Revamping of The Internal
Security Machinery
By B. Raman
In a detailed interview to Shri Vir Sanghvi,
telecast by the CNBC-TV 18 channel, Shri
P.Chidambaram, Minister for Home Affairs of
the Government of India, has spoken, inter
alia, of how in his view the
counter-terrorism machinery of the
Government of India should work. Relevant
extracts from the interview are annexed.
2. Two important points emerge from the
interview---- the exclusive responsibility
of the Home Minister to exercise political
oversight over the internal security
machinery and the limited executive role of
the National Security Adviser (NSA) in
internal security management.
3. The principle of the exclusive
responsibility of the Home Minister for
internal security management had been
observed right from the days of Jawaharlal
Nehru as the Prime Minister. The Prime
Minister of the day depended on the Home
Minister for ensuring that internal security
was effectively maintained. For this
purpose, the Home Minister had under his
administrative and operational control the
Intelligence Bureau and the various central
police organizations or para-military
forces. He also had the responsibility for
guiding and co-ordinating the work of the
State Police forces.
4. The line of responsibility for political
oversight was very clear with no room for
doubt till the assassination of Indira
Gandhi in October, 1984. After her
assassination, this clear line of
responsibility got increasingly diluted or
blurred due to various reasons such as the
following:
-
The creation of new agencies for
security-related duties such as the
Special Protection Group (SPG) for the
security of the incumbent and past Prime
Ministers and their families and the
National Security Guards (NSGs) as a
special intervention force against
terrorism. Rajiv Gandhi, the then Prime
Minister, decided that the SPG and the
NSG should work under the political
oversight of the Prime Minister and the
operational oversight of the Cabinet
Secretary.
-
Terrorism assuming international
dimensions necessitating co-operation
with the counter-terrorism and homeland
security agencies of other countries.
Diplomacy assumed an important role in
counter-terrorism particularly against
State sponsors of terrorism. The US
created a counter-terrorism division in
the State Department to deal with these
international and diplomatic dimensions.
It continues to function even after the
creation of the Department of Homeland
Security in 2004. Some other countries
followed the US model. Under Shri Atal
Behari Vajpayee, this international and
diplomatic dimension was given greater
importance than under the predecessor
Governments. A number of Joint
Counter-Terrorism Working Groups with
different countries came into existence
and joint counter-terrorism exercises
were organized with interested
countries, including the US and China.
While the responsibility for the
co-ordination of the international and
diplomatic dimensions was given to the
Ministry of External Affairs, the
Ministry of Defence exercised the
co-ordination responsibilities in
respect of joint counter-terrorism
exercises.
-
With terrorist organizations such as Al
Qaeda and its associates acquiring or
attempting to acquire specialized
capabilities for what came to be known
as catastrophic terrorism such as
terrorism involving the use of weapons
of mass destruction material, terrorism
in the cyber space to disrupt or destroy
critical infrastructure, aviation
terrorism, maritime terrorism etc, the
need for the State acquiring specialized
counter-capabilities was realized. For
meeting these needs, the role of the
Ministry of Defence, the Armed Forces
and the various science and technology
institutions naturally got enhanced.
5. The problems we face in India arise from
the fact that whereas terrorism has
increasingly assumed new dimensions and new
frontiers, no attempt has been made to work
out a comprehensive approach to deal with
terrorism in its classical form, terrorism
in its post-9/11 form and likely forms of
terrorism of the future as well as with
State-sponsors of terrorism such as Pakistan
and other States failing to act against
terrorism such as Bangladesh. While the
threat posed by terrorism of different hues
continues to evolve, our concepts to deal
with it has not been keeping pace with the
threat.
6. In working out a comprehensive approach
to internal security management in general
and counter-terrorism in particular, the
National Security Adviser (NSA) has to play
an important role as an ideas man, who looks
beyond the day-to-day nuts and bolts aspect
of counter-terrorism. Shri Chidambaram is
right when he says that the NSA should have
little executive role in internal security
management. The executive role has to be
that of the Home Minister. However, the NSA
has to play an active role in evolving
concepts which take into account the
international and specialized dimensions of
the new terrorism of today. He would also be
the right person for co-ordinating and
supervising the evolving machinery to
facilitate India taking advantage of the
growing international co-operation against
terrorism.
7. The concept of intelligence co-ordination
has also been evolving. The role of
intelligence in internal security management
has many components:
- Intelligence
collection within our frontiers.
- Trans-border
intelligence collection.
- Intelligence
collection in foreign countries.
- Use of technical
gadgets for the collection of
intelligence specifically required for
internal security management.
- Use of technical
gadgets for the collection of
intelligence of relevance to internal as
well as external security.
8. Presently, there is no single Ministry or
Department capable of co-ordinating all
these roles. Is it necessary to create a
single nodal point in the Prime Minister’s
office to co-ordinate these roles in the
form of a National Intelligence Adviser?
This question has been posed by different
analysts from time to time since the Kargil
conflict of 1999, but has not been addressed
seriously. It is time to address it as part
of an exercise to revamp our security
machinery----internal as well as external.
9. In India, the concept of an intelligence
community has not evolved. Similarly, the
concept of leadership roles in
security-related matters has not received
attention. In the US, under the Intelligence
Community Act, all agencies are required to
function as an organic whole. There is a
consolidated intelligence budget for the
community as a whole, which is prepared and
got approved by the Congress by the
Director, National Intelligence. After the
Congressional approval, he makes the
individual allocations to different
agencies. The leadership role in respect of
counter-intelligence is with the FBI, in
respect of counter-terrorism with the
National Counter-Terrorism Centre, in
respect of Homeland Security with the
Department of Homeland Security and in
respect of covert actions with the CIA. The
designated leaders coordinate the follow-up
action.
10. In Israel, the leadership role in
respect of internal security is that of Shin
Bet, the security agency, in respect of
external security that of Mossad, the
external intelligence Agency, and in respect
of trans-border security that of the
military intelligence agency. We dot not
have such clearly-defined leadership roles.
11. From a perusal of Shri Chidambaram’s
address of December 23, 2009, in the
Intelligence Bureau, and his latest
interview to Shri Vir Sanghvi, it is
apparent that he has been approaching the
exercise for the revamping of our security
machinery essentially from the point of view
of the Home Ministry. This is a very
important aspect, but it is equally
important to give the exercise a larger
dimension in order to evolve a comprehensive
security machinery with clearly laid down
concepts, carefully defined leadership roles
and a workable co-ordination drill. In such
a larger exercise, the NSA has to play an
active role not only as an adviser to the
Prime Minister, but also to the Cabinet as a
whole in matters relating to national
security.
(The writer is Additional
Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt.
of India, New Delhi, and, presently,
Director, Institute For Topical Studies,
Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)
ANNEXURE
EXTRACTS FROM THE INTERVIEW OF SHRI
P.CHIDAMBARAM, HOME MINISTER OF THE
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA, BY SHRI VIR SANGHVI FOR
THE CNBC-TV 18 CHANNEL
Vir Sanghvi:
The other thing that is said is that the
first thing you did apparently when you took
over as Home Minister is you instituted a
meeting at apparently noon every day at
which the chiefs of intelligence agencies
came and you had a look at what the
situation on the ground was and that the
National Security Advisor also started com
P Chidambaram:
No that is a job I wrote for myself.
Vir Sanghvi:
It was completely your own job description?
P Chidambaram:
Yes but then when I took over, the Prime
Minister graciously said, you will have a
free hand because time is very limited, and
if there is any problem, come back to me.
When I thought about my job that weekend, I
said, the first thing is we must bring
everybody together, because I had to learn
and act and change and deliver all in five
months.
Vir Sanghvi:
You know the background which is it is being
posited by many people that you took away a
lot of jobs that Narayanan use to do – your
answer is always been look you people are
making too much of this we have been friends
for years – but let us leave friendship out
of this. On purely functional terms you did
take over a lot of the job didn’t you?
P Chidambaram:
No. I did not take away any of his
responsibilities. I did not take over any of
his responsibilities. All I said was that
whoever is doing whatever, it must be under
political oversight. I happened to be the
person providing the political oversight and
therefore everybody accepted it.
Vir Sanghvi:
Which is a departure from what had happened
before? In Mr Advani’s time it did not
happen, Mr Shivraj Patil’s time it didn’t
happen. So in that sense the home ministry
did assert itself over the national security
advisor.
P Chidambaram:
That is how it should be isn’t it.
Vir Sanghvi:
I personally agree that is how it should be
but it wasn’t how it was?
P Chidambaram:
It wasn’t for whatever reason I do not know.
But if I was going to be responsible as I
was made responsible on that day then I was
going to make sure that I knew it was going
on. The only way that I could know what was
going on what happen and what did not happen
was to exercise political oversight over
every agency that was concerned with
security.
Vir Sanghvi:
My question to you therefore is what is the
role of national security advisor should he
be an intelligence overload to whom the
chief of intelligence’s report should he be
an advisor to the Prime Minister?
P Chidambaram:
Essentially I think he is an advisor to the
Prime Minister, advisor to the National
Security Council. He heads a very important
body, the NSES, the Secretariat, which
combines not only intelligence from internal
security matters but a number of other
things - Diplomatic intelligence, external
intelligence, nuclear command authority etc.
So he brings all the strands together and
then advises the Prime Minister. Surely he
must be in the loop as far as internal
security is concerned, who can he not be in
the loop, he has to be in the loop. But
whether he should have executive
responsibility given the pressures of work
and time I think is an open question.
My personal view is that he should have very
few executive responsibilities as far as
internal security is concerned. That should
be given to other professionals.
Vir Sanghvi:
That leads me to the question of where
Research & Analysis Wing (R&AW) reports
because R&AW cannot report to the home
ministry by definition because it is an
external agency, of course you have said
that when it comes to terrorism the R&AW
chief must be involved because there has to
be a nodal point on terrorism. But what
happens to R&AW, it is a bit fatherless,
isn’t it in the current system?
P Chidambaram:
R&AW reports to the Prime Minister now. But
I think there is broad agreement that so far
as counter terrorism is concerned, I don't
think anybody has a serious objection that
R&AW would have to report to the Home
Minister.
Vir Sanghvi:
Let me now go back to 26/11, do you think
one of the reasons we were so ill-prepared
for what happened was because mechanisms
like these were not in place?
P Chidambaram:
Yes, of course. There should have been one
point where everything converged, all
information converged. Today it converges in
a group of about six-seven people who meet
everyday. That is how it should be which is
what the National Counter Terrorism Centre (NCTC)
will be.
It will be an institutional mechanism rather
than an individual-headed mechanism. And the
response will be an institutional response
rather than an individual driven response.
Vir Sanghvi:
You have seen the evidence that there was a
fair amount of intelligence pointing to
26/11 which was ignored. Do you think it was
inevitable that would have been ignored or
if there had been a system like this in
place we would have acted on it?
P Chidambaram:
The system in this place would have surely
connected the dots. There were three
separate pieces of information, they were
not connected.
Vir Sanghvi:
So there was a failure?
P Chidambaram:
I said so.
Vir Sanghvi:
There were two aspect to 26/11, one was that
26/11 happened without us knowing because we
didn’t connect the dots as you said. The
second was our response which was surely
inadequate and took too long to put
together, so would that happen again?
P Chidambaram:
I don’t think so. If god forbids anything
like 26/11 happens, we will respond in a
much swifter passion. We have a much better
command and control system here and our
people will respond very quickly.
Vir Sanghvi:
What about state police forces, one of the
problems of 26/11 was that they now know
were the problems within the Bombay Police,
and it’s the same?
P Chidambaram:
That’s not correct, they are getting better
every day, the capacity is better, response
time is quicker. We have set out SOPs now
and when we sent the NSG or the Central
Paramilitary force what will be the command
and control structure. They can command any
plane, why their own plane.
Vir Sanghvi:
Which they were allowed to under the NSG act
any how?
P Chidambaram:
Because no body had been authorized to do
that.
Vir Sanghvi:
It was as simple as that?
P Chidambaram:
I think so. I am not going into the past I
didn’t decide that I will issue but I issued
authority and they can take over any plane
now.