SP's NavalForces

Exercise Sea Vigil – A Multi-Tiered Patrol and Surveillan­ce Mechanism

The scale of the exercise was unpreceden­ted in terms of the geographic­al extent, the number of stakeholde­rs involved, the number of units participat­ing and in terms of the objectives to be met

- REAR ADMIRAL SUSHIL RAMSAY (RETD)

The scale of the exercise was unpreceden­ted in terms of the geographic­al extent, the number of stakeholde­rs involved, the number of units participat­ing and in terms of the objectives to be met.

Rear Admiral Sushil Ramsay (Retd)

tEN YEARS AFTER “MUMBAI 26/11”, the Indian Navy commenced the largest coastal defence exercise off the Indian coast on January 22, 2019. exercise Sea vigil, a first of its kind was conducted along the entire 7,516.6 km coastline and exclusive economic Zone of India, involving all of 13 coastal States and Union territorie­s along with all maritime stakeholde­rs, including the fishing and coastal communitie­s.

exercise Sea vigil was aimed to comprehens­ively and holistical­ly validate the efficacy of the measures taken since ‘Mumbai 26/11’. Seaward monitoring during the exercise entailed patrolling off coast, in offshore Developmen­t Areas and off Islands territorie­s by the Indian navy, Indian coast guard, supported by the State Marine Police. closer coast, strategic assets, ports, Single Point Moorings was patrolled by designated agencies. Seaward monitoring also entailed inputs from technical means, including intelligen­ce sources. extensive shore-based monitoring enhanced vigil by the State Police along the coast; monitoring of fish landing centres by State fisheries department­s; as also monitoring of Port areas by respective Port authoritie­s.

While smaller exercises are conducted in coastal States on a biannual basis, including combined exercises amongst adjoining States, the conduct of a security exercise at a national-level was conducted the very first time. It reflected the distance that was covered since ‘ Mumbai 26/11’ and the relative maturing of the organisati­on for coastal Security to take on this large-scale endeavour. exercise Sea vigil provided a realistic assessment of Indian navy’s strengths and weakness which would help further strengthen­ing of maritime security and in turn national security. The first Coastal Defence Exercise Sea Vigil, conducted by the Indian navy and Indian coast guard, in close coordinati­on with State government­s and Union territorie­s concluded on January 23, 2019 saw participat­ion by more than 100 ships, aircraft and patrol boats manned and operated by various security agencies.

the scale of the exercise was unpreceden­ted in terms of the geographic­al extent, the number of stakeholde­rs involved, the number of units participat­ing and in terms of the objectives to be met. the exercise Sea vigil was a build up towards the major theatre-level Readiness operationa­l exercise (tRoPex) which Indian navy conducts every two years. exercises Sea vigil and tRoPex together are structured to cover the entire spectrum of Maritime Security, including transition from peace to conflict. the conduct of the exercise Sea vigil was facilitate­d by the Ministries of Defence, home Affairs, Shipping, Petroleum and nat

ural gas, fisheries, customs, State government­s and other agencies of centre/State.

Background

the exercise which commenced on January 22, 2019, comprised two distinct phases. In the first phase, all stakeholde­rs assessed the robustness of their own organisati­ons. During the second phase, simulated attacks were carried out on vital installati­ons and assets by infiltrati­ng through the Sea, in Kerala and Lakshadwee­p. the security agencies were able to thwart attempts by the opposing force to infiltrate the coast using commandeer­ed fishing boats. Response of agencies to other security contingenc­ies such as hijacking of a ship and attack on offshore installati­ons off Kochi Harbour was also assessed. All infiltrati­on attempts were analysed promptly to identify gaps in the multi-tier security layers at Sea, close to the land and also in the hinterland in close coordinati­on with concerned stakeholde­rs.

Sea vigil that lasted for over two days, including the mobilisati­on phase, witnessed a high tempo of operations by all agencies and large-scale deployment of forces. All operationa­l centres of the Indian navy and coast guard and control Rooms of Police and Kochi Port were fully activated and exchanged informatio­n with each other. During the exercise, multiagenc­y teams evaluated the security set up implemente­d by agencies including at fishing harbours, fish Landing centres, Police control Rooms and Ports amongst others.

Take-away of Sea Vigil

exercise Sea vigil, India’s largest-ever coastal Defence exercise was conducted over an intense 36-hour period from 22 and 23, 2019. Exercise Sea Vigil conceptual­ised and led by the Indian navy and coast guard saw the simultaneo­us activation of India’s entire coastal Security apparatus across all nine coastal States and four Union territorie­s. the exercise saw the complete support and earnest participat­ion of all central and State agencies including the Ministry of home Affairs (MhA), Ministry of Defence (MoD), customs, central Industrial Security force (cISf), Department of fisheries, Director general, Lights & Lighthouse­s, Director general Shipping, Port authoritie­s and the coastal Police of all participat­ing States.

Planned in two phases, the Phase I commenced with the deployment of personnel and sea-going units of all stakeholde­rs. 150 ships and 35 aircraft of the Indian navy and coast guard were deployed for the exercise. this when added to sea-going assets of other stakeholde­rs like the State Police, cISf, and customs etc. reached an astonishin­g 500-600 craft at Sea. This layered defence provided a near-unbroken ‘nigrani’ or surveillan­ce net along the entire coast of India and outlying Islands. this was further enhanced by the chain of Radar Stations setup along the Indian Peninsula to establish an effective coastal Surveillan­ce network. All this was fed back to the Joint operations centres set up by the Indian navy at Mumbai, Kochi, visakhapat­nam and Port Blair for monitoring, analysis and response.

the uniform and technical surveillan­ce network was further augmented by the fishing communitie­s along the Coast as the ‘eyes and ears’ of the nation’s coastal Security construct. the Phase I also saw an intensive audit of all measures put in place since Mumbai 26/11 to improve the measures of efficiency and effectiven­ess of coastal security. this ‘nireekshan’ was undertaken by multi-agency teams deployed to check and audit important landing points including fish Landing centres and vulnerable Areas and important installati­ons along the coast as well as in the hinterland.

Commencing from 2000 hours on January 22, 2019 the entire coastal security apparatus transited to Phase II. this Phase saw attempts to penetrate and land dummy explosives by designated ‘ReD’ forces comprising teams drawn from the Indian navy, coast guard, Police and cISf. these teams were given a free hand to commandeer fishing vessels; merchantme­n etc. and attempt to reach the coast. 8-10 teams were deployed in each State and it is to the credit of all participat­ing agencies that only a few ‘attacks’ were successful. Many attacks were allowed to ‘go-through’ to test robustness of Police ‘nakabandi’ which was found to be very effective throughout the exercise. the customs also undertook rummaging of visiting ships at anchorage and in harbour.

Driven by the MhA, the Phase II also saw the exercising of various contingenc­ies on land after an ‘assumed’ landing. the national Security guard was also called in to tackle hostage situations in two-three vital installati­ons. contingenc­ies including hijacking of ships, bomb disposal in Malls, attacks and responses on places of worship, etc. were also exercised and tested for effectiven­ess. the crisis Management groups of States were also activated to deal with such situations.

Conclusion

Indian navy, made responsibl­e for overall maritime security including coastal and offshore security, will now conduct a detailed debrief for all stakeholde­rs during March 2019. Debriefs would also be undertaken with all participan­ts at the State and District levels. the feedback of the internal and external audit and lessons identified are planned to be presented at the next meeting of the national committee for Strengthen­ing Maritime and coastal Security ( ncSMcS), the nation’s highest body that monitors implementa­tion of measures to enhance security post Mumbai 26/11. This is expected to allow stakeholde­rs to focus efforts on identified vulnerabil­ities and lacunae. no coast can be completely sealed at all times, however the ability to deter and prevent enemies of the State from unhindered access to land would continue to remain top priority for all stakeholde­rs in the coastal Security construct.

This first-ever large scale Coastal Defence exercise would be now institutio­nalised to be conducted every two years in addition to the State-focussed Sagar Kavach series of exercises. Sea Vigil 2019 saw the largest mobilisati­on of maritime and coastal security machinery in India and this sends an unambiguou­s message to Anti-national elements that India would spare no effort to defend its coast and territoria­l integrity at all times.

 ?? MAP: Indian Navy ??
MAP: Indian Navy

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