Ministry, every MP will get Rs 2.8 lakh per month. Their pension, too, will see a jump.

watch vedio  below

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XYlkvjpFjsc

The government has proposed increasing the monthly salary of an MP from Rs 50,000 to Rs 1 lakh, constituency allowance from Rs 45,000 to Rs 90,000 and secretarial assistance plus office allowance from Rs 45,000 to Rs 90,000. The proposal, currently with the Finance Ministry, also suggests that basic pension should be raised from Rs 20,000 per month to Rs 35,000. Those who have served for more than five years would get an additional amount — the number of years multiplied by Rs 2,000. Currently, the additional amount is the number of years multiplied by Rs 1,500.

If the Finance Ministry agrees to allocate the amount, Parliament will amend the Salary, Allowance and Pension of Members of Parliament (Amendment) Bill to incorporate the changes, sources said. “The ministry is expected to accept the proposals,” said a top government official.

The Finance Minister had allocated Rs 295.25 crore for Lok Sabha MPs and Rs 121.96 crore for Rajya Sabha MPs — which includes expenses such as travel — in his last budget.

IAF BASE ATTACKED Driver’s killing was a professional’s job

5Jupinderjit Singh,Tribune News Service,Chandigarh, January 9

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Allegedly attacked by militants in the wee hours of January 1, curiously the nature of injury on  deceased taxi driver Ikaagar Singh’s neck and that of the injured jeweller Rajesh Verma is very different. Both were allegedly assaulted by a sharp-edged weapon.Doctors who conducted the  medico-legal examination say Ikaagar’s throat may have been slit by a professional killer. But the same could not be said about the jeweller, who survived the attack.Officials wonder if Ikaagar and Rajesh were attacked by different terrorists who formed part of the group that let off Salwinder Singh, SP, or by different groups of militants. Doctors and police officials say Ikaagar’s injuries show he may have put up a resistance against the attackers. But in case of Rajesh, there are no such signs.  Ikaagar’s body had stab wounds in the chest and the stomach.Investigators are yet to declare Ikaagar clean as a phone call from Pakistan was received on his phone. But Satnam Singh, the deceased’s brother, says his brother scuffled with the militants and that is enough proof of his innocence. “My brother fought the terrorists. He tried to overturn the car to stop the terrorists from reaching their target. That is why the Chief Minister has acknowledged his sacrifice. On the other hand, a trained police officer with years of experience could not do anything,” he remarked.While Ikaagar’s body was found near Kathlore bridge on way to Pathankot from Kohlian village chowk, his Innova car was found abandoned 2 km from Kohlian village town towards Pakistan. Two tyres of the car were deflated.Ikaagar lived in an impressive house in Bhagwal village. He had bought a second-hand Mahindra Scorpio worth Rs 3 lakh two weeks ago for which he took a loan.The police are trying to ascertain if Ikaagar had any other source of income as his life style was opulent. “On the one hand they declare him a martyr and on the other, they have doubts about him. Why would he have struggled with the terrorists if he was hand in glove with them? Why did terrorists kill him and not the SP,” asked Ikagaar’s brother.The Punjab government has declared Ikaagar a martyr even though the investigations are yet to be completed. The family has been paid a compensation of Rs 5 lakh and the government has promised a job for his sister or wife.The narrow street to his house is being paved again. It would be a huge embarrassment for the government if found that Ikagaar had ties with anti-social elements.


Governor briefed on security along LoC, border

Tribune News Servic,Jammu, December 22

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Governor NN Vohra today reviewed the security scenario on the Line of Control (LoC) and international border and discussed measures that could enhance transparency in the administrative set-up.In a meeting, General Officer Commanding of 16 Corps, Lt Gen RR Nimbhorkar briefed the Governor about the situation along the LoC and the emerging security environment during the current winter.The Governor discussed with Lt Gen Nimbhorkar several issues related to more effective surveillance of the international border and further strengthening of the counter-infiltration grid. The Governor also spoke about security concerns in the hinterland.In a separate meeting, Chief Information Commissioner GR Sufi apprised the Governor about the efforts being made by the Commission for enabling implementation of the Right to Information Act, 2009, in the state and enhance awareness among the masses regarding their right to seek relevant information from all public offices under the Act.The Governor discussed with Sufi the measures which could be taken to further enhance transparency in the functioning of the administrative apparatus in Jammu and Kashmir.The Governor also met Ranjeet Singh, national president of the Bahujan Kranti Party (BKP) (Marxvad-Ambedkarvad). BKP president Ranjeet Singh submitted a memorandum to the Governor regarding the BKP’s demands.The demands included bringing about constitutional and statutory provisions for improving the electoral process, particularly deleting the names of contesting candidates from ballot paper; election-related expenditure being met by the government instead of candidates and political parties; elections being contested on the basis of party ideology and not in the name of any individual; grant of right to political parties to recall elected candidates; terminating recognition of political parties which fail to fulfil 75 per cent of promises mentioned in their election manifestos; and doing away with MPLAD and constituency development funds.

Army holds blood donation camp

A blood donation camp was organised by the Jammu and Kashmir Light Infantry Regimental Centre under the aegis of the Chinar Corps, on its Rangreth here on Monday.The camp was inaugurated by the Officiating Commandant, JAK LI Regimental Centre, Col AA Bapat.A defence spokesperson said the camp was organised with a view to augment the stock of blood at the civil hospital in Srinagar.“Nearly 50 Army personnel from the Regimental Centre donated blood. The blood units collected were provided to Lal Ded Hospital in Srinagar,” the spokesperson said.Senior officials of the Public Health Department present during the event mentioned that the blood will meet the urgent surgical requirement at the hospital.


WHEN TERROR CHECKED IN

HT investigates and reconstructs the audacious attack on the Pathankot air base that has tested India’s response and its relations with Pakistan

From page 1 Hours before the long gun battle began at the Indian Air Force air base in Pathankot, one of the terrorists named Nasir called his mother in Pakistan and told her he was on a fidayeen mission. “Host a lavish party,’’ he said. He wanted his ‘martyrdom’ to be celebrated and informed his mother that she would get a call from ‘Ustad’ once he had attained it. The terrorists had no confusion. They were crystal clear about their task and had come prepared to turn their bodies into missiles. Unlike the six terrorists who managed to breach the high-security airbase despite concrete and credible intelligence that came from Pathankot’s Superintendent of Police (SP), Salwinder Singh, the security establishment was far from prepared for the deadly assault. At first, the Border Security Force (BSF) which guards the international border between Punjab and Pakistan had no clue that a heavily armed group had infiltrated into India. Even after they were accidentally — and providentially — discovered, the terrorists, armed with assault rifles, were mistaken to be robbers.

AP PHOTOLt Col Niranjan Kumar’s funeral in Elambulasserry in Kerala on January 5

It is not often that intelligence comes knocking on the front door. Before the Mumbai attacks in 2008, intelligence agencies had failed to join the dots despite ‘Taj Hotel’ appearing in several intercepts, but on the night of December 31, barely an hour before the dawn of a new year, the terrorists came face to face with an SP rank officer in Pathankot. He was blindfolded and thrown out of the car before the terrorists fled in his blue-beacon XUV. The information provided by the controversial and colourful SP Salwinder Singh was, however, dismissed by his seniors, who thought he had probably partied too long. Even after he was finally taken seriously, the Indian security establishment was unclear of where the terrorists would strike or how many they numbered. By late morning on January 1, it was clear that the first day of the new year was signing in with a terror imprint: Innova driver Ikagar Singh’s body was found with his throat slit. Salwinder Singh’s Mahindra XUV was tracked to just outside the air base and his jeweller friend Rajesh Verma too had checked into a hospital with a gash on his throat.

Phone lines started buzzing between Delhi and Pathankot, between Jammu and Udhampur, where the army’s Northern Command is based, between Chandigarh, which headquarters the Punjab Police, and Chandi Mandir in Panchkula, where the Army’s Western Command is headquartered. And between the Prime Minister’s Office and Manesar, where the elite commandos of the National Security Guards are based. The country’s security establishment was on high alert and defense establishments in Pathankot were asked to activate their quick reaction teams (QRTs).

Soon, it also became known that the terrorists had an unmistakable Pakistan connection. They had made the cardinal error of using the phones that they’d snatched from Ikagar and Rajesh. The intelligence agencies had intercepted vital inputs: conversations between the terrorists and their handlers and Nasir’s farewell call to his mother. In one call, the handler reprimands the terrorist for sparing the SP and in another, he can be heard telling one of the terrorists that one group has moved ahead.

FIRST CONTACT

The terrorists had not just moved ahead, they had managed to enter Pathankot’s air base undetected, even as QRT’s made plans of stopping them at the gates of their respective establishments. The terrorists had checked in and were lying in wait. They were already inside the reinforced gates well before the NSG commandos took position. The terrorists had managed to evade the BSF, the Punjab Police and the Garud and Defense Service Corps. The base’s security cover has weakened over the years. The perimeter wall has no patrolling road around it. At several points, the wall shares its length with residential houses with no efforts to contain encroachment around the base. Members of the Gujjar community have settled around the boundary wall and are allowed inside the base to gather fodder and to graze their animals. The road where Ikagar and Salwinder were kidnapped is barely five kilometers from the international border but there is no police picket on it. The first police picket at Kathlour Bridge let the SP’s blue beacon car go thinking it was a VIP vehicle. The approximately 30km distance to Pathankot airport was covered in an hour with no stop before Salwinder and his cook Madan Gopal were thrown out. Nasir and his terror companions made their first attempt at martyrdom in the dead of night intervening January 1 and 2. The fidayeen squad first shot a Garud, the Indian Air Force’s in-house commando team and quickly made their way to the DSC mess where Jagdish Chand, an ex-army wrestler was preparing tea. Chand grappled with the terrorists, overpowered one, snatched his rifle and shot him dead before being killed himself. In the mess, the terrorists killed four more DSC men. The terror imprint had been firmly stamped at first contact even as QRTs waited for the terrorists disguised in army fatigues to show up at their gates. After one terrorist was killed, the remaining are

CONFUSION REIGNS

Pathankot has a large air base with nearly 10,000 families living within the sprawling perimeter with a circumference of 25 kms. The fear of a hostage situation was real. The base also had 23 foreign military trainees from Nigeria, Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar. That the trainees were in close proximity to the DSC mess gave the IAF some anxious moments till they were rescued by the army and the NSG. The gates to the technical area where the IAF’s fighter machines — MIGs and MIs — are parked were also barely 500 metres from the mess. “God was on our side,’’ an air force source said, adding, “There was no fog and we were lucky to be able to fly our UAV’s.” Luck was constantly by their side as confusion reigned. The terrorists had not only hauled in 50 kg of ammunition and 30 kg of grenades that could damage tanks, but had also brought in inflammable gel to set machines on fire. By the evening of January 2, the remaining three terrorists were engaged and killed. The air traffic control, which was the operation control room, burst into celebration thinking there were only four terrorists. “Liquor was filled in glasses and the operation, though not officially declared ended, was considered to be over,” a source revealed. The same message was perhaps relayed to Delhi for soon the Home and Defense ministers tweeted congratulatory messages. In fact, the party had started too soon.

MISPLACED RELIEF

The security grid had planned well: mine protected vehicles had been moved from Northern Command to Mamoon, not far from Pathankot. Highly trained men had moved in too but none knew that two more terrorists lay in wait. They had come well equipped with morphine injections and packets of cooked chicken and rotis.

Presuming the battle to be over — despite the SP’s cook having said there were at least five terrorists — the NSG went about its task of sanitizing the complex. Tragedy struck when its bomb disposal squad officer, Lt Col Niranjan was removing bombs from the dead body of one of the four terrorists. “He pulled out a grenade and his buddy told him to throw it away. He did, but it exploded,’’ said an officer privy to the incident, adding, “Niranjan was wearing his armour but his lungs collapsed due to the sheer impact of pressure.”

Firing started again between 10 and 11 in the morning. Six defense personnel were on the first floor of the same building from which the fifth and sixth terrorist had fired. Luck saved the day again: a latch door between the ground and first floors stayed untouched. Perhaps the terrorists didn’t know they had six defense personnel right above them as perfect hostages. Even after the six had been rescued, the battle was fierce. Cannon fire was used to try and silence the terrorists, who showed no signs of having been silenced. “I could have taken a tank and blasted the building or used rocket launchers but that would have damaged civilian areas. They continued to engage us through the day,’’ an officer said.

Finally, it appears, ‘the cooking phenomenon’ — to use a military term — was set in motion. The phenomenon is a process where ammunition starts exploding on its own. This coupled with cannon bursts resulted in the two terrorists literally melting. All that was found the next morning were pieces of flesh and bone. The NSG sent a dog into the building the next morning to ensure that the terrorists had been killed. If the bodies had melted, how did they know there were two terrorists and not one? “Because the pieces of bone and flesh were found at two different locations of the ground floor,” an officer said. The gun battle had indeed ended. But amid the rubble at the Pathankot airbase lie questions that need answers. The hows and the whys are being addressed by the National Investigation Agency. Maybe this time the post mortems and enquiries will plug holes to ensure that terror does not check in as easily again.

LIST OF LAPSES

When terrorists struck at the Dinanagar police station in July last year, it was a signal to Pakistan-based terrorist outfits plotting on making Punjab the new port of terror. The audacious Pathankot airbase attack has only confirmed the terrorists’ insidious intent to spread the jihadi arc to the border state

CHINKS IN THE BORDER

By all accounts, terrorists infiltrated into India from the Bamiyal belt. Besides its broken terrain and riverine topography, it has a 40-km unfenced stretch, supposed to be guarded with thermal imagers, floodlights and more boots on the ground. However, it remains thinly-manned while technical devices were found to be non-functional. As a result, it became the walk-in border for terrorists, not once but twice in past six months. The BSF has been in denial mode even though Dinanagar investigation has established that they entered from the Punjab border.

NO SECOND LINE OF DEFENCE

The latest depredation has also highlighted the absence of vigil in areas close to the border. After breaching the border security, heavily-armed terrorists were on the loose for 24 hours, carjacked two vehicles and travelled unchecked for about 35km before reaching their target — the IAF base at Pathankot. Despite a high alert sounded in the last week of December, there were no signs of beefed-up security or check points on key roads.

INTELLIGENCE FAILURE

There was no specific, actionable intelligence on an impending terror plot. The Union home ministry’s new year’s-eve advisory talked about “uncorroborated information” about Pakistan-based Lashkar-eToiba’s plans to strike and listed a range of general targets. There were no intelligence inputs on Jaish-e-Mohammad or the Pathankot airbase. The terrorists’ actions – the kidnapping of a Punjab police SP, a Jaish pamphlet from the abandoned vehicle, and their intercepted calls to their handlers in Pakistan – alerted security agencies.

POORLY GUARDED AIRBASE

Despite being a front-line airbase, the IAF complex sprawling over 1,900 acres, had a poorly-guarded perimeter wall. With cheek-by-jowl civilian dwellings on its periphery and thickfoliage along the boundary wall, it was only waiting to be breached by terrorists on a suicide mission. They went unnoticed even as they scaled the outer wall.

UNCHECKED NARCO-TERRORISM

Narcotic smuggling has been a cottage industry in the villages along Punjab’s border with Pakistan. Smugglers on both sides are known to help terror groups cross the borders and give them shelter. Officials suspect the Pathankot attackers too got their clandestine support.

THE BEST OF THE ELITE FORCES

India’s response to the fidayeen attack on the Pathankot fighter base set off a fierce debate over whether the NSG or the army’s Special Forces (SF) should have handled the operation. Here’s what you need to know about the two HISTORY The NSG was set up in 1984 soon after the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi as a counter-terrorism force to be used in exceptional circumstances.

The army raised its first Para Commando units in 1966. The redesignation of these units as SF happened in the mid-1990s. ROLE The NSG is trained and equipped for counterterrorism operations, hostage rescue, antihijack operations and urban warfare. It also guards VVIPs. The SF specialises in covert operations, warfare in jungles, mountains and deserts, low-intensity conflict and hostage rescue EQUIPMENT The NSG is equipped with German Heckler & Koch MP5 submachine guns, Swiss SIG SG 551 assault rifles, Austrian Glock-17 pistols and Heckler and Koch PSG1 sniper rifles. The SF is armed with Israeli TAR-21 assault rifles, US-made Colt M4 carbines and a mix of Israeli Galil and Russian Dragunov sniper rifles. STRUCTURE Half of the NSG personnel, also known as Black Cat commandos, are drawn from the army. The paramilitary and state police forces contribute the rest. Army personnel volunteer to join the SF and have to undergo a rigorous selection process. The SF comes under the defence ministry. DEPLOYMENT The NSG is deployed at four hubs across the country to mount a swift response. Two more are planned. The hubs came up after the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks in 2008. The SF units are continuously deployed in operations in Jammu and Kashmir and the Northeast.


PATHANKOT ATTACK Sharif’s second meet on leads

Simran Sodhi,Tribune News Service,New Delhi, January 8

The uncertainty over the Foreign Secretary-level talks scheduled for January 15 in Islamabad continued today with Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif reportedly ordering a probe into the evidence provided by India over the Pathankot attacks.Sharif held a second high-level meeting today with his senior officials, including Army Chief Raheel Sharif. This is his second such meeting in as many days. Sources said the meeting was called to discuss the Pathankot attacks.The leads provided by National Security Adviser Ajit Doval have reportedly been handed over to Pakistan Intelligence Bureau chief Aftab Sultan for further action.India has stated publicly that talks cannot happen till Pakistan acts on this “actionable intelligence”. A section of the Pakistan media reported that Pakistan officials felt the evidence provided by India was not enough as it contained mainly telephone numbers and they might seek additional information.Sources in the government told The Tribune that India had not received any such request from Pakistan so far.Sources said both PMs were keen on taking forward the dialogue process that had just resumed between the two countries. Sharif had yesterday held a high-level meeting with top officials.

Sharif chairs meet on Pathankot again

SAVING TALKS Reviews action on leads provided by India; Modi may visit Pathankot today or address soldiers via web chat

NEW DELHI: Pakistan on Friday reviewed the progress on leads provided by India about the Pathankot attack, a day after New Delhi linked next week’s talks between the foreign secretaries to Islamabad’s response to the audacious strike.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has stressed on the need for urgent action when he spoke to Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif, is likely to visit the Pathankot airbase on Saturday or address soldiers via web chat, government sources said.

However, Punjab DGP Suresh Arora told HT there was no official communication regarding the visit. While Islamabad pushed for a sustained dialogue in the wake of the attack that has cast a shadow on bilateral ties, authorities in New Delhi said they were awaiting a formal response from Pakistan.

Sources said India had shared actionable intelligence about the terrorists, believed to be from the Pakistan-based Jaishe-Mohammed group. “There is no deadline. But we hope Pakistan takes action in time so that the scheduled talks are not hampered,” said an official.

Sleuths of the National Investigation Agency (NIA) are probing whether the attackers in Pathankot had help from inside to enter the airbase and remain hidden for nearly 24 hours, sources said. The federal anti-terror agency on Friday formally summoned Punjab police officer Salwinder Singh who claims he along with a friend and a cook were abducted by terrorists involved in the attack. Sources said the SP may also have to go through a polygraph test.

Investigators say the probe will also determine whether weapons used by the attackers came in drugs consignments and the terrorists secured passage with the help of local drug cartels who may or may not have known their real identity.

“All these aspects are part of the inside angle probe,” said a counter-terror official.

A meeting chaired by Sharif in Islamabad, also attended by army chief Gen Raheel Sharif and ISI chief Lt Gen Rizwan Akhtar, reiterated Pakistan’s commitment to cooperate with India to “completely eradicate” terrorism.

A statement issued by Sharif’s office after the meeting contained several assurances that appeared to be aimed at assuaging Indian concerns.

“In line with Pakistan’s commitment to effectively counter and eradicate terrorism, the meeting reviewed the progress made on the information provided by the government of India,” the statement said without giving any details.

“The meeting expressed the confidence that building on the goodwill generated by the recent high level contacts, the two countries would remain committed to a sustained, meaningful and comprehensive dialogue process,” it said.

The statement reiterated Pakistan’s 2004 commitment about not allowing its soil to be used for terrorism directed at India.

“The people of Pakistan have evolved a political consensus for action against all terrorists and terrorist organisations without any distinction, and have resolved that no terrorist would be allowed to use Pakistan’s soil for committing terrorism anywhere in the world,” it said.

Pakistan repeated its condemnation of the Pathankot attack and the statement said the country’s “entire leadership and institutions were working in complete harmony to counter terrorism and extremism” – an indication that the powerful army was on board.

Besides the army and ISI chiefs, the meeting was also attended by interior minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, foreign policy chief Sartaj Aziz, national security adviser Nasser Janjua, foreign secretary Aizaz Chaudhry and the Director General of Military Operations.

The Pathankot attack had figured in another meeting between Prime Minister Sharif and his top aides on Thursday. Pakistani media reports said Sharif had directed authorities to launch a probe on the basis of the information provided by India.

India’s demand for action against the JeM had also figured at a meeting of corps commanders chaired by army chief Gen Sharif on Wednesday, sources said.

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