NEW DELHI, (Reuters) - India´s new Prime Minister Narendra Modi has chosen a daring
former spy with years of experience
in dealing with Pakistan as his national security adviser, a move officials say signals a more muscular
approach to New Delhi´s traditional enemy.
The choice of Ajit Doval, alongside former Indian army chief General V.K. Singh as a federal
minister for the northeast region,
underscores plans to revamp national security that Modi says became weak under the outgoing government.The two
top-level appointments, reporting directly to Modi, point to a desire to address what are arguably India´s
two most pressing external security concerns -
Pakistan and China, both of which,
like India, have nuclear arms.
Doval, a highly decorated officer renowned for his role in dangerous counter-insurgency missions,
has long advocated tough action
against militant groups, although operations he has been involved in suggest a level of pragmatism.In the 1980s,
he smuggled himself into the Golden Temple in the city of Amritsar from where Sikh militants were
later flushed out, and he infiltrated a
powerful guerrilla group fighting for
independence from India in the northeastern state of Mizoram. The group ultimately signed a peace accord.
Ajid Doval, Modi's security advisor |
Singh has declared
his priority is to develop the northeast in order to narrow the gap with Chinese investment in
roads and railways on its side of the frontier.
India is also
creating a new mountain corps and beefing up border defences, although that initiative has stalled.
FEARS OF AFGHAN SPILLOVERA secure India is a
long-standing goal of Modi´s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and the new
prime minister himself wants strong borders
so the country can focus fully on
giving economic growth a much-needed boost.
He won the election in May in a landslide victory largely on economic pledges that India´s 1.2
billion people hope will secure jobs
and raise living standards. But with
most foreign troops withdrawing from Afghanistan by the end of this year, India is concerned that Islamist
militants fighting there will turn their sights
towards the disputed region of Kashmir, which is also
claimed by Pakistan.
India and Pakistan have fought two of three wars since independence over the Himalayan
territory, and their armed forces are separated
there by a rugged, mountainous Line of Control which militants have the capability to cross.
Doval, 69, formerly head of the Intelligence Bureau domestic spy agency, will be National Security
Adviser, only the second officer from
the intelligence community to hold the post. By contrast, predecessor Shiv Shankar Menon is a member
of the elite Indian Foreign Service - an
expert on China and nuclear security known for his
formidable intellect.
Doval did not say what his priorities would be after his job was announced on Friday, but in
conversations with Reuters previously
as head of a right-wing think tank in New Delhi, he said the new government must lay down core security
policies, one of which was "zero
tolerance" for acts of violence. He was referring to operations by militants who India
says cross from Pakistan, like the gunmen
who killed 166 people in Mumbai in
2008 in a brazen assault that brought tentative peace talks between the South Asian rivals to a juddering
halt.
CARROT AND STICK APPROACH
Modi invited his pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharif, to his
inauguration in a calculated sign of reconciliation. But he used stick as well
as carrot. During nearly an hour of talks, he
told Sharif Pakistan must prevent militants on its territory from attacking
India and act speedily against the men India blames for the Mumbai massacre.
Modi´s assertive stance was in keeping with his Hindu nationalist
agenda, which makes many of India´s 175 million or so Muslims nervous, not to
mention those in Pakistan next door.
The two nations did, however, agree to relaunch peace talks. "Terrorism
continues to be our main concern and we have to handle it in a holistic
manner," said A.S. Dulat, a former head of the Research and Analysis Wing,
which is charged with external intelligence gathering. "At the
end of the day, war is not an option."While India will put diplomatic
pressure on Pakistan, there is also an acceptance that the civilian government
in Islamabad is not in a position to control all militant groups and that New Delhi
needs to address weaknesses in its homeland security."The one thing the
new government will focus on is internal security, that´s what worries them
most. You don´t want another Mumbai, you don´t have a lot of good options if it
happens," said an official at the Home Ministry.
Pakistan said it remained committed to improving ties with India
and that it had got off to a good start."Whoever is appointed by Modi in
his national security team is his own prerogative, and we will certainly not
interfere in that," said Tariq Azeem, a senior official in Sharif´s
team."Pakistan will carry on with the determination shown by Nawaz Sharif
to build good relations with India. The meeting in Delhi was cordial and
friendly and we hope to build on that," he told Reuters.
CHINESE FRONT
Formar Indian Army Chief General V. K. Singh |
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