In removing Avinash Chander last week, the government sacrificed the DRDO's most potent symbol of success
By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 20th Jan 15
In
November, while accompanying Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Nepal, Special
Protection Group chief Durga Prasad learned of his unceremonious exit from his
job of providing personal security to the leader he was travelling with.
In similar
vein on Tuesday, Defence R&D Organisation (DRDO) chief, Dr Avinash Chander,
at the fag end of a trip to Pune with Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar,
learned that he was being removed from his job. The information came from
journalists who had read a notification (hastily taken down later) on the
website of the government’s Department of Personnel and Training. Since nobody
bothered to inform Chander, he went to office next morning as if nothing had
happened, until Parrikar told the media that the accomplished missile scientist
was being removed to make way for “someone good from the DRDO, who has the urge
for development.” Parrikar said he wanted someone young as DRDO chief; a
retired employee, hired on contract, should not hold the job.
Parrikar did
not explain why his own ministry had, just 45 days earlier, on November 28,
2014, granted Chander an 18-month extension to head DRDO till May 31, 2016. The
most charitable explanation could be that Parrikar had taken over as defence
minister just 18 days before that and had signed off on Chander’s extension
without considering it properly. Yet, that does not explain why Chander was
removed so peremptorily without even the dignity of an advance warning. If
Parrikar was signalling to the DRDO that failure was no longer an option, he
chose for a sacrificial lamb the organisation’s most potent symbol of success.
Hasty
farewell
It was an
unceremonious end to the distinguished career of a child from a refugee family
from Mirpur, now in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir. Recounting his personal story to
Business Standard after taking over as DRDO chief in June 2013, Chander described
his family’s harrowing journey to India and a childhood in a one-room home in
Old Delhi. After a succession of government schools, Chander was selected to
join IIT Delhi, from where he went straight into the DRDO in 1972. His M.Tech
and Ph.D. came later in his career.
Those were
heady days for a fledgling organisation that was building ballistic missiles
that could carry nuclear bombs to targets hundreds of kilometres away. After
India’s “peaceful nuclear experiment” on May 18, 1974 --- codenamed “Smiling
Buddha” and conducted on Buddha Jayanti --- international technology sanctions
forced DRDO to build everything from scratch. Fortunately they had the men for
the job. Avinash Chander quickly emerged as leader of the team that designed navigation
systems; another youngster, Vijay Kumar Saraswat, who joined the DRDO just 10
days before Chander, masterminded the development of propulsion systems.
The band of
young scientists who coalesced around these two were taken under the wings of
DRDO legend APJ Abdul Kalam --- later India’s president. Kalam’s Integrated
Guided Missile Development Programme was successful from the start, even as
DRDO struggled on other technology fronts. The liquid-fuelled Prithvi missile
was developed in the 1980s and 1990s, followed by the Agni-series, culminating
in the Agni-4 and Agni-5 missiles that --- with ranges of 4,000-5,500
kilometres --- provide India the ballistic missile capability it needs to deter
China. Chander and Saraswat also delivered the underwater-launched K-15
missile, which allows nuclear-powered Arihant-class submarines to fire
nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles, completing India’s nuclear triad. This is
now being developed into the 4,000-kilometre range K-4 missile.
Given the
almost unalloyed career success of both these scientists and the wide respect
they enjoyed within the organisation, it was hardly surprising that both rose
to head the DRDO --- first Saraswat, from 2009-2013; succeeded by Chander on
June 1, 2013. Far more remarkable is the contrasting fortunes of these two
after achieving that pinnacle. Last week, Saraswat was appointed full-time member
of the NITI Aayog, the revamped planning commission, with the rank of minister
of state. This week, Chander lost his job.
Conspiracy
theorists have been quick to conclude that Saraswat somehow engineered
Chander’s exit. In fact, the two have been close friends and colleagues for
decades. Speaking to Business Standard soon after taking over as DRDO chief,
Chander warmly described his relationship with Saraswat thus: “We have been
good, close friends from the beginning.”
The reality
is that the hard-driving Saraswat was temperamentally inclined towards the Bharatiya
Janata Party, joining a technology think-tank associated with the Sangh Parivaar-linked Vivekananda
International Foundation, which served as his springboard into the National
Democratic Alliance government. The laid-back Chander, as technologically
gifted but visibly an appointment of the United Progressive Alliance
government, found himself in the firing line. He was particularly vulnerable
being a contract employee. While he had been appointed on June 1, 2013 for a
three-year tenure as DRDO chief, his regular employment terminated in November
2014 when he became 64 years old --- the age of retirement of scientists with
the Central Government. For the next 18 months, he would have had to serve on
contract.
Since
May, when the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government came to power, it
was whispered that Chander would not be retained on contract when he
superannuated in November. The rumours became more persistent after Modi, at
the DRDO’s annual awards ceremony on August 20, appeared underwhelmed by the
organisation’s achievements. While it was widely reported that the PM criticised
the DRDO’s “chalta hai”, or
easy-going, attitude; he had actually referred to a nation-wide
lackadaisicalness. Modi’s more trenchant criticism centred on the disconnect
between the DRDO and the military (“Has the jawan
ever seen the rishi who has laboured
in a laboratory for 15 years? When this happens, it will be very good”). The PM
also implicitly criticised the DRDO’s focus on high-tech equipment while jawans hankered for better personal kit,
including lighter boots and water bottles. In a statement that resonated after
Chander’s termination, the PM proposed empowering younger scientists by manning
5 of the 52 DRDO laboratories exclusively with scientists under 35. "We
need labs in India which utilise raw talent, which employ people only below the
age of 35. Let us allow these young scientists full decision-making power,"
Modi had said.
There is a
dispute over whether junior DRDO scientists believe they are stifled and denied
growth opportunities. Some argue that junior-and-mid-level DRDO scientists look
to quit the organisation because promotion avenues are blocked by service extensions
routinely granted to top officials. The counter-argument is that few DRDO
scientists wish to leave a top military research establishment that provides
both cutting-edge technological challenges and an annual budget of about Rs
15,000 crore (2014-15). Figures presented in parliament on December 9, 2013
support the latter argument. In the five years from 2008-2013 (excluding the
month of December 2013), just 487 of the DRDO’s 7,500 scientists resigned, a
remarkably low annual attrition rate of about 1.3 per cent per year.
The
elusive young head
Even so,
following Modi’s comments, rumours swirled about a government “search committee”
that was finding a successor, with Sekhar Basu of the Department of Atomic
Energy (DAE) believed to be the outsider chosen to revitalise the moribund DRDO.
The rumours held that Chander would not be put out to pasture. Instead, the
three posts that he held --- i.e. secretary (defence R&D), director
general of the DRDO (being upgraded to chairman, DRDO); and scientific advisor
to the Raksha Mantri (SA to RM) ---
would be split. Shekhar Basu
would take over as director general of DRDO, while Chander would continue as scientific
advisor to the defence minister.
One of them would additionally hold the post of secretary (defence R&D).
All this
appeared to be water under the bridge when, on November 28, two days before Chander
was to superannuate, the MoD granted him an 18-month contract from December 1,
2014 to May 31, 2016, under the same terms and conditions that he currently
enjoyed as secretary (defence R&D). The matter seemed settled; Chander apparently
enjoyed the government’s confidence.
Parrikar’s
media statements on Wednesday have confused the speculation. The defence
minister says he wants someone from the DRDO, while Basu is an outsider from
the Department of Atomic Energy. Nor is Basu young by any reckoning; he is already
on a two-year extension after having retired at the age of 60.
Within
the DRDO, shocked senior scientists are also looking around them warily for the
man who might succeed Chander (no women are realistically in the running). The
seniormost after Chander is S Tamilmani, the aeronautics chief, who is closely
associated with the Tejas light combat aircraft (LCA) programme. Yet Tamilmani,
who is nearing 62 years, has already received one extension. This is also the
case with the next in line, the brilliant Dr VG Sekaran who has long been a key
mastermind of the DRDO’s Agni missile programmes and currently oversees all
missile projects. Further down in seniority is another hot contender, radar
specialist S Christopher, who heads the project to develop an Airborne Early
Warning and Control (AEW&C) aircraft, a flying command post from where the
air force battle would be controlled. Christopher turns 60 in mid-2015.
Those who
believe that the political leadership might carry out “deep selection” of a
relatively young scientist who would bring a brand new perspective and serve a
long tenure as chief, are placing their money on Satheesh Reddy, who currently
heads the missile electronics laboratory, Research Centre Imarat (RCI) in
Hyderabad. Elected last year as a fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society, UK,
Reddy is internationally recognised for his work in navigation systems. Missile
scientists like Sekaran and Reddy benefit from their roots in the DRDO’s most
successful vertical, one that still consumes most of the organisation’s budget.
While
DRDO scientists lick their wounds after Chander’s contract termination, several
believe that he remains in the picture. Top defence ministry officials confirm
they are still examining the proposal to split the three positions
traditionally held by the DRDO chief. That could see the organisation headed by
a new, young chief, while Chander continues as the advisor to the minister.
That would only be justice for a scientist whose name would feature prominently
in anyone’s history of the DRDO.
Jinping - Modi... Bhai-Bhai... Bye-Bye... Chander...
ReplyDeleteProbably he was given a warning.
ReplyDeleteIts just that MoD didn't cc you when the DRDO chief was warned, so you don't know.
And since Avinash Chander has been so friendly inviting you to his chamber and giving exclusive interviews and feeding you butter naans may be you should ask him and he will tell you if he was warned or the reasons that led to terminating his contract.
Or maybe you should file an RTI rather than spreading malice all over the media space.
Why are we seeing things which are not there?
ReplyDeleteDr. Chander was successful with the Agni for which he has been amply rewarded and recognized.
As the Head of DRDO he was less successful which is why he has been removed. Even in the manner of his removal he has been of service because the message has ( hopefully ) gone out that one has to perform irrespective of antecedents.
What DRDO now needs is a leader not , I am sorry to say, a brilliant Scientist who may well be a square peg in a round hole.