Deccan Chronicle

It’s time to develop our own weapons, says deputy NSA

- COREENA SUARES | DC

Deputy National Security Adviser R.N. Ravi pushed for greater indigenous manufactur­ing of weapons, saying the strong get surrounded by friends and the weak by enemies.

Mr Ravi, a former chairman of the Joint Intelligen­ce Committee, said that time and again the government had to upgrade weapons of the armed forces through imports. “The time has come to develop weapons and weapon systems within the country.”

The city is hosting a twoday national conference on self-reliance in defence manufactur­ing. A bunch of think tanks, including scientists from DRDO, private sectors, aeronautic­al and engineerin­g students and more are here to share their ideas, products and proposals to help safeguard national interest.

Speaking on day one of the conference, Mr Ravi, who led counter-insurgency and counter-terrorist operations, said, “Indian forces have been upgrading weapons to the next generation through procuremen­t, instead of developing its own. India is among the highest importers of defence products. A sense of awakening that India can manufactur­e weapons is needed.”

He further said, “There are two approaches of security, to identify the threat and assess it and to assess the intention of the enemy in order to protect our borders. It is time that we built

Indian forces have been upgrading weapons to the next generation through procuremen­t, instead of developing its own. India is among the highest importers of defence products. A sense of awakening that India can manufactur­e weapons is needed

— R. N. RAVI, Deputy National Security Adviser

a system on advanced cyber, aviation, robotics and communicat­ion, that will help the forces expand beyond the convention­al border. We need to detect and destroy the enemy before they attack our borders.”

Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on chairman Mr G. Satheesh Reddy, who was present at the event, said, “Warfare is no longer a border-to- border thing. The enemy has its eyes on human habitation in rural and urban belts. Warfare has become heavily informatio­n intensive. If we are losing on intelligen­ce inputs, we are losing the war.”

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