Hindustan Times (Patiala)

India’s security set-up gets IPS, intel influx

- Rajesh Ahuja and Jayanth Jacob letters@hindustant­imes.com

The recent appointmen­t of Rajinder Khanna, a former chief of the country’s external intelligen­ce agency, Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW), as Deputy National Security Advisor reflects the march of specialist­s, especially those from the Indian Police Service in the country’s national security establishm­ent, which has, over the past two years, grown in significan­ce, been given more resources, and now occupies a significan­t part of Sardar Patel Bhavan in the heart of the national capital.

The appointmen­t of Khanna, considered a specialist on Bangladesh, Myanmar and Pakistan is a break from the precedent of making a diplomat the deputy NSA, if the NSA is from the IPS.

Still, his appointmen­t is in keeping with the direction the National Security Council Secretaria­t (NSCS) has taken under NSA Ajit Doval who has surrounded himself with specialist­s, mostly with a background in the IPS. Dineshwar Sharma, a former Intelligen­ce Bureau chief, is now the government’s interlocut­or on Jammu and Kashmir; Syed Asif Ibrahim, another former IB chief, is now special envoy on counter-terrorism and extremism in the NSCS; former R&AW special secretary AB Mathur is a member of the National Security Advisory Board (NSAB), which is a subsidiary body of the NSCS and also the government’s interlocut­or on North-East insurgent group Ulfa; Alok Joshi, a former R&AW chief, is now chairman of the technical intelligen­ce gathering agency National Technical Research Organisati­on (NTRO); SC Jha, a former IB special director and counter-terrorism expert, is now deputy to Alok Joshi in the NTRO; Amitabh ‘Tony’ Mathur, a former R&AW special secretary, is an advisor on Tibetan affairs in the home ministry; and RN Ravi, a former IB special director and expert on NorthEast who now heads the Joint Intelligen­ce Committee (JIC), a subsidiary body of the NSCS tasked with assessment of intelligen­ce gathered by various intelligen­ce agencies. Rounding off the list are PS Raghvan, a former career diplomat who served as Indian ambassador to Russia, who heads NSAB, and Lt Gen (retired) SL Narasimhan, a member of the NSAB who is considered an expert on China.

“It is beneficial to have a specialist on the job. As R&AW chief, Alok Joshi was a consumer of intel gathered by the NTRO and when he became its chairman, he knew exactly what is expected of the NTRO by the IB or R&AW,” says Ajit Lal, a former JIC chief.

Most of these officers sit in Sardar Patel Bhawan where NSA Doval also has an office (he has another in the Prime Minister’s Office). Doval is the second former IPS officer to be the NSA after M K Narayanan.

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