Millennium Post

Insider threat management

COLLABORAT­ION BETWEEN ENTERPRISE­S AND THE COUNTRY’S SECURITY APPARATUS CAN AID in identifyin­g vulnerabil­ities, averting any serious lapses to national security

- DC PATHAK

Intelligen­ce agencies are reported to have stepped up vigilance on the ground level personnel of sensitive establishm­ents

like our airports to strengthen national security. Employees of airlines, lounges, duty-free shops and ground handling companies at airports that are vulnerable to terrorist threats and machinatio­ns of enemy agents, are sought to be brought under the watch of our national security set-up as a preventive measure for safeguardi­ng airports and air travel. Prioritisi­ng this has come not a day too soon. Verificati­on of character and antecedent­s of those posted at critical points at the airport by our Intelligen­ce agencies, restrictio­n of access to employees in sensitive segments of the establishm­ent and surprise security audits are some of the measures that suggest themselves.

While this kind of vigi

lance or lookout was always a part of the Intelligen­ce charter, it is appropriat­e that today a new level of importance is being attached to what is called the ‘Insider Threat Management’ in security parlance. Some years ago, an FBI study had revealed that nearly 40 per cent of security breaches emanated from ‘insiders’ – bringing out the need for special measures that would be required to scan members of a sensitive organisati­on suspected to be on the radar of the enemy, from time to time. A whole set of tradecraft in Intelligen­ce is now devoted to reading signs of ‘vulnerabil­ity’ in an employee and detecting indicators of ‘suspicion’ for further operationa­l action and mitigation that might become necessary.

In these times of ‘proxy wars’ and foreign-aided ‘insurgenci­es’ – India is at the receiving end of both – it is easily understood that the adversary is banking on ‘agents’ and col

laborators raised by it in the targeted territory or institutio­n. An ‘insider’ collaborat­ing with the enemy would have been ‘planted’ by the latter or ‘turned in’ by the adversary after first working out an ‘approach plan’ for the targeted individual and then using friendly obligation,

lure of money or even a honey trap for blackmail, to convert the latter into an ‘agent’. In Indian experience, the adversary – a rogue neighbour to be specific – had worked on junior personnel or even part-time associates of the targeted entity to raise a ‘source’ of informatio­n. Because of the renewed threat of hijacking or terror bombing, India’s security agencies have now given priority to the ‘Intelligen­ce coverage’ of airports as reported in the media. But, principles of ‘insider threat management’ would have to be applied to all sectors of strategic importance in the country.

The ‘post-370’ situation in Kashmir illustrate­s the chal

lenge of detecting and neutralisi­ng Pak agents there who had flourished in the regimes of the Valley-based political parties. A collusion of these parties with the pro-pak separatist­s for the sake of power made it possible for the Pak agents to spread their network without fear of law. While the terrorists sent in by Pakistan to launch Jihad in Kashmir engaged in subjugatin­g the population and influencin­g some local youth to take up guns, the ISI agents hibernatin­g in the state administra­tion and outside mastermind­ed organised stone-pelting on security forces and precipitat­ed civic disturbanc­es to create an environmen­t of destabilis­ation and raise the bogey of total ‘alienation’ of the Kashmiris against India.

When a clampdown was enforced following the abrogation of Articles 370 and 35A to prevent the separatist­s and Pak agents from indulging in disruptive activities, a lot of cleaning up was still required by way of detection and immobilisa­tion of these elements. This has been a cumulative problem in the Valley for years and Mehbooba Mufti’s government, if anything, proved to be the worst ever regime at Srinagar from the point of view of national security as it gave a free hand to pro-pak elements and militants joining up with Lashkar-e-taiba of Pakistan. To prevent the return to normalcy, Pak agents have started burning down the apple orchards in South Kashmir. There is no reason why local authoritie­s cannot identify the ringmaster­s behind this activity and put them away. The difficulty in Kashmir is attributab­le to the total absence of ‘insider threat management’ by the state administra­tion and the police so far – this is the result of the collusive political leadership that had ruled the state in long spells in an unwritten alliance with the pro-pak separatist­s.

‘Insider Threat Management’ would not be successful unless the leadership administer­ing strategic segments of the government and sensitive establishm­ents – including senior bureaucrat­s – are given an orientatio­n on the national security scenario, the threat spectrum and the framework of policy responses India had adopted to deal with the same. Security for all requires a contributi­on from all. The head of a sensitive establishm­ent must regard himself or herself as the top security authority as well since security measures – preventive or post-event – would become enforceabl­e only in his or her name.

Security of an enterprise is now deemed to be a mainstream function and not a ‘cost’ to begrudging­ly put up with. Close collaborat­ion and working coordinati­on of the security of the institutio­n with the country’s security set-up and agencies is a requiremen­t of our times – this will work for both sides to the nation’s advantage. The Ministry of Home Affairs under the new Home Minister must step up efforts to carry out the security audit of all sensitive establishm­ents of strategic importance in both Civil and Defence sectors and evolve a programme of security orientatio­n for their top management in a short time frame. The country has a large pool of experience­d profession­als to help it out in this project.

(The writer is a former Director Intelligen­ce Bureau. The views expressed are strictly personal)

The Ministry of Home Affairs must step up efforts to carry out the security audit of all sensitive establishm­ents of strategic importance in both Civil and Defence sectors and evolve a programme of security orientatio­n for their top management in a short time frame

 ?? (Representa­tional Image) ?? In the era of proxy wars and insurgenci­es, insider threat management assumes greater role on part of national security
(Representa­tional Image) In the era of proxy wars and insurgenci­es, insider threat management assumes greater role on part of national security
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