By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 29th March 16
A war of words has broken out over the government’s
decision to allow five Pakistani counter-terrorism officials, including one
from the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and another from Military
Intelligence (MI) to visit the Pathankot Air Force Base. They are in India to
investigate the fidayeen attack from
January 1-4, when four-to-six terrorists crossed the border from Pakistan,
sneaked into the air base and killed seven Indian military personnel before
getting killed.
The Congress and Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) have
charged the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led government with endangering
national security by allowing the Pakistani joint investigative team (JIT) into
the base. On Tuesday, as the JIT officials flew from Delhi to Amritsar and then
drove to Pathankot, Congress protestors gathered outside the air base with
black flags and placards reading “Pakistani JIT go back!”
In Delhi, AAP minister, Kapil Mishra,
alleged an “ISI-BJP coalition” and asked: “Why is ISI being served biryani by
Modi?”
Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar had
earlier ruled out allowing the Pakistani JIT inside Pathankot air base.
However, after a political decision to co-opt Islamabad into the investigation,
the Indian Air Force (IAF) is learned to have cleared their entry into the air
base, subject to being allowed to visit only the “non-technical areas” that the
terrorists had breached.
These include areas not directly involved
in flight operations, including airmen accommodation, kitchens and messes,
family quarters, schools, etc. No access will be granted to “technical areas”,
which are directly related to flight operations. These include aircraft hangars
and pens, logistics installations, ammunition dumps, radar centres, air defence
missile batteries and flight control facilities. The terrorists had failed to
breach the “technical areas” during their attack.
Objections to the JIT’s visit centre on two
allegations. First, that the JIT’s visit serves no purpose since Pakistan has
never been serious about investigating terrorist attacks launched from its soil.
Second, that allowing Pakistani officials entry into the air base would give
away sensitive details, compromising operational security.
Ajai Sahni, of the Institute for Conflict
Management says: “Pakistan has never seriously investigated a single terror
attack, including 26/11 (the Mumbai strike of 2008). By hosting the JIT, we will
allow Pakistan to falsely claim that they are doing what is needed. We must
wait until Islamabad satisfies us that it is seriously cracking down on
anti-India jihadis.”
Sahni says Islamabad is yet to do even a
tenth of what Bangladesh has done against terrorists that were targeting India
from its soil. “The burden of proof lies on the country from where terrorists
operate. Dhaka has fully demonstrated its bona fides. Islamabad has not even
begun to”, says Sahni.
Others, like former IAF officer, Air Vice Marshal
(Retired) Manmohan Bahadur, say the Pakistani JIT visit serves no investigative
purpose, but achieves a strategic aim. “If the visit serves to deny Pakistan an
excuse for avoiding action, it serves a strategic aim. Nothing would be lost by
allowing the team to visit”, he says.
Air Chief Marshal SP Tyagi, who has served
at Pathankot as a fighter pilot and later oversaw the base as chief of western
air command points out “there is nothing that a Pakistani visitor to the air
base can see from the ground, which cannot be seen from commercially available
satellite photographs. The IAF has already done a security assessment and I
fully endorse it.”
Tyagi says the IAF has designated areas
where the JIT can go and others where it cannot. “Areas that are at all
sensitive will be physically screened off”, he says.
Tyagi also points out that commercial
flights use about 30 operational IAF bases on a regular basis, without
endangering security. “If scheduled civilian flights and hundreds of passengers
can fly daily in and out of airports as sensitive as Srinagar, what will the
Pakistani team gain from driving through a screened, “non-technical” route in
Pathankot.”
Another former air chief, Fali Major,
endorses Tyagi’s opinion. “In today’s world, software like Google Earth gives
everyone a view into military installations. Military intelligence users can
get high-resolution Russian satellite imagery that is far more useful than a
ground visit”, says Major.
Another expert, who wishes to remain
anonymous, says secrecy exists mainly around communications and radar
frequencies, and combat tactics. “The infrastructure on the ground is pretty
much the same on every combat air base. What needs to be safeguarded is digital
electronic frequencies and codes, and mission tactics. The Pakistanis are
welcome. They will glean none of that”, he says.
I think the biggest gain would be for Modi to tell sharif, we have done what you asked for..now you do what we are asking for...
ReplyDeletewill sharif / pak do it ? that is another question. this seems to be more poltical than actual investigation.
The next step is :
ReplyDeleteIndian and Pakistani police teams must conduct joint intelligence gathering and arrest /seizure operations.
There need not to be a terror element to this. Militaries or counter terror forces need not participate.
The target must be heroin cartels and human trafficking rings, animal poachers, Violent criminals etc. The working units must be CBI, Pakistan's equivalent of it and cops of the state (Punjab Police and Punjab Police, Gujarat Police and Sindh Police).
Nothing spells brotherhood like shared sacrifice., a better lawful environment will also stimulate economic growth.
This can be done for a few years and then graduated to Anti terror ops.
ReplyDeleteAjay , Wait for a while to see the outcome and if nothing works out then you can criticize. I fell like you are trying to put across your view in the name of "EXPERT " .
DO you need Experts to tell you this?
ReplyDeleteI didn't hold my breath!!Never in month of Sunday it would've been successful.
ReplyDelete