The Asian Age

‘ India joined US- led top secret alliance in 2008’

- SANJIB KR BARUAH

India has been one of the most proactive members of a secretive US National Security Agency ( NSA)led 10- member counterter­rorism platform called SIGINT Seniors Pacific ( SSPAC) for the last 10 years, a recent tranche of classified documents recently released by whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden to a Website suggests.

Besides the US, the SSPAC has Australia, Canada, France, India, South Korea, New Zealand, Singapore, Thailand, and United Kingdom as members.

The Indian representa­tion at the SSPAC comprises officials from the Research and Analysis Wing ( RAW), National Technical Research Organisati­on ( NTRO) and the Aviation Research Centre ( ARC). A document states: “RAW has produced the highest volume of reports for SSPAC next to the US and its informatio­n has garnered positive feedback from multiple SSPAC members.”

While RAW is the dedicated agency for external intelligen­ce, NTRO is the super- feeder agency for providing technical intelligen­ce on internal and external security. ARC is mandated with the aerial collection of intelligen­ce.

The SSPAC members use a NSA- developed stand- alone secure communicat­ion system called “Crushed Ice” which is deployed in each nation’s headquarte­rs to communicat­e with each other including real time conversati­ons and exchange of “phone numbers, fax numbers, email addresses, voice and language identifica­tions, voice cuts, lead informatio­n and interrogat­ion reports”.

In 2007, the US NSA director sought the opinion of SSPAC on the possibilit­y of inviting India to join the SSPAC multilater­al forum on counter terror. The NSA felt strongly that India’s participat­ion in multi lateral intelligen­ce sharing would help mature its Indian signals intelligen­ce agencies as well as provide regional counter terror expertise.

The move was prompted by a keen US administra­tion that wanted to improve relations with India.

After given a unanimous go- ahead, a high level team, including the NSA director and his equivalent­s from Singapore and New Zealand, travelled to New Delhi in March 2008 to extend the invite. In June 2008, India formally accepted the SSPAC invitation.

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