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Pakistan Continues To Use Bogus Bomb Detectors Despite Global Ban

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ADE 651 is a fake bomb detector that was produced by ATSC (UK), which claimed the device could effectively and accurately, from a long distance, detect & locate the presence of various types of explosives, drugs, ivory, and other substances

Pakistan continues to use bogus bomb detectors ADE-651 to guard its high-value facilities such as airports and government installations despite being officially banned last month.

Pakistan bought more than 15,000 of a new variant of the absolutely useless handheld device, AFP quoted several Pakistani officials as saying Monday.

With radio-like antennae meant to swivel and point at vehicles carrying bombs, "magic wand" explosive detectors proliferated throughout conflict zones in the 2000s until they were exposed as a global scam.


Many creators of the original devices are serving long prison sentences for fraud, including British businessman James McCormick. His ADE-651 became a mainstay of security forces in Iraq, where $85 million was spent on them, before they were officially banned last month.

"It serves a deterrence value only — it's good for police and security personnel to have something in their hands," said a senior interior ministry official, who asked to remain anonymous.

Pressed on whether Taliban and Al-Qaeda insurgents — who have been waging an insurgency that has that claimed more than 60,000 lives in Pakistan since 2004 — may by now be wise to the deception, he conceded: "Yes, they are savvy and they probably are aware by now."

His comments were backed by two more senior members of government, though neither was prepared to go formally on the record.

Official silence over the matter may be linked to the enormous sums of money involved in the business, observers say, while many bureaucrats fear for their jobs if they speak out.

"Powerful people make money through these scams and you cannot offend powerful people, even if it means endangering lives," said one former official at the interior ministry.



India Asks Financial Action Task Force (FATF) To Get Details of JeM’s Trust

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NEW DELHI: In a bid to corner Pakistan at the world stage, India has approached European countries and USA, who are part of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), seeking bank transaction details of Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) owned al Rehmat Trust, which has several offices in Pakistan.

The banned terror outfit JeM, headed by Maulana Masood Azhar, enjoys the patronage of Pakistan, according to NIA. The group was responsible for the attack at Pathankot airbase and scores of other attacks on in Jammu and Kashmir.

New Delhi in its request before FATF has cited Section 17 of the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), that deals with raising of funds for terrorist activities.

"India is one of the key members of the global anti-financial terror body. We have sought details from banks in European nations where online transactions have been done using cash and car payments," said a senior NIA official.

The letter rogatory sent to Pakistan in April by the agency seeking details of al-Rehmat trust did not yield any results, the official added.

NIA during Pathankot investigations, has claimed that JeM was using two websites namely rangonoor. com and alqalaamonline.com and the payments to host the websites were made by a person identified as Abdul Hasan associated with al Rehmat trust.

Investigators also suspect that the money collected by the trust through 'Zakat' is being used for funding and training terrorist modules.


South Australia Keen For Nuclear Energy Business With India

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Uranium is highly essential for India's ambitious Nuclear Power generation program

With the civil nuclear agreement between India and Australia coming into force at the end of last year, the state of South Australia is keen to do business with India in the nuclear energy sector, the state's Minister for Trade and Investment, Defence Services and Veterans' Affairs Martin Hamilton-Smith said on Monday.

India and Australia have a great future in the field of nuclear energy, Hamilton-Smith, who is currently leading a 100-member delegation of the South Australia Trade Commission (SATC) to India, said at a media interaction here.

Of Australia's total uranium deposits, 81 percent are in South Australia of which 40 percent are extractable.

Building nuclear power plants in India will also lead to a cleaner environment, Hamilton-Smith said.

Though the India-Australia civil nuclear agreement was ratified by the Union cabinet in December last year, uranium supplies from Australia are yet to start.

Asked if this was due to Australian companies' concerns over India's nuclear safeguards, Hamilton-Smith replied in the negative.

There are eight areas of focus of the SATC delegation's mission to India: defence and advanced manufacturing ; water and environment; education and vocational education training; health; premium food and wine, fashion; and sports, culture and tourism.

Stating that India was South Australia's third largest trading partner, Hamilton-Smith said trade in goods and services between the two sides stood at A$1-1.2 billion (A$1=$0.76) in 2015.

We sell copper, lead, wheat, food and wine to India and buy diesel, petrol, jewellery and motor vehicles from India, he said.

In the area of defence manufacturing, he said that South Australia was playing a major role in the A$90 billion worth of submarines, frigates and patrolling that Australia was building for India.

South Australia is considered the national centre of naval shipbuilding and submarine sustainment, home to the Royal Australian Navy's largest and most complex over the past three decades and confirmed build location for Australia's next generation warships and submarines.

The SATC delegation, during the course of its visit, also held a meeting with Minister of State for Defence Subhash Ramrao Bhamre.

Hamilton-Smith said that South Australia also has a lot to offer India in terms of water management technology.

He pointed out that his state was the the driest one in Australia and had faced a serious drought recently.

In the area of education too, South Australia is keen to boost its ties with India.

The minister said that there are around 3,400 Indian students in South Australia forming around three percent of the international students in the state.

I want to double or even triple that number, Hamilton-Smith said, adding that South Australia was also a safer alternative to big Australian cities like Sydney and Melbourne.

Apart from New Delhi, the SATC delegation will also visit Jaipur (the Rajasthan capital is the sister city of South Australia's capital Adelaide), Bengaluru and Mumbai.


Defence Procurement: If Process Not Expedited, We’ll Have To Rethink Our Investment In India, Says IWI

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The ACE Family of 5.56mm and 7.62mm caliber Assault Rifles are based on the exceptionally reliable mechanism of the very successful GALIL Assault Rifle

Frustrated at the delay from the defence ministry in signing contracts where its products have cleared the trials, Israeli small arms manufacturer, Israel Weapon Industries (IWI) Ltd. says that it may have to rethink its investments in India. More than 70 per cent of the FDI in defence sector in India in the last two years has come from IWI for its joint venture project with Punj Llyod Ltd at Malanpur in Madhya Pradesh.

“We have been here in India for 12 years, and have sold small arms worth tens of millions of dollars to defence, law enforcement agencies, BSF and others. We were one of the four firms which bid for the close quarter battle carbine for the army in 2010, and were the only company selected after the trials from 2012 to 2014. But nothing has moved in the last two years,” Mark Shachar, VP business development of SK Group of Israel told The Indian Express. IWI, a manufacturer of small arms, is one of the six defence companies that are part of the SK Group.

IWI, along with American Colt, Italian Beretta and Swiss Sig Saguer participated in the 2010 tender for 44,600 carbines for the army, which includes the import of 33.6 million rounds of ammunition. The weapon and ammunition deliveries are to be concluded within 18 months, alongside the transfer of technology to the Ordnance Factories Board to license building the designated carbine in India. Baretta fielded its ARX-160 model, the Colt the M4 while IWI fielded its Galil ACE carbine for the trial.

The trials, including the confirmatory trials, were completed in July 2014. Selection of IWI as a single vendor, although permissible under the Defence Procurement Procedure, led to complaints from other contenders, notably Beretta about the process. Last year, the defence ministry formed a committee of three Lt Generals to confirm if the process was followed in the carbine selection process. Sources said that this committee found no wrongdoing and the matter has since been discussed in the meetings of the Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) chaired by the defence minister.

Shachar now says that his company has not been conveyed anything by the defence ministry so far, and they will have to reconsider their investment plans under Make in India. “We were committed to Make in India, had a JV with Punj Llyod. Our plan is to not just make small arms from that factory to India but to also export. We will have to think it over,” said Shachar.

“If this doesn’t work, who will come and invest here? This version of Make in India is clearly not for us. We can’t just invest with no outcome, we have been waiting for so long but nothing is moving. Frustration at the state of affairs is an understatement,” added Shachar.

Ashok Wadhawan, president of Manufacturing Business of Punj Lloyd, said that “the frustration of our partners who have invested in the project bothers us. Globally also, our partners are getting impatient with the situation here.”

IWI has committed to a 49:51 JV manufacturing plant with Punj Lloyd for small arms at Malanpur in Madhya Pradesh. Sources said that IWI is expected to send a bigger tranche of FDI in the next couple of months. India has got no FDI in defence since the Centre relaxed its rules in June to allow 100 per cent FDI in defence where it results in access to modern technology. Only Rs 1.12 crore has come as FDI in defence since May 2014.


Kuwait Orders 30 Caracal Helicopters From France For Over Billion Euros

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The French Department of Defense has confirmed that Kuwait has placed an order for 30 Caracal helicopters for over one billion euros.

"The Ministry of Defence of the State of Kuwait signed a contract with Airbus for the acquisition of Helicopters 30 Caracal helicopters for the Kuwait army and the national guard in the presence of French Defense Minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian,” the french Defense ministry said in a statement Tuesday.

Kuwait had signed provisional agreements with France that included an order for 24 Airbus Caracal helicopters with an option for another six on October 21, 2015. The Letter of Agreements also covered mid-life upgrade for the Kuwait Navy’s eight P-37 fast attack craft and Renault light armored vehicles collectively worth an approximate Euro 2.5 billion (US $2.8 billion).

The helicopters are designed to carry troops and perform combat rescue missions. All the 30 aircraft will be manufactured in France. The first aircraft will be delivered to Kuwait in two and half years.


Russian Navy’s Kamov Ka-52 Helicopters To Be Equipped With New AESA Radar

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Russian  Kamov Ka-52 Alligator Attack/Reconnaissance Gunship


Russian Naval Variant of Kamov Ka-52 Alligator attack/reconnaissance helicopter will be equipped with compact active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar from KRET.

The AESA radar will be able to operate in the millimetre wavelength for effective ground target acquisition as well as centimetric spectrum to enable large naval targets to be detected at a range of 180 km, IHS Janes reported quoting a company spokersperson as saying Tuesday.

The radar is also capable of detecting low-altitude aerial targets such as cruise missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), providing data to cue on-board electro-optical devices and corresponding weapons to these targets.

Flight safety is enhanced with ground moving target indication and tracking modes, which assists the crew in coping with low visibility conditions such as fog, dust and night-time operations. The radar also detects ground obstacles including transmission towers and power lines, the news weekly reported.

The Ka-52K helicopter - developed to sink amphibious landing ships as well as the transports of enemy strike groups and convoys with its ability to employ anti-ship cruise missiles such as the high-speed Kh-31AD - was originally slated for deployment aboard the two French-built Mistral-class amphibious command ships originally destined for the Russian Navy.

However, delivery of the ships to Russia had subsequently been cancelled by France due to the former's annexation of Crimea.

There are now plans to add the helicopters already constructed to the air wing of the Project 11435 Admiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrier.


Almaz-Antey Develops Next-Gen Air Defense Missiles For Russian Navy

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File Photo of the Russian Kashtan Close-in Weapon System Naval Air Defence Complex


Russian Navy will be equipped by the Almaz-Antey arms manufacturer`s newly-introduced air-defence missiles, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said Saturday.

Russian arms manufacturer Almaz-Antey has developed new-generation air-defense missiles for the country's Navy, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said Saturday.

"Almaz-Antey has presented the results of the tests of new-generation air-defense missiles for the Navy to the Military-Industrial Commission," Rogozin, who heads the commission, said on his Twitter account.

On Friday, Rogozin tweeted that the commission would check the development of four new Il aircraft, including two transport planes and two passenger planes.


Malware Called 'South China Sea RAT' Spied on Philippines, Other Targets

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A malware known as NanHaiShu or “South China Sea Remote Access Trojan (RAT)” in Mandarin was discovered to have gathered intelligence related to the South China Sea arbitration case from the Philippines and organizations involved in assisting the South East Asian country which won an international arbitration case against China.

Hackers believed to be from China have attacked government and private-sector organizations linked to the row over the key waterway, a Japan Times report said quoting an analysis by Finnish cybersecurity firm F-Secure.

While asserting that it had no proof of Chinese government involvement, the F-Secure analysis said that hackers have tried to extract sensitive information from the Philippines and other targets.

Notable targets included the Philippines Department of Justice, the organizers of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit and an unidentified major international law firm involved in last month’s South China Sea arbitration decision at The Hague which went in favour of the Philippines, the report said.

The Department of Justice is believed to have played a key role in the case and reports ahead of a November 2015 APEC event in the Philippines had said leaders attending the summit would discuss the South China Sea issue, the Japan Times report said.

F-Secure said more organizations had been targeted, but details had been withheld at their request. The omitted portions of the report, however, did not indicate that the arbitration court would itself have been targeted by this malware campaign, Erka Koivunen, a cybersecurity adviser with F-Secure, was paraphrased in The Japan Times.



Thousands Protest At China-France Nuclear Project

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Thousands rally in China over nuclear project fears - Photos and videos on social media show crowds of people shouting slogans and waving banners

"There were several thousand people," a hotel worker told AFP on condition of anonymity. 

"Building a nuclear waste processing plant in Lianyungang is a recipe for disaster for future generations, local people have a right to express anger," another witness said.

Pictures also show demonstrators surrounded by police. A local resident identified as Xu described "clashes between police and protesters.”

Rumors have emerged that one of the activists was beaten to death. Police have denied those reports, and also said that officers have not clashed with demonstrators.

The protest was staged over an agreement between French nuclear fuel group Areva and China National Nuclear Corp (CNNC), which took place in 2012. The companies agreed to build a reprocessing facility in China, but didn’t elaborate on the location.

But Lianyungang residents fear the plant will be constructed in their city, as China National Nuclear Corp (CNNC) is currently building a nuclear object nearby, AFP reported.

“The government kept the project a secret. People only found out about it recently. That’s why most people are worried,” local resident Sheng told The Financial Times. “Some speculate that the nuclear waste is from other countries and do not understand why the project should be built here instead of over there if it’s as safe and beneficial as they say.”

Lianyungang is also situated near the Tianwan Nuclear Power Plant, built by Russia in 2006. The site is set to become one of the biggest nuclear power plants in China, with two operational units and six additional units planned.

“We already have a chemical industrial park in Lianyungang and the pollution problem is quite worrying. Nuclear waste is far worse than normal chemical pollution,” local shop owner He told The Financial Times. “Also, we all know what happened to Fukushima in Japan after the nuclear accident. We are really worried.”

Lianyungang, a port city in Jiangsu province, eastern China, has a population of around five million people. It is located some 480 kilometers (298 miles) north of Shanghai.


India Should Not Get 'Entangled' In South China Sea Dispute: Chinese Media

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BEIJING: India should avoid "unnecessary entanglement" in the South China Sea dispute during Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi's visit to New Delhi to prevent it becoming yet "another factor" to impact bilateral ties, a state-run Chinese daily said today.

"India may want to avoid unnecessary entanglement with China over the South China Sea debate during Wang's visit if the country wishes to create a good atmosphere for economic cooperation, which would include reducing tariffs on made-in-India products exported to China amid the ongoing free trade talk known as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership," an article in the state-run Global Times said.

"India is expected to allow only moderate tariff reduction on made-in-China products under the talks in a bid to preserve its domestic industries. If India wants China to be more generous in terms of tariff reduction, it would be unwise for the country to let its relationship with China deteriorate further at this moment," it said.

The daily said it is puzzling that India is focusing on the South China Sea issue at this moment, a move which it said might risk "unnecessary side effects" to bilateral ties and potentially create obstacles for Indian exporters hoping to increase their presence in China, the world's second largest importer.

Underlining that tensions between China and India have been increasing in recent months owing to a series of political incidents, it said, "Considering that India does not face territorial disputes with China in the South China Sea, is it worth letting the South China Sea issue become another factor that will impact India's cooperation with China? India should consider this."

Amid unease in ties, Wang will arrive in India to hold talks with his counterpart Sushma Swaraj on August 13 during which key regional and bilateral issues will be discussed, including the NSG issue.

His visit comes ahead of the G20 Summit scheduled to be held in the Chinese city of Hangzhou next month in which Prime Minister Narendra Modi is expected to take part.

Following the ruling by an international tribunal last month which rejected Beijing's claims over much of the disputed sea area, China is campaigning against the issue to be raised in G20 Summit saying it is a matter to be resolved between parties concerned and outsider has no role.

"In fairness, after dozens of countries have expressed support for China's stance in the South China Sea, India's attitude toward the issue may not be as important as the nation had imagined," the article said.

"While many Indian people have been focused on the South China Sea ahead of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi's upcoming trip to the country, less attention has been paid to the recent fall in exports of made-in-India products to China," it said.

It said India should move its focus from geopolitical competition to economic issues to stop a further decline in exports to China.

Source>>

Washington Slapdown: Turkey Turns To Moscow For Help

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“Turkey is slowly leaving the Atlantic system. That is the reason behind this coup. That is the reason why NATO is panicking. This is much broader and much bigger than Erdogan. This is a tectonic movement. This will affect Turkish-Syrian relations, Turkish-Chinese relations, Turkish-Russian relations and Turkish-Iranian relations. This will change the world.”


“It is becoming clear that the attempted putsch was not just the work of a small clique of dissatisfied officers inside the armed forces; it was rather the product of a vast conspiracy to take over the Turkish state that was decades in the making and might well have succeeded.”

— Patrick Cockburn, CounterPunch

On August 9, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Saint Petersburg The two leaders will discuss political developments following the recent coup-attempt in Turkey, tourism, and the launching of Turkstream, the natural gas pipeline that will transform Turkey into southern Europe’s biggest energy hub.. They are also expected to explore options for ending the fighting in Syria. Putin will insist that Erdogan make a concerted effort to stop Islamic militants from crossing back-and-forth into Syria, while Erdogan will demand that Putin do everything in his power to prevent the emergence of an independent Kurdish state on Turkey’s southern border. The meeting will end with the typical smiles and handshakes accompanied by a joint statement pledging to work together peacefully to resolve regional issues and to put an end to the proxy war that has left Syria in tatters.

All in all, the confab will seem like another public relations charade devoid of any larger meaning, but that’s certainly not the case. The fact is, the normalizing of relations between Russia and Turkey will foreshadow a bigger geopolitical shift that will link Ankara to Tehran, Damascus and other Russian allies across Eurasia. The alliance will alter the global chessboard in a way that eviscerates the imperial plan to control the flow of energy from Qatar to Europe, redraw the map of the Middle East and pivot to Asia. That strategy will either be decimated or suffer a severe setback. The reasons for this should be fairly obvious to anyone who can read a map. Turkey’s location makes it the indispensable state, the landbridge that connects the wealth and modernity of the EU with the vast resources and growing population of Asia. That vital connecting piece of the geopolitical puzzle is gradually slipping out of Washington’s orbit and into enemy territory. The July 15 coup is likely the final nail in the NWO coffin for reasons we will discuss later. Here’s a clip from Eric Draitser’s insightful piece titled “Erdogan’s Checkmate: CIA-Backed Coup in Turkey Fails, Upsets Global Chessboard” that summarizes what’s going on:

“Ultimately, the failed 2016 coup in Turkey will have lasting ramifications that will impact the years and decades ahead. With Turkey now clearly breaking with the US-NATO-EU axis, it is rather predictable that it will seek to not only mend fences with both Russia and China, but to place itself into the non-western camp typified by BRICS, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, China’s One Belt One Road strategy, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, etc.” (“Erdogan’s Checkmate: CIA-Backed Coup in Turkey Fails, Upsets Global Chessboard“, Global Research)

In an earlier part of the article, Draitser correctly identifies the followers of Fethullah Gulen as the perpetrators of the coup. As he and others have pointed out, Gulen’s agents have penetrated all levels of the Turkish state and military acting as a shadow government (aka- “parallel state”) that poses a direct threat to Turkey’s national security.

Here’s journalist Patrick Cockburn making the same point in a recent article in CounterPunch:

“There is little question left that the followers of Fethullah Gulen were behind the coup attempt, despite his repeated denials. “I don’t have any doubt that the brain and backbone of the coup were the Gulenists,” says Kadri Gursel, usually a critic of the government. He adds that he is astonished by the degree to which the Gulenists were able to infiltrate and subvert the armed forces, judiciary and civil service. ….

…it is difficult to find anybody on the left or right who does not suspect that at some level the US was complicit in the coup attempt. Erdogan is probably convinced of this himself, despite US denials, and this will shape his foreign policy in future….

…if the coup had more successful, Turkey would have faced a full-blown military dictatorship or a civil war, or both. Erdogan said in an interview that foreign leaders who now counsel moderation would have danced for joy if he had been killed by the conspirators….” (“After the Coup, Turkey is Being Torn Apart“, Patrick Cockburn, CounterPunch)

If the coup had succeeded, then it is quite likely that Erdogan would have been savagely murdered like Gadhafi while the state was plunged into a long-term civil war. This is why Erdogan has removed tens of thousands of Gulen sympathizers or operatives from their positions in the state, the media, the military and the universities. These prisoners will now be charged with supporting the coup (treason?) and could face the death penalty. Critics in the Obama administration and western media have lambasted Erdogan for violating civil liberties in his effort to rid the country of fifth columnists and traitors, but the Turkish President will have none of it. He has angrily responded saying that Washington was “taking the side of the coup leaders.”

“Now I ask”, said Erdogan, “does the West give support to terror or not? Is the West on the side of democracy or on the side of coups and terror? Unfortunately, the West gives support to terror and stands on the side of coups….We have not received the support we were expecting from our friends, neither during nor after the coup attempt.”

Erdoğan lamented that no Western leader had come to Turkey to express condolences and show solidarity with the Turkish people.” (Hurriyet, Turkish Daily)

He has a point, doesn’t he? While I am no fan of the autocratic and narcissistic Erdogan, it’s very suspicious that Washington is so eager to criticize and so reluctant to help. After all, the two countries are allies, right?

And what does Erdogan want?

He wants the US to extradite Gulen (who currently lives in exile in Pennsylvania) so he can face charges of treason in Turkey.. According to Erdogan, “Documents have been sent to the U.S.” establishing Gulen’s guilt. But the Obama administration remains unmoved, even though Turkey has handed over terrorists to the US in the past without evidence. Apparently, sauce for the goose is not sauce for the gander.

It’s worth repeating what Cockburn said in the excerpt above. He said: “it is difficult to find anybody on the left or right who does not suspect that at some level the US was complicit in the coup attempt.”

Why is that? Why does everyone in Turkey –regardless of their politics or ethnicity–think the US had a hand in the coup?

Take a look at this clip from an article at the World Socialist Web Site which helps to explain:

“US claims that Washington had no advance warning of the coup are simply not credible. Turkey’s Incirlik Air Base, which hosts more than 5,000 American soldiers and is the main base for the US-led bombing campaign against Syria and Iraq, was the organizing center of the putsch. Pro-coup fighter jets flew in and out of Incirlik as the coup unfolded. Shortly after the coup failed, the base commander, General Bekir Ercan Van, was arrested along with other pro-coup soldiers at the base.

Given that Incirlik is the site of dozens of US nuclear weapons, no credibility can be given to claims that US intelligence was unaware that a coup against Erdogan was being organized from there. Were that truly the case, it would represent a CIA intelligence breakdown of stunning proportions….

A pro-coup officer captured by the Turkish government, Lieutenant Colonel Murat Bolat, told the conservative Yeni Savak newspaper that his unit was designated to detain and possibly murder Erdogan after receiving precise information on Erdogan’s location from US sources.

“A person in the meeting, whom I guess was an officer from the Special Forces, said, ‘Nobody will be allowed to rescue the president from our hands,’” he said, indicating that this meant Erdogan was to be shot after he was captured if the forces who had arrested him faced any counterattack.” (“Erdogan accuses US of supporting failed coup in Turkey“, World Socialist Web Site)

While the information is not conclusive, it is suspicious. At the very least, Washington knew a coup was being planned and looked the other way. This except from a post by Harvard professor, Dani Rodrik seems like a very plausible explanation of US involvement to me. Here’s a brief clip:

“The U.S. government may not have had a direct hand in Gulen’s activities, but it is more difficult to dismiss the argument that it provided tacit support – or that some parts of the U.S. administration prevailed on other parts who were less keen on Gulen.

…As the Wikileaks cables I referred to above make clear, the State Department, at least, has been well aware of Gulenist infiltration of the Turkish military for quite some time. The Gulenists’s role in Sledgehammer, which led to the discharge of many of the most Kemalist/secularist officers in the military is equally clear. Beyond Sledgehammer, the Gulenists’ wide range of clandestine operations against opponents in Turkey must be well known to American intelligence…..

…the head of the Turkish military, who was held hostage by the putschists during the coup attempt, has said that one of his captors offered to put him in touch with Gulen directly. This, on its own, is prima facie evidence of Gulen’s involvement, and likely passes the “probable cause” test that is required for extradition. Incredibly, administration officials are still quoted as saying “there is no credible evidence of Mr. Gulen’s personal involvement.” In other words, these officials must think that the army chief of their NATO ally is lying.” (“Is the U.S. behind Fethullah Gulen?“, Dani Rodrik’s Blog)

The Obama administration’s support for the Kurds in Syria as well as its behavior following the coup of July 15, has led to a dramatic deterioration in US-Turkey relations. This will undoubtedly effect Erdogan’s willingness to allow the US to use its airbases for conducting bombing raids in Syria in the future. It’s also bound to accelerate the pace at which Turkey strengthens relations with Russia, Iran and others as it will need the protection of new allies to better defend itself against threats from the west.

The Obama administration is still uncertain of how to proceed mainly because no one had expected that Erdogan would break with Washington, purge his enemies, pursue rapprochement with Moscow, Tehran and Damascus, and throw a wrench in Uncle Sam’s plan for redrawing the map of the Middle East. At present, the administration is trying to ease tensions by dispatching one high-ranking official after the other to persuade Erdogan that the US was not involved in the coup. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Joseph Dunford visited Ankara just this week while Secretary of State John Kerry and Vice President Joe Biden are scheduled for later in the month. Eventually, even Obama will be asked to make the trek. No effort will be spared to bring Erdogan back into the fold.

If, however, the charm offensive fails, as I expect it will, Erdogan will be crucified in the western media (Hitler Erdogan) while covert operatives and NGOs try to foment political instability. At least, that’s the way things normally play out.


India Provides Emergency Food To 10,000 Workers Laid Off And Starving In Saudi Arabia

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Another Feather in the External Affairs Minister's Cap - Sushma Swaraj with Judith D'Souza after her rescue from Taliban terrorists

India was providing emergency food rations to an estimated 10,000 of its workers in Saudi Arabia who faced severe food shortages after losing their jobs, officials said Sunday.

India’s consulate in the city of Jeddah said its officials worked overnight to distribute food to the laid-off Indians who live in five worker complexes or camps in and around the city.

More than 16,000 kilograms of food and other items including eggs, spices and salt were distributed.

Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj intervened in the humanitarian crisis on Saturday evening after a distressed man at a camp in Jeddah sent a direct appeal for help. She said a total of 10,000 Indian workers were facing a food crisis in Saudi Arabia and ordered Indian missions to provide immediate help.

Swaraj said a large number of Indians had lost their jobs in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait and that their employers had not paid wages or closed down their factories.

As a result, Indians were facing extreme hardships, Swaraj said adding that while the situation in Kuwait is “manageable,” matters are much “worse” in Saudi Arabia.

She asked junior foreign ministers VK Singh and MJ Akbar to travel to the region to take up the matter with local authorities.

She also appealed to the roughly 3 million Indians in the nation to help their “fellow brothers and sisters.”

Domestic media outlets who interviewed community workers in Saudi Arabia, said most of the workers had been laid off by Saudi Oger, a leading Saudi construction company.

The firm had not paid salaries for the last seven months, and had also stopped providing food to the workers.

One of the community workers told the IANS news agency that there had been a slowdown in the Saudi construction industry because of the fall in global crude oil prices. “Not only Saudi Arabia, it has been happening in all Gulf countries,” he said.

Officials told the Times of India newspaper that the government was also planning to bring back the out-of-work Indians in the coming weeks.

Saudi Arabia, like other oil-rich Gulf countries, depends heavily on Asian migrant workers.

Indians form the bulk of the Asian workers in the region. Some 70 per cent of the 3 million expatriate Indians in Saudi Arabia and 800,000 of them in Kuwait are blue-collar workers, mainly employed in the construction, oil and infrastructure sector.

In reports over past years, right groups like Amnesty International have said that workers in the countries frequently suffer difficulties including non-payment of wages, harsh and dangerous working conditions and appalling standards of accommodation.


Obliged To Raise Voice For 'Oppressed' Kashmiris: Nawaz Sharif

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Islamabad: Needling India yet again, Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Tuesday said that he was "obliged" to become the voice of the "oppressed" people of Kashmir and would "leave no stone unturned" to make the world understand the "plight" of the people in the Valley.

Sharif chaired a preparatory meeting for the upcoming UN General Assembly (UNGA) attended by his foreign affairs advisor Sartaj Aziz, special assistant on foreign affairs Tariq Fatemi, foreign secretary Aizaz Ahmed Chaudhry, Pakistan's permanent representative in the UN Maleeha Lodhi, and Pakistan's ambassador to the US Jalil Abbas Jilani and other senior officials.

The meeting reviewed the agendas to be included in the next session of UN General Assembly in which the premier is expected to participate, said a statement from his office.

"It is an obligation for me as Prime Minister of Pakistan to become the voice of Kashmiris who have been oppressed in Kashmir. I will leave no stone unturned to make the world understand the plight and the legitimate struggle of the people of Kashmir," said Sharif.

The meeting observed that "Kashmir remains an unfinished agenda of the UN and accordingly India must realise that Kashmir is not its internal matter, rather it is a matter of regional and international concern".

Sharif said that the denial of right of self-determination for Kashmiris is one of the persistent failures of the UN.

"The right of self-determination is the basic right of Kashmiris and we will make every effort to make Kashmiris a captain of their own ship," the statement quoted Sharif as saying in the meeting.

Last week, Sharif had said Kashmir was witnessing a "new wave of freedom movement" and asked his country's diplomats to apprise the world that Kashmir was "not an internal matter of India".


A Month On, Why Kashmir Unrest Continues After 56 Deaths

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Cartoon Courtesy: Manoj Kureel        
SRINAGAR: It has been a month since the current unrest began in the Kashmir Valley, shattering years of relative stability in a state ravaged by one of the longest-running armed conflicts in the world.

On July 8, when security forces gunned down Kashmir's rebel commander Burhan Wani in a controversial gunfight, nobody imagined that the turmoil triggered by his killing would be so widespread and extend this long.

But exactly a month since, the valley remains on the edge. The pro-freedom demonstrations and clashes between protesters and security forces have become routine. Over 56 persons have died and more than 5,000 have been injured -- many are still in hospitals.

The valley is seething with anger, with many terming it as a "new phase of freedom struggle" and a "now-or-never" situation.

The valley has suffered huge losses with businesses, schools and offices shut amid continuous curfew by the government and shutdown by separatists. India has blamed Pakistan for fomenting the unrest.

The protests erupted spontaneously after the killing of Wani -- a 22-year-old social media-savvy Hizbul Mujahideen commander -- who had a huge following among younger Kashmiris. Tens of thousands of mourners, who later turned violent with stone-throwing, rallied across the valley. They were met with bullets and pellets by security forces.

Wani was not the first militant commander killed by security forces in Kashmir. In fact, he is considered no match for early armed militants like Ishfaq Majid, the founder of Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front, and others, killed in the early years of militancy that began in the late 1980s.

Wani surely was not as popular as Afzal Guru -- the 2001 parliament attack convict -- who was hanged in Delhi's Tihar Jail on February 9, 2013.

The killings of these militant leaders did trigger anger. But none of the unrest was as violent and as widespread as the latest one.

How did the death of this young militant bring the valley to such a violent standstill that refuses to fizzle out even after 31 days?

Political pundits say Wani's death was just a trigger. The anger had been building up over many controversial issues dominating the political narrative in Kashmir.

Among them, a pro-India politician said, is the "unnatural ruling alliance" of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and regional Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

Both fought the 2014 assembly elections against each other, promising to keep each other away from power in India's only Muslim-majority state.

While the PDP wooed its voters with a soft-separatist plank of fighting for "self-rule", the BJP promised to revoke Article 370 of the constitution that gives Jammu and Kashmir a special status in India.

In the end, electoral arithmetic forced both to join hands and forget their differences. But people may not have forgotten the PDP's electoral plank.

"The PDP brought the BJP and RSS (Rashtriya Swamsevak Sangh) to rule a state where they could only dream of getting a foothold. Now they are ruling us," said Rashid Ahmed Mir, a Kashmir University scholar.

"It was molten rock waiting to erupt. It has been building up since the hanging of Guru," Mir told IANS, recalling how a common Kashmiri still feels that the Jaish-e-Mohammed activist didn't receive a fair trial over his involvement in the December 13, 2001, attack on the Indian parliament.

Mushtaq Ahmed Malik, a former separatist leader, said one cannot also ignore the BJP's rhetoric and proposal to build housing colonies in Kashmir for the families of retired soldiers and Hindus who fled the valley fearing for their lives at the start of the armed insurgency.

"All these proposals have been unpopular among Kashmiri Muslims. And then came the ban on selling beef in Kashmir. Kashmiris felt they were being pushed to the wall," Malik said.

Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti's PDP had also promised to initiate a dialogue between India, Pakistan and Kashmiris to resolve the 70-year-old territorial dispute stemming from the India-Pakistan partition in 1947.

But the BJP has been continuously ruling out any possibility of talking to Kashmiri separatist leaders or even to Pakistan.

"These broken electoral promises contributed to the anger and revived the separatist sentiments after years of relative peace," said Malik. These issues, he said, have largely driven the current unrest in Kashmir.


This Is Why It Is Difficult to Make in India

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Employees worked on the cabin of a Sikorsky S-92 at the TATA Advanced Systems Ltd. facility at Adibatla in the south Indian city of Hyderabad


Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ‘Make in India’ drive means training millions of people quickly

by Santanu Choudhury

ADIBATLA, India—Having signed a string of multibillion-dollar orders from foreign firms to make parts for helicopters, jet fighters and trains, India is struggling to find people with the skills to build them.

In a $3.3 billion push, it is racing to equip 15 million people by 2020 with the skills necessary to realize Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s aim to bring more high-grade manufacturing to the country.

But the challenges are significant at a time when foreign suppliers including Boeing Co., Airbus Group SE and Alstom SA often can’t find the employees with the training and experience to help fulfill Mr. Modi’s ‘Make in India’ program.


More than 80% of engineers in India are “unemployable”, Aspiring Minds, an Indian employability assessment firm, said in a January report after a study of about 150,000 engineering students in about 650 engineering colleges in the country.

A lack of specialized courses mean companies have to train their own people from scratch. At one training center outside Hyderabad in southern India, young workers in their early 20s toil with high-precision hand tools as they are taught for the first time how to fix rivets on aircraft-grade aluminum sheets as part of a year-long training program.



Silence And Inaction Pushing Kashmir Youth Away From India, Says Farooq Abdullah

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Former Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah - The NC leader said that the “Prime Minister is morally and politically obligated to deal with this issue personally and politically, with a sense of justice, history and empathy.”


Former Jammu Kashmir Chief Minister Dr Farooq Abdullah and president of the opposition National Conference on Tuesday asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi to personally lead an initiative on political outreach towards the people of Kashmir. “There can be no alternative to the issues being addressed by the Prime Minister directly,” he said and asked Prime Minister to realize how every passing day of silence and inaction pushes the youth of Kashmir further away from the idea of India and fuels the growing sense of disenchantment in their hearts and minds. “A prolonged phase of political inaction could lead us to disastrous consequences,” Farooq said in a statement circulated here.

Pointing out that Kashmir is perhaps the most prolonged and complicated political dispute in the entire world and it “can be outsourced to neither the Home Ministry nor the Defence Ministry nor the bureaucracy in New Delhi” the NC leader said that the “Prime Minister is morally and politically obligated to deal with this issue personally and politically, with a sense of justice, history and empathy.”

Expressing grief over the loss of lives and alarm over the worsening situation in the Valley, he said it was important for New Delhi to acknowledge that the “genesis of the Kashmir turmoil lies in the injustice of August 1953 when a popular, democratically elected Prime Minister of J&K was illegally overthrown to suppress the political sentiment in Kashmir.” While it was heartening to see that certain central leaders in New Delhi were now talking about the political nature of the problem, it was a pity that the same leaders chose to not lend their voice of support when the Interlocutors’ Report and the Sagheer Committee Report was available for discussion and implementation, he pointed out.

He said those Central leaders in New Delhi who are advocating a political solution to the Kashmir Issue today have traditionally acquiesced with the conventional, tried and tested formulations of an operational handling of the issue. Their stand today is welcome and a positive development and I hope they don’t go back to the conventional policy of validating an operational handling of the issue when seeking a political resolution might become less expedient for them, he added.

Pointing out that every phase of political unrest in the Valley including the current one is a manifestation of a prolonged, systemic erosion of faith in Kashmir, the NC leader said that “what happened on the 9th August 1953 continues to remind the people of Kashmir about how New Delhi has chosen to either suppress the political sentiment here or deal with it through an operational prism with a perpetually short-sighted, fire-fighting policy. “Unless the root cause of the political instability and alienation in Kashmir is addressed constitutionally and politically, crushing the sentiment by use of force is not only futile but also highly counterproductive,” Farooq said.

He welcomed the parliamentary discussions on the current situation in Kashmir, saying the Parliament needs to acknowledge and understand the root cause of alienation and unrest in the Valley and accepting the criminal nature of the injustice perpetrated against the people of J&K on August 9th, 1953 would be a good start to an open-ended, broad-minded introspection at the national level.

Prevarication and deflection of responsibility won’t help anymore. The problem in Kashmir is about the people of Kashmir and their political aspirations neither about any other country nor about terrorism. New Delhi has to engage with the people of Kashmir who are the primary stakeholders in the political issue and also the rightful final arbiters of their destiny. A sustained, comprehensive political dialogue on Kashmir between New Delhi and Islamabad is equally indispensable not only for a feasible and long-lasting resolution of the vexed Kashmir Issue but also for the cause of sustainable peace and stability in the subcontinent, Farooq Abdullah added.

Expressing his heartfelt solidarity with the families of those who have lost their lives in the current unrest, he said there has been a clear pattern of an excessive use of lethal force against protesters. The situation is saddening and heart-rending and is worsening with each passing day. A prolonged phase of political inaction could lead us to disastrous consequences.


US Will Cut Off Aid To Pakistan If It Supports Terror: Donald Trump’s Aide

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A top national security advisor to Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has said the US will treat Pakistan “harshly” and “cut off” assistance if it continues to be the “safe haven” for terror groups like Taliban, Haqqani and al-Qaeda.

“We need to have some tough love conversations with the leaders of countries who pretend to be our friends, but who also collaborate with our enemies,” Lt General (Retd) Michael T Flynn, has said in his latest book “How We Can Win the Global War Against Radical Islam and Its Allies” that hit the book stands last week.

“Countries like Pakistan need to be told that we will not tolerate the existence of training camps and safe havens for Taliban, Haqqani, and al-Qaeda forces on their territory, nor will we permit their banks and other financial institutions to move illicit funds for the terror network,” said Flynn.

In the war against terrorism, he listed India as one of the countries with which the US needs to strengthen its relationship.

“Diplomacy alone will not be sufficient; at the moment, nobody takes us seriously. We will have to demonstrate the ability and the resolve to crush our enemies. We should start with strengthening our relationships with Israel, Jordan, and Egypt,” he said.

“We will also need to revive our working relations with countries such as Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, India, and Argentina,” Flynn wrote.

Flynn who served as the director of the Defence Intelligence Agency, commander of the Joint Functional Component Command for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance and chair of the Military Intelligence Board is one of the few top Pentagon leadership to have supported Trump.

Among those shortlisted for Trump’s vice presidential pick, Flynn is considered close to Trump and his top national security advisor.

“They are going to have to choose and if they continue to help the jihadis, we are going to treat them harshly, cutting them off from American assistance, and operating against enemy safe havens,” Flynn said, adding that the same tough approach applies to the financing of the jihadi network.

“Over the years, the terrorists have raised a lot of money from individual donors (sometimes contacted in person, other times online), but criminal activities are a much more important source of money. Some of the best intelligence work carried out by the American government has been done in this area,” he said.


Discovery Channel Reveals What It Takes To Be In The Indian Army's Premier Strike Force

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MARCOS Special Forces - The BEST in the world

New Delhi: Discovery Channel puts the audience through the toughest training of the Indian Army. The ‘Paratrooper Special Forces Operatives’ are amongst the sharpest and the deadliest soldiers who have earned an enviable niche in the Army. An average 10 per cent of the volunteers make it to this elite group, classifying it as one of the toughest military selection courses in the world.

On the occasion of India’s 70th Independence Day, Discovery Channel’s exclusive INDIA’S PARATROOPERS: EARNING THE BADGE will give viewers a rare peek into the Indian Army’s training academy to reveal the intense training programs these soldiers undergo to perform unconventional warfare roles. Preparing for the unpredictable world of covert operations, counterterrorism, frontline combat and law enforcement, only the fastest, strongest and smartest survive.

Watch the awe-inspiring story of courage and commitment in India’s Paratroopers: Earning the Badge on Monday, August 15 at 9 pm on the Discovery Channel. The program will simulcast on Discovery Tamil.


Known as Paratrooper Special Forces, these operatives wear the Maroon Beret and pin to their chest ‘The Balidaan Badge’ - the winged blade of sacrifice. To earn this distinguished honour, the volunteers complete a grueling 90 days’ probation wherein they are stretched to the limit of their endurance. Discovery Channel will give viewers a never-before-seen glimpse of a training module where only the bravest succeed to achieve the prestigious badge.

Bonded by their heroic commitment, the probationers transition through an extreme selection process and a rigorous training regime. Not tasks for the fainthearted, the recruits are put through a series of punishing physical and mental routines including wading through chilling waters, sleep deprivation, exhaustion, uphill and downhill speed march, and the ultimate non-stop 100 KM endurance run. Focusing heavily on physical fitness and psychological strength, the combat training encompasses specialization in weaponry, demolition, navigation, evasion, survival, communication, medical, language and unconventional warfare.

Learn what it takes to meet the exceptional standards of the most specialized forces in the world.


REVEALED: India's Brand New Medium-Range Surface-to-Air Missile (MRSAM)

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The Medium-Range Surface-to-Air Missile (MRSAM) is being developed by India's Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) in collaboration with Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI). It is expected to enter service with the Indian Air Force (IAF) in 2017.

The missile is designed to provide the armed forces with air defence capability against a variety of aerial threats at medium ranges.

MRSAM Development And Testing

A contract for the MRSAM programme was signed in February 2009. The IAF will buy 450 MRSAMs and 18 firing units at a value of more than $2 bn. The IAF ordered one MRSAM regiment including 16 firing units and associated fire control systems and surveillance systems.

IAI and DRDO conducted three flight tests of the MRSAM weapon system at the Integrated Test Range off Odisha Coast, India, in July 2016, to validate all missile components. The missile successfully intercepted a moving aerial target in all the three tests.

MRSAM Design And Features

Each MRSAM weapon system comprises of one command and control system, one tracking radar, missiles, and mobile launcher systems. The mobile launcher is used to transport, emplace and launch up to eight canisterised missiles in two stacks. It can fire the missiles in single or ripple firing modes from the vertical firing position.

The combat management system simplifies the process of engaging a variety of threats. It identifies and tracks the threat using tracking radar. The system calculates the distance between the target and the launcher, and then determines if the identified target is a friend or a foe. The target information is, then, transmitted to the mobile launcher.

The weapon is 4.5m-long, weighs approximately 276kg, and is equipped with canards and fins for control and manoeuvrability.

Guidance And Warhead

The MRSAM missile is equipped with an advanced active radar radio frequency (RF) seeker, advanced rotating phased array radar and a bidirectional data link. The RF seeker, located in the front section of the missile, is used to detect moving targets in all weather conditions.

"The missile's explosive warhead, featuring a self-destruct fuse, provides high-probability of kill against enemy targets with minimal collateral damage."

The phased array radar provides a high-quality air situation picture, while the bidirectional data link is used for relaying midcourse guidance and target information to the missile. The missile's explosive warhead, featuring a self-destruct fuse, provides high-probability of kill against enemy targets with minimal collateral damage.

Performance of MRSAM Weapon

The MRSAM surface-to-air missile is powered by a dual-pulse solid propulsion system developed by DRDO.

The propulsion system, coupled with a thrust vector control system, allows the missile to move at a maximum speed of Mach 2. The weapon has the ability to engage multiple targets simultaneously at ranges of 70km.

Variants of DRDO's Surface-To-Air Missile

The MRSAM is a land-based configuration of the long-range surface-to-air missile (LRSAM) or Barak-8 naval air defence system, which is designed to operate from naval vessels.

The Indian Ministry of Defence is procuring an undisclosed number of MRSAM air defence systems to replace the Indian Army's ageing air defence systems.

Contractors Involved

Under a contract with DRDO, TATA Advanced Systems designed and manufactured combat management systems for the MRSAM programme at its research and development (R&D) facility in New Delhi, India.

Bharat Dynamics (BDL) was the lead integrator for the MRSAM missile systems. BDL established a new production facility in Hyderabad with an investment of $100m to manufacture both MRSAM and LRSAM missiles. When operational, the facility will have the capacity to produce 100 missiles a year.

Other contractors involved in the development of the MRSAM include Bharath Electronics (BEL), L&T, Elta, Rafael, and other private industries.


Defence Minister To Have More Say In Key Military Appointments

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Defence Ministry earlier went by recommendations of the Chiefs and the service headquarters

New Delhi: In a break from the past, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar is taking greater interest in appointments of Principal Staff Officers (PSO) to Chiefs, Vice Chiefs and Army Commanders and their equivalent in the Navy and Air Force. Senior-most officers of the three forces are appointed as PSO and they advise the chief on critical issues.

Earlier, the Ministry of Defence went by the recommendations of the Chiefs and the service headquarters. Now, sources tell NDTV, Mr Parrikar has told the services that while he would take into account the recommendations of chiefs for the appointments, the final call would be of the ministry. And, some recommendations for appointments as PSO have been sent back with queries.

It is understood that while the recommendation of the Chief of Army Staff in the appointment of the vice-chief has been accepted by Mr Parrikar, he has hasn't accepted the recommendation of the Army Headquarters in certain cases.

Senior Ministry of Defence officials said Mr Parrikar has asked the forces to inform the ministry about all officers who are ligible for promotions instead of just the first three or four officers, as was the custom earlier. The change in the process comes after several retired officers have suggested to the Defence Minister that recommendations of the service headquarters should not be final.

Besides, there have been allegations that some appointments were influenced by regimental preferences. Former Defence Ministers AK Antony and Pranab Mukerjee also questioned appointments but that was never a policy, more an intervention.

In a related development, the Ministry of Defence has appointed Lieutenant General Bipin Rawat, currently commanding the Pune based Southwestern Command as the new Vice-Chief of the Indian Army. The current Vice-Chief MMS Rai retires this month. The delay in naming the new Vice-Chief was attributed to the consultations between the defence ministry and Army Headquarters.

Sources said the defence ministry has also cleared the appointment of Lieutenant General Surinder Singh as the Western Army Commander. He is from the Mechanized infantry and now heads the Sukhna-based 33 Corps. The outgoing Western Army Commander Lieutenant General KJ Singh retired on July 31. Lieutenant General SK Patyal has been appointed as the Director General of Military Intelligence. The previous DGMI Lieutenant Genral KG Krishna retired on July 31. General SK Patyal was commanding the Leh-based 14 Corps Command.


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