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LCA Tejas set to debut outside Indian airspace

NEW DELHI: The locally-produced light combat aircraft (LCA) is set to make its international debut. The LCA Tejas will fly outside Indian airspace for the first time at the Bahrain International airshow being held at the Sakhir airbase from January 21-23, a defence ministry spokesperson said on Friday.

The fighter is among the 15 weapon systems identified for export by the Defence Research and Development Organisation to help the country get into the international arms bazaar. The Indian Air Force plans to induct six squadrons (120 planes) of the LCA with upgrades, including a new electronic warfare suite, refuelling capacity, better missiles and improved radar.

A report released by the comptroller and auditor general in May 2015 had revealed that the LCA-Mark1 was riddled with 53 “significant shortfalls” that could compromise its survivability in combat.


‘Rudra’ to debut at R-Day parade

Tribune News Service,New Delhi, January 23

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Indigenously designed, developed, built and weaponised version of advanced light helicopter (ALH) — “Rudra” — will make its debut at the Republic Day parade. The helicopter produced by the Defence Ministry owned public sector giant Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) is being used by the Army since February 2013.The HAL is to produce 76 of these helicopters of which 60 are for the Indian Army’s Strike Corps formations — three of them headquartered at Mathura, Ambala and Bhopal. Armed helicopters fly in coordination with ground-based tank regiments. HAL handed over the first two Rudra helicopters to the Army’s Aviation wing in Bangalore in 2013 and since then more machines have been added.Rudra is equipped with a mix of weapons providing it with the capability to search and destroy any target. It carries a 20mm automatic cannon, which can fire at a rate of 750 rounds per minute with an effective range of 2,000 metres.The stub-wings of Rudra can be fitted with up to eight Helina (helicopter-launched Nag) anti-tank guided missiles, four MBDA mistral short-range air-to-air missiles or four rocket pods for 70mm rockets. The helicopter is equipped with Integrated Defensive Aids Suite (IDAS), radar warning receiver, IR jammer, flare and chaff dispenser. Pilots have a helmet-mounted sight and fixed sight facilitating firing of the onboard weapons. Future upgrades will include infra-red jammer, obstacle avoidance system for the Army version of the helicopter and Nuclear Biological and Chemical sensors. The helicopter is powered by French origin Turbomeca engines and has a maximum speed of 270 kmph with flying ceiling of 20,000 feet. Another first this time will be a covered bulletproof enclosure — that will have a roof. Last year, the dignitaries sat through rain.French President Francois Hollande will be the chief guest. The Army’s dog squad used as sniffers and explosive detectors will also figure in the parade. It will be after 27 years that the dogs will be part of the parade. Also plagued by monotony and security concerns of protecting a large number of high-risk individuals, this year’s parade will be shorter by 25 minutes (of 90 minutes).

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India, China border personnel meet held on LAC

ribune News Service,Jammu, January 1

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A ceremonial border personnel meeting in the Chushul Sector of eastern Ladakh on the New Year. A Tribune photo

A ceremonial border personnel meeting between India and China was held on the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in the Chushul sector of eastern Ladakh on the New Year today. The meeting was held at the Moldo Garrison of the Chushul sector, said defence spokesperson SD Goswami.“Both the sides sought to build on the mutual feeling to uphold the treaties and agreements signed between the governments of the two sides to maintain peace and tranquility along the LAC,” said Goswami.The Indian delegation was led by Brigadier Vijyant Yadav whereas the Chinese side was represented by Senior Colonel Fan Jun.The meeting was marked by saluting the national flag of China by the members of both the delegations followed by ceremonial address by leaders of the two groups. The delegation heads exchanged New Year greetings and expressed mutual desire of maintaining and improving relations at functional level at the border, said the spokesperson. Both delegations interacted in a free, congenial and cordial environment, the spokesperson added.During the recent visit of Northern Command chief Lt Gen Hooda to Lanzhou Military Region, measures to maintain cordial relations, peace and tranquility were discussed between the two sides. Meanwhile, a culture programme showcasing vibrant Chinese culture and traditional grandeur was also organized on the occasion.

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Two Army men arrested for extortion in Kulgam

Suhail A Shah,Anantnag, January 1

Four persons, including two Army men, have been arrested in Kulgam district of south Kashmir for allegedly extorting money on gun point while posing as Hizbul Mujahideen militants.The Army men have been found involved in more than one case of extortion, the police said.The police were investigating an extortion complaint by a doctor from Khrewan village of the district when the role of the two Army men came under scrutiny.The accused soldiers have been identified as Muhammad Yousuf Teli and Muhammad Rafiq Khanday of Jammu and Kashmir Light Infantry. They are presently posted with the 19 Rashtriya Rifles camp in the Larkipora area of Kulgam district.The police said the accused Army men were the residents of the district.According to police report, an FIR (303-2015) under sections 34, 386 and 452 of the Ranbir Penal Code was registered against the accused after an extortion complaint by Dr Bila Beigh from the Khrewan Malpora area.Dr Beigh told the Tribune that two armed men, posing as Hizb militants, had held his family hostage on Sunday evening and ransacked their house, before decamping with Rs 32,000 and some electronic gadgets.“I was in Delhi when the incident took place. My sister and her husband were at my place and they were in deep shock,” Dr Beigh said.Station House Officer (SHO), Qazigund, Parvez Ahmad said it was Dr Beigh’s sister who had spotted one of the accused at the Emergency Hospital in Qazigund, where she works as a senior dental technician.“The police swung into action and arrested the identified man, who led us to his accomplice,” the SHO said.The two were identified Muzaffar Ahmad Bhat and Nisar Ahmad, he said.While the police were interrogating the arrested duo, one of Dr Beigh’s neighbours Muhammad Yousuf Teeli approached him and confessed to have provided weapons to the accused duo.“He pleaded for forgiveness and was worried that he will be thrown out of the Army,” Dr Beigh said. “I, however, informed the police regarding the incident and they picked up the threads from there,” he said. The police questioned Teeli and subsequently secured a confession from him of being involved in multiple extortion cases. “He also led us to one of his accomplices. Both have been produced in court and sent to remand,” the SHO said.The police officer said the Army men have also confessed to having carried out similar extortions across Kulgam and in neighbouring Anantnag district.

In the dock

  • Two Army men and two civilians have been arrested in Kulgam district for allegedly extorting money on gun point while posing as Hizbul Mujahideen militants
  • The accused soldiers have been identified as Muhammad Yousuf Teli and Muhammad Rafiq Khanday of the Jammu and Kashmir Light Infantry. They are at present posted with the 19 Rashtriya Rifles camp in the Larkipora area of Kulgam district

Poor quality products from Ordnance Factory Board forces soldiers to purchase boots and uniforms

NEW DELHI: Soldiers of the world’s second-biggest army are being forced to buy their own boots and uniforms because those issued to them are so poor in quality. Defence ministry officials told ET that the Ordnance Factory Board (OFB), responsible for the production of boots and uniforms, has been inundated with complaints about substandard products.

While the matter has been raised with the defence ministry, OFB officials are said to have been conducting surveys and inspections across units in the last few months, besides interacting with officials on the quality of products.

The boots are liable to tear and the heavy sole is prone to dropping off, said a soldier who has had to buy a new pair within three months of being issued OFB footwear.

As for uniforms, the biggest complaint is the quality of the material, which gets ripped and fades, adding to colour mismatches. A havildar said that this means getting pulled up at inspections and parades. Awkward sizing is another complaint, making it also almost impossible for the soldiers of the 1.2 million strong army to find the right fit.

“The OFB issues uniforms and boots every 18 months, but they last only three-four months,” said one of the persons cited above. “There is no option but to buy these from the market.” OFB hadn’t responded to queries as of press time.

Army headquarters confirmed that there were flaws in the boot design. “Boot High Ankle DVS was reported to have heavy sole and a better design and lighter weight with polyurethane rubber sole for better flexibility has been identified,” said an official. Approval for an open tender enquiry ( OTE) has been obtained, he said.

ET VIEW
Put out tender for accessories

Armies are no longer measured by their size alone, but by their armoury — and how their soldiers are treated. Clearly, the Indian Army has been suffering on the second front. No matter how much we valorise our soldiers, if basic equipment like uniform and boots are sub-standard, there is a serious problem of morale –especially when soldiers are made to make their own purchases. If the ordnance factories can’t do the job, put out tenders to get them from elsewhere.


Pakistan’s army is building an arsenal of ”tiny” nuclear weapons—and it’s going to backfire

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Pakistan has the fastest growing nuclear arsenal and, within the next five to ten years, it is likely to double that of India, and exceed those of France, the United Kingdom, and China. Only the arsenals of the United States and Russia will be larger.

In recent years, Pakistan has boasted of developing “tactical nuclear weapons” to protect itself against potential offensive actions by India. In fact, Pakistan is the only country currently boasting of makingincreasingly tiny nuclear weapons (link in Urdu).

Pakistanis overwhelmingly support their army and its various misadventures. And the pursuit of tactical weapons is no exception. However, there is every reason why Pakistanis should be resisting—not welcoming—this development. The most readily identifiable reason is that, in the event of conflict between the two South Asian countries, this kind of weaponization will likely result in tens of thousands of dead Pakistanis, rather than Indians. And things will only go downhill from there.

Why would Pakistan want “the world’s smallest nuclear weapons”?

In late 1999, Pakistan’s general Pervez Musharraf (who took power of Pakistan through a military coup in Oct. 1999 and remained in power until 2008), along with a tight cabal of fellow military officials began a limited incursion into the Kargil-Dras area of Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. While planning for this began in the fall of 1998, by the time Pakistani troops were discovered there in May of 1999 Pakistani forces had taken territory that was several miles into India-administered Kashmir.

Because the Pakistanis had the tactical advantage of occupying the ridge line, India took heavy losses in recovering the area from the invaders. The so-called Kargil War was the first conventional conflict between India and Pakistan since the two conducted nuclear tests in May 1998. International observers were wary that the conflict would escalate either in territory or aims, with the potential for nuclear exchange.

Fearing such escalation, then Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif sought support from China and the United States. Both were adamant that Pakistan respect the line of control, which separated the portions of Jammu-Kashmir administered by India and Pakistan.

Under international pressure and branded an irresponsible state, Pakistan withdrew its forces from Kashmir. It initially claimed that the intruders were mujahedeen—but this was later found to be pure fiction. While Pakistan was isolated internationally, the international community widely applauded India’s restraint. The Kargil War provided the United States with the opportunity to reorient its relations away from Pakistan towards India, while at the same time, demonstrated to India that the United States would not reflexively side with Pakistan.

In retrospect, the Kargil war catalyzed the deepening security cooperation between the United States and India. It also galvanized a serious rethink in India about its domestic security apparatus, intelligence agencies’ capabilities, and overall military doctrine.

Crucially, India learned from this conflict that limited war is indeed possible under the nuclear umbrella. In Oct. 2000, air commodore Jasjit Singh, who retired as the director of operations of India’s air force and headed India’s Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses until 2001, laid out the lineaments of an India’s limited war doctrine. However, no apparent effort was made to make this a viable military concept immediately and India persisted with its defensive posture. In late Dec. 2001, Pakistani terrorists from the Pakistan-backed military group Jaish-e-Mohammad attacked India’s parliament in New Delhi.

In response, India’s government began the largest military mobilizationsince the 1971 war, which resulted in the liberation of Bangladesh, then East Pakistan. Just as the crisis was subsiding, another group of Pakistani terrorists, Lashkar-e-Taiba, attacked the wives and children of Indian military personnel in Kaluchak, Kashmir. India again seemed poised to take military action but ultimately backed down. The crisis was officially defused after India held elections in Kashmir later that fall. Pakistan concluded that its nuclear arsenal had successfully deterred India from attacking.

As Walter Ladwig has written, analysts identified several problems with India’s posture during that crisis. First, the Indian army took a long time to mobilize which gave Pakistan time to internationalize the conflict and to bring international pressure to bare upon India. Second, the mobilization of India’s strike corps had no element of surprise. Even Pakistan’s modest surveillance capabilities could easily detect their movements, and given their “lumbering composition,” could quickly discern their destination. Third, according to Ladwig, India’s holding corps’ were forward deployed to the border but lacked offensive power and could only conduct limited offensive tasks.

In response to these collective inadequacies, and the prospects of enduring threats from Pakistan, the Indian defense community began formalizing what came to be known as “Cold Start.” Ladwig, who wrote the first comprehensive account, claims that the doctrine aimed to pivot India away from its traditional defensive posture, and towards a more offensive one. It involved developing eight division-sized “integrated battle groups” that combined infantry, artillery, and armor which would be prepared to launch into Pakistani territory on short notice along several axes of advance.

These groups would also be closely integrated with support from the navy and air force. With this force posture, India could quickly mobilize these battle groups and seize limited Pakistani territory before the international community could raise objections.

India could then use this seized territory to force Pakistan into accepting the status quo in Kashmir. While Indians insist that this doctrine never existed, other analysts discount Indian demurrals and note slow—but steady—progress in developing these offensive capabilities. Irrespective of India’s protestations, Pakistanis take “Cold Start” to be a matter of Quranic fact.

Worried that its primary tools of using terrorism fortified by the specter of nuclear war, and fearing that India would be able to force acquiescence, Pakistan concluded that it could vitiate “Cold Start” by developing tactical nuclear weapons. As Pakistan’s former ambassador the United States and current ambassador to the United Nations,Maleeha Lodhi, explained, the basis of Pakistan’s fascination with tactical nuclear weapons is “to counterbalance India’s move to bring conventional military offensives to a tactical level.’’

Pakistani military and civilians often boast of their fast growing arsenal of the world’s smallest nuclear weapons and routinely update the world on the progress of the short-range missile, the Nasr, that would deliver this ever-shrinking payload.

Why should ordinary Pakistanis care?

While Pakistanis overwhelmingly applaud their army’s continued efforts to harass India in pursuit of Kashmir—a territory that Pakistanwas never entitled to but fought three wars to acquire by force—there are numerous reasons why Pakistanis should be more sanguine, or evenalarmed by Pakistan’s development of tactical nuclear weapons.

The first reality that should discomfit ordinary Pakistanis is that there is really no such thing as a “tactical nuclear weapon.” Even the smallest so-called tactical nuclear weapon will have strategic consequences. (Simply calling them “battlefield nuclear weapons” does not obviate this serious problem.) If Pakistan should use such weapons on India, there is virtually no chance that India will be left responding alone. The international community will most certainly rally around India. The response to Pakistan breaking a nuclear taboo that formed after the Americans used atomic bombs on Japan will most certainly be swift and devastating.

Second, as Shashank Joshi, a war studies researcher at the University of Oxford, has argued, these weapons do not have the military benefits that Pakistan’s military boasts, yet they exacerbate the enormous command and control challenges, including the possibility that nefarious elements may pilfer them once they are forward deployed. For one thing, tactical nuclear weapons do not have significant battlefield effects on enemy targets. For another, it is not evident that these weapons are in fact capable of deterring an Indian incursion into Pakistan.

Third, while Naeem Salik, a former director for arms control at Pakistan’s Strategic Plans Directorate, has said that Pakistan has shifted away from merely doctrinal thinking towards “actual nuclear war fighting,” such thinking is hardly viable for the simple reason of faulty math.

Even if, for the sake of argument, one assumes that Pakistan deploys its one hundred odd weapons of 15 to 30 kilotons at India’s major cities, it is unlikely that Pakistan would be able to deploy all of these weapons to conduct a “splendid first strike,” by which Indian capabilities are completely destroyed.

Moreover, it takes considerably fewer weapons of similar magnitude to utterly destroy Pakistan. Pakistan has thoughtfully concentrated all but three corps in central the Punjab region, which is also its most populous province and the country’s industrial and agricultural center. In short, Pakistan will cease to be a viable political entity while India, though grievously hurt, will survive as a state. Even if Pakistan obtains a functioning triad and retains launch capabilities from submarines, they will be launched in defense of a state that, simply put, no longer exists.

There is a fourth problem that should disquiet Pakistanis perhaps even more than the triggering of the destruction of their country through the deliberate or inadvertent use of their micro-weapons—these tactical nuclear weapons are intended to be used first against Indian troops on Pakistani soil. According to a conference report by the Naval Post School, which hosted Pakistan’s military and diplomatic officials, one Pakistani luminary opined that the “Nasr creates a balancing dynamic that frustrates and makes futile the power-maximizing strategy of India.”

He envisages the Nasr’s shells being used to carry atomic explosives that would annihilate advancing Indian armored thrusts in the southern deserts and blunt Indian advances toward major Pakistani cities, such as Lahore. Retired military general S. F. S. Lodhi, in the April 1999 issue of the Pakistan Defence Journal, laid out four stages of escalation in Pakistan’s use of tactical nuclear weapons which aligns with this view as well.

The consequences of Pakistan nuking itself to keep the Indians out should disturb Pakistanis. According to calculations by Jaganath Sankaran, Pakistan would have to use a 30-kiloton weapon on its own soil, as this is the minimum required to render ineffective fifty percent of an armored unit.

Using Lahore as an example, a 30-kiloton weapon used on the outskirts of the city could kill over 52,000 persons. As Indian troops move closer to Lahore and as the population increases, such a weapon could kill nearly 380,000. Sankaran notes, as an aside, that this would “genuinely destroy a larger battalion or brigade.” Consequently, many more Pakistanis would be likely to die than these horrendous figures suggest.

All of sudden, Pakistan’s tactical nuclear weapons don’t look so fun for any Pakistani who thinks through the math.

Fifth, Pakistanis should be derisive of this new weapon in the national arsenal because it cannot do what the army promises: protect Pakistan from an Indian offensive. Would any Indian military planner take seriously Pakistan’s threat to use nuclear weapons on its own soil when the casualties are so high? Pakistan may have been willing to eat grass to get its nuclear weapons, but is it willing destroy its own center of gravity to maintain its ability to harass India with terrorism over territory to which it never had any legal claim? If the Indians do not take this threat seriously, how is it a deterrent against them? What additional deterrent capability do these weapons afford Pakistan that its strategic assets do not that compensates for the enormous risks they convey?

Finally, if India took Pakistan’s threats seriously, it does not have to invade Pakistan to coerce the country’s leaders to detonate one of these weapons on its own soil. Presumably simply looking adequately likely to cross the international border and threaten a major Punjabi city could provoke a “demonstration detonation.”

I am not encouraging a nuclear Armageddon upon Pakistan; rather expositing the limited utility that these weapons confer upon Pakistan.

Even if Pakistan fully inducts these weapons in its arsenal, it still has an army that can’t win a conventional war against India and nuclear weapons it cannot use. This leaves only an industrial farm of terrorists as the only efficacious tool at its disposal. And given the logic of the above scenario, India and the international community should consider seriously calling Pakistan’s bluff. The only logical Pakistani response to a limited offensive incursion is to accept the fait accompli and acquiesce.
So far, the West has seen Pakistan’s nuclear weapons as a proliferation threat rather than a security threat. The implications of this has largely been appeasement. The United States, worried that Pakistan’s weapons may fall into the hands of non-state actors or that Pakistan will once again reopen its nuclear weapons bazaar to aspirant nuclear powers, perpetually argues for engaging Pakistan diplomatically, militarily, politically, and financially. In essence, Pakistan has effectively blackmailed the United States and the international community for an array of assistance exploiting the collective fears of what may happen should Pakistan collapse.

In recent months, some US White House officials have even argued for a potential nuclear deal to reward Pakistan for making concessions in fissile material production, limiting the development and deployment of its nuclear weapons among other activates to address Washington’s proliferation concerns. Unfortunately, Washington has yet to seriously formulate punishments rather than allurements to achieve these ends, even though Pakistan has shown no interest in making such concessions.

There are reasons why the United States and the international community should begin to see Pakistan’s nuclear weapons as a direct security threat. For one thing, these nuclear weapons have always been intended to allow Pakistan to harass India through the use of militant proxies. Consequently, Pakistan has become an epicenter of Islamist terrorism.

Had Pakistan not had these nuclear capabilities, India could have sorted out Pakistan some time ago. Moreover, the critical time period for Pakistan’s nuclear program was in the late 1970s, when Pakistan was on the threshold of obtaining a crude weapon. (We now know that Pakistan had a crude nuclear weapon by 1984 if not somewhat earlier.) The United States even sanctioned Pakistan in 1979 for advances in its program.

The United States relented in its nonproliferation policy with respect to Pakistan after the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. Reagan, after getting sanctions waived in 1982, began supporting the so-called mujahedeen produced by Pakistan for use in Afghanistan. (Pakistan actually began its own jihad policy in 1974 on its dime without US assistance.)

Saudi Arabia matched America’s contributions. While al-Qaeda is not truly the direct descendent of the Afghan mujahedeen, there can be little doubt that the structures built to wage this jihad gave birth to the group. Had the United States remained focused on nuclear weapons in Pakistan, and used a different strategy in Afghanistan, a wholly different future could have been realized.

As tensions between the United States and Pakistan deepen, and as Pakistan’s arsenal expands and permits it to target US assets in South, Central, and Southwest Asia, the United States should begin considering Pakistan’s proliferation of nuclear weapons and delivery vehicles as a direct threat to its security, rather than merely a proliferation problem to be managed. We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com.

http://qz.com/579334/pakistans-army-is-building-an-arsenal-of-tiny-nuclear-weapons-and-its-going-to-backfire/


Ex-servicemen protests outside Jaitley residence

New Delhi : This is the second time in two weeks the veterans have staged demonstrations outside the minister’s official residence.

Ex-servicemen seeking changes in the government’s One Rank One Pension (OROP) scheme on Sunday staged a protest outside the official residence of Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in New Delhi, alleging that he failed to respond to concerns raised by them during an earlier meeting.

This is the second time in two weeks the veterans have staged demonstrations outside the minister’s official residence.

“We had staged protest outside the Minister’s residence on January 3. At that time, he had assured us he will speak to Defence Minister (Manohar Parrikar) over our demands.

“He had said he would get back to us within a week. But it’s two weeks now that he has not responded. What kind of Finance Minister he is if he can not keep his word?” said Group Captain (retd) V.K. Gandhi.

Mr. Gandhi, general secretary of Indian Ex-Servicemen Movement, said the veterans will continue with their protest until Jaitley or Parrikar holds parleys with them.

“Either of the Ministers will have to come and speak to us. We will not move an inch from here until then. If they don’t want to give us actual OROP, they should clarify so to us. Why lie?” he said, reiterating that the government notification has “flaws” and was “unacceptable”.

Around 200 ex-servicemen including Major General Satbir Singh, who has been spearheading the protest, have been demonstrating outside Mr. Jaitley’s residence, Mr. Gandhi added.

– See more at: http://www.prameyanews7.com/en/jan2016/national/11807/Ex-servicemen-protests-outside-Jaitley-residence.htm#sthash.uY9vKJuf.dpuf


JAG dept celebrates Corps Day in Udhampur

Tribune News Service,Jammu, December 21

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Brig Praveen Kumar salutes martyrs at the War Memorial in Udhampur on Monday. A Tribune photo

Northern Command chief Lt Gen DS Hooda today commended the Department of the Judge Advocate General (JAG) for meeting emerging challenges in the form of cyber law, terrorism and human rights.While appreciating the exemplary service of the JAG Department, Lt General Hooda extended good wishes to the officers, staff and their families.The JAG Department celebrated its 32nd Corps Day at the Northern Command headquarters in Udhampur today.The Northern Command chief also recognised the efforts of the department in ensuring speedy justice and re-emphasised upholding the department’s motto ‘Nyaya Eva Dharm’ (Justice alone in the supreme duty) at any cost and in all circumstances.The origin and evolution of the JAG (Army) is closely linked to the evolution of the military law in England and can be traced back to the British “Articles of War – 1385”.On the occasion, Brigadier Praveen Kumar, Deputy Judge Advocate General, laid a wreath at the war memorial, paying a tribute to those who laid down their lives for the country.The JAG Department also organised a conference which was inaugurated by Lt Gen NPS Hira, Chief of Staff, Northern Command.


Men in Army fatigue cause panic, turn out to be soldiers

Tribune News Service,Ludhiana, January 17

Nearly a fortnight after the terror attack on the IAF base at Pathankot, panic gripped a village under the Koom Kalan police station after four men in Army fatigue were spotted.Later, it was found that the four men were Army soldiers and were on a navigation exercise. The soldiers were handed over to senior Army officersThe incident took place last night when the villagers spotted four men in Army fatigue roaming around the village looking for a way out.The residents got panicked and informed the police about it. Soon, a high alert was sounded in the entire police district along with Khanna and Jagraon. More than 200 policemen equipped with weapons were dispatched to cordon off the area.

Quick action by police averted statewide panic

  • A quick response by the police averted statewide scare. When the police intercepted the soldiers they were nearing completion of their navigation exercise with an Army team visiting them out of the village. Had the Army men finished their exercise before the arrival of the police, it would have led to a statewide panic and would have sent the security agencies in a tizzy, said a police officer.

 


India to build sea bridge, tunnel to connect Lanka

Tribune News Service.New Delhi, December 16

India is to build a sea bridge and tunnel connecting Sri Lanka and it has signed a pact with Bangladesh, Bhutan and Nepal for the seamless flow of traffic and passenger vehicles in the region, Road Transport and Highways Minister Nitin Gadkari said here today.Making a suo-moto statement in the Lok Sabha, Gadkari said, “The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is ready to fully finance a bridge-building project connecting Rameshwaram to Sri Lanka. The project was also discussed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi with his counterpart during the latter’s recent visit.”Gadkari said the India-Sri Lanka connectivity project cost was pegged at about Rs 24,000 crore. The minister said, “Subsequent to PM Modi’s announcement of the ‘Act East’ policy, India proactively engaged in building effective and credible links between South Asia and Southeast Asia through an enhanced regional connectivity.”


Laser walls to cover unfenced Indo-Pak border

short by Prashanti Moktan / 01:09 pm on 17 Jan 2016,Sunday
Following the Pathankot attack, laser walls will soon be used to cover over 40 unfenced areas along the India-Pakistan border as the Home Ministry has made this a top priority to prevent entry of terrorists. Riverine stretches in Punjab will be covered using this technology. Laser walls detect objects and caution with a loud siren in case of any breach.
  • Laser walls for riverine areas of Indo-Pak border soon

New Delhi, Jan 17 (PTI) More than 40 vulnerable unfenced stretches along the India-Pakistan border will be covered by laser walls soon with the Home Ministry giving it a top priority to check any infiltration of terrorists in the wake of the Pathankot attack.

All these riverine stretches located in Punjab will be covered by the laser wall technology developed by Border Security Force to completely eliminate the chances of breach of the international border by Pakistan-based terror groups, a Home Ministry official said.

A laser wall is a mechanism to detect objects passing the line of sight between the laser source and the detector. A laser beam over a river sets off a loud siren in case of a breach.

As of now, only 5-6 out of around 40 vulnerable points are covered by laser walls. This beam over the river sets off a loud siren in the case of a breach.

The suspected infiltration point of Ujj river in Bamiyal used by the six Jaish-e-Mohammad terrorists before storming the Pathankot air base was not covered by a laser wall.

A camera to keep watch over the 130-metre-wide river bed was found to be not recording the footage.

BSF has covered this stretch by putting up a laser wall last week before Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Pathankot air base on January 9.

The border guarding force had started putting up laser walls on unfenced riverine stretches of international border last year in Jammu sector, which was more prone to terrorist intrusions till three terrorists carried out attack in Gurdaspur in Punjab in July last year.

The terrorists believed to have entered India five kms downstream of Bamiyal near the Tash border outpost – a riverine point not covered by a laser wall as well.

Bamiyal has BSF posts on either side of the river with a personnel on each post keeping a watch on the river round the clock. The area is also lit up with high mast lights.

There is a possibility that the six JeM terrorists might have walked through the dry river bed at night and BSF personnel might have missed them.

Officials said Bamiyal is not known as a drug trafficking route as no drugs have been seized here over the past 3-4 years.

The BSF has already deployed additional personnel along the border in Punjab and boat patrolling has been intensified, particularly during night.

BSF plans more laser walls along border with Pak

Ravi Dhaliwal,Tribune News Service,Gurdaspur, January 17

Post the terrorist attack on the Pathankot Air Force Station, the BSF is embracing modern technology in a big way. The security forces are all set to install the sophisticated laser wall equipment near 40-odd vulnerable stretches along the international border. Officials claim that once this mechanism is in place, it will be almost impossible for terrorists and smugglers to infiltrate. A laser wall is a  device which can detect movement along the border within no time. For example, a laser beam over a riverine stretch will set off a siren in case of a breach.Since most of the vulnerable points are along the Ravi, almost all stretches on it and its tributaries will be covered with the new technology. “Once in place, it will eliminate whatever chances the militants have of crossing over,” claimed a BSF officer.Though the BSF has been consistent in its denial that Dinanagar and Pathankot attackers came across the border, a highly placed source said it was suspected that the six Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) militants who had barged into the Pathankot air base without being challenged had come via the Bamiyal Sector which was not covered by a laser wall. Also, a camera installed to keep a watch over the 130 metre-wide riverbed was found to be defunct by a BSF team. The Dinanagar terrorists are believed to have entered India 5 km downstream Bamiyal near the Tash border outpost which was not covered by a laser wall at that time. There is every likelihood that the six Pathankot terrorists may have walked through the dry riverbed at night giving the BSF the slip, said an official.Claims by some security agencies that Bamiyal was also used as a drug trafficking route was rubbished by BSF officials.

Quick action by police averted statewide panic

  • A quick response by the police averted statewide scare. When the police intercepted the soldiers they were nearing completion of their navigation exercise with an Army team visiting them out of the village. Had the Army men finished their exercise before the arrival of the police, it would have led to a statewide panic and would have sent the security agencies in a tizzy, said a police officer.

 

PATHANKOT AFTERMATH BSF technology will secure 40 unfenced riverine stretches along the border with Pakistan

NEW DELHI: India will erect laser walls to secure more than 40 unfenced riverine stretches along the border to stop Pakistani militants from sneaking in and carrying out deadly attacks like this month’s terror strike at Punjab’s Pathankot airbase, say sources.

SAMEER SEHGAL/HT FILEThe Pathankot airbase attack highlighted India’s need to fill the gaps on its border with Pakistan.The technology developed by the Border Security Force (BSF) will be employed at all these vulnerable points in Punjab where a fence cannot be set up, with the home ministry making the issue a top priority.

A laser wall is a mechanism to detect objects passing the line of sight between the laser source and the detector. A laser beam over a river sets off a loud siren in case of a breach.

Sources say the six alleged Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) terrorists involved in the Pathankot attack crossed over to India from Pakistan near the Ujj river at Bamiyal village in Punjab with no protective fence present in the area. A camera to keep watch over the 130-metrewide riverbed was found to be not recording footage.

As of now, only five to six of around 40 vulnerable points are covered by laser walls.

The development comes days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the site of the longdrawn encounter during which seven Indian soldiers and all the terrorists were killed and he also took stock of security at the border area.

Following the attack, defence minister Manohar Parrikar had said there were some “gaps”, adding that the BSF had been asked to give details of areas from where the terrorists could have entered and a security audit of all defence installations was also being carried out.

The BSF began erecting laser walls at unfenced riverine stretches of the international border last year in the Jammu sector, which was more prone to terrorist intrusions till three militants carried out an attack in Punjab’s Gurdaspur district in July last year.

The force put up a laser wall at Bamiyal last week before Modi’s Pathankot visit on January 9.The area has BSF posts on either side of the river with a soldier on each post keeping watch on the river round the clock. The stretch is also lit up with high-mast lights.

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