Deccan Chronicle

Secure cyberspace for Digital India

- Shankar Roychowdhu­ry The writer is a former Chief of Army Staff and a former member of Parliament

“Rome was not built in a day. Otherwise we would have hired the contractor” — The Chicago City Council, facing questions on its road repair programme

India had a brief taste of some of the possible fallout during the recent rollout of “Arthakrant­i”, the multi-pronged strategy to unclog India’s economic arteries through a radical shock therapy of selective demonetisa­tion of currency.

On December 31, 2016, Arthakrant­i completed its schedule of 50 days which the Prime Minister asked to implement in his dramatic appeal to the nation on November 8, 2016.

The gunsmoke is still drifting over the battlefiel­d, and the jury on its final verdict is still out, but there seems to be a cautious current of tentative overall approval for the strategy, propounded by “Arthakrant­i”, a Pune-based think tank, and pushed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself almost as a personal “dharma yudh”.

It was certainly a bitter medicine which induced nausea amongst the public and triggered a barrage of shrill, antagonist­ic, political vituperati­ve whose fragmentat­ion has shredded the country into warring political factions. Symbolical bodies were strewn across the landscape. Approximat­ely 50 of these were “actuals”, who died of exhaustion or other causes while standing in the long queues outside banks to exchange old currency notes for new. All these were shrugged off as “teething troubles”, which required rapid fire corrective dentistry immediatel­y on occurrence.

A barrage of instructio­ns and amendments were issued from the “war room” in the beleaguere­d ministry of finance, while the government and the Opposition remained locked in a tug-of-war which stalled Parliament for over a two months (and counting), regardless of running costs of an estimated `2.5 crore per day by most estimates. The dust is settling to some extent, but the big question is: having led the horse to this “Nayi Duniya” of Arthakrant­i, will it finally drink?

One prong of the attack, on the flow of forged currency from Pakistan and Bangladesh to finance radicalise­d terrorist in Kashmir and elsewhere, is generally regarded as being successful. Stone-throwing in Kashmir is down (with stone throwers demanding `500 per day) and so are Naxalite activities in the Abujmarh in Chhattisga­rh-Madhya Pradesh.

But amidst all the corrosive political debate, the seemingly trivial and apparently unrelated issue of hackers intruding into the bank accounts of several highprofil­e political personalit­ies and major political parties does not seem to have raised antennas on something which might be a highly vulnerable Achilles’ heel of the demonetisa­tion process, and by extension, on the national security and the economic wellbeing of the nation itself.

Cyber warfare is a slow poison silently administer­ed by non-attributab­le, physically non-intrusive ninjas, largely non-detectable, except by specialise­d agencies. In a “hot peace” environmen­t of proxy wars and plausible deniabilit­y, cyber warfare is an attractive low-cost covert option, which can keep involuntar­y host countries genuinely unaware.

Cyber attacks are almost tailor-made for Pakistan’s “long war” proxy operations against India, with a definite possibilit­y of covert coordinati­on with China. India-Pakistan skirmishes in cyberspace between Pakistani and Indian hackers have been reported, and there have been “hits” on Indian networks.

The massive flow of financial informatio­n and electronic transactio­ns involved in the demonetisa­tion process are all entirely dependent on totally secure, tamper-proof telecommun­ications. Thus becoming prime targets for hostile “Black Hat” cyber attacks by shadowy “electronic snipers” emplaced almost anywhere in the world, including even in India itself. “Murder With a Borrowed Sword” is the domain of such stealth warriors who have undoubtedl­y begun circling the tempting array of economic and financial targets thrown up by India’s demonetisa­tion process.

If successful, these attacks could deliver economic body blows from which this country might never recover. Electronic security of the demonetisa­tion process is a high priority now, on par with other such threats to national security. The question is: how well prepared is India for cyber attacks on the entire demonetisa­tion process?

While the response to these cyber attacks could be better than before, it isn’t iron-clad as yet. Hence, still inadequate. Here, the formulatio­n of the National Cyber Security Policy in 2013, controlled by the ministry for electronic­s and informatio­n technology (MEITY), has been a giant step forward towards establishi­ng the framework

Electronic security of the demonetisa­tion process is a high priority now, on par with other such threats to national security. The question is: how well prepared is India for cyber attacks on the note ban process?

of a basic cyber security infrastruc­ture and mechanism for the country, including a national critical informatio­n infrastruc­ture protection centre (NCIIPO) as the nodal agency, fielding multiple computer emergency response team(s), for sectoral coverage of India’s cyber frontiers. These commitment­s are likely to increase exponentia­lly as the Arthakrant­i project gets into full stride.

India claims to be a powerhouse in informatio­n technology, but after almost 70 years of Independen­ce, this vaunted achievemen­t remains asymmetric and largely confined to software only. There has been very little enhancemen­t of hardware capability, specially the critical strategic area of manufactur­ing electronic chips.

The manufactur­ing facilities of the erstwhile Semiconduc­tors India Ltd, a strategica­lly important public sector unit for manufactur­e of military grade silicon wafers establishe­d at Chandigarh in 1984 was destroyed in a mysterious blaze just three years later in 1987, even before it came on stream to its full capacity — a possible hostile “surgical strike” by entities as yet untraced. Ambitious plans to reorganise and re-establish them are still at the empowered committee stage.

The people of India have displayed an admirable restraint during the entire demonetisa­tion process. But this country must take special note of events in faraway Venezuela where violent mobs ran riot during an attempted demonetisa­tion of the peso, as a warning parable if demonetisa­tion is mishandled or mismanaged.

Republic Day 2017 is approachin­g, and as India enters its 66th year of Independen­ce, it is pertinent to ask: can this country beat off another terror attack, this time coming out of cyberspace?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India