The Sunday Guardian

Concerns arise over safety of India’s undersea data cables

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to a halt, the enemy country or entity will just have to damage the majority of these cables, the path and exact location of which can be easily identified. This will disrupt everything—from banking transactio­ns and medical services to air and land travel, online booking, media production and government functions.

Damaging these cables, as some past incidents in the neighbourh­ood have shown, does not require advanced tools or weapons. All that it needs is coordinate­d effort at multiple pre-decided locations. A fishing ship manned by two trained men or an innocuous looking fishing trawler, from which a simple iron anchor can be thrown to the bottom of the sea at the exact spot where the cable is lying has the potential to break the backbone of the informatio­n flow network of the intended country.

Last month, two undersea internet cables linking Taiwan’s main island with the Matsu islands were severed within less than a week. According to Taiwanese officials, Chinese vessels were behind the act which ensured that the 14,000 residents of Matsu island were left without any phone or internet. The internet connectivi­ty to these islands is likely to become normal by the end of April.

As per Taiwanese officials, the cables linking Taiwan’s main island with the Matsu islands, the Quemoy islands, the Penghu and other islands—and also linking those islands with each other—have been damaged at least 30 times through human activity since 2020. Twenty-one of the 30 incidents in which the cables were severed were caused by fishing boats or sand dredgers. According to Telegeogra­phy, a telecommun­ications market research and consulting firm, the normal global instances of such cable breaking are 100, which confirms that these Taiwanese cables were being “broken” by intent as a part of an “undersea cable war”.

Among the countries that have woken up to this threat not just from China but also from other-state backed actors (as is suspected in the sabotage of Nord Stream) is Japan, which last year introduced a specific budget provision to do timebound research on the measures it needed to take to safeguard these undersea cables.

Similarly, the French government released money under the head “ocean floor defence” post the Nord Stream pipeline attack, to protect its ocean floor assets that include undersea cables. The French government also constitute­d a task force that will report to the French President. It also has invested money in purchasing two unmanned underwater vehicles whose sole objective is to protect the undersea cables that connect France to other countries.

However, nothing on these lines is on the anvil so far as India is concerned, despite a few voices taking up the issue. In May 2021, the then Indian ambassador to France, Jawed Ashraf and Australian ambassador to France, Gillian Bird had penned a joint opinion piece for the French newspaper, Le Journal du Dimanche, in which they had stated among other things, “The Indo-pacific region has the busiest internatio­nal shipping lanes, a dense network of submarine cables, and a growing constellat­ion of satellites in space. These assets face threats that will have consequenc­es for global security and the economy.”

A recent paper titled, “Submarine Cable Security in the Indian Ocean”, which was published by the National Security College, Canberra, highlighte­d how it was imperative for the government­s of France, India and Australia to come together to cooperate to safeguard the undersea cables in the Indian Ocean Region. The paper also makes it clear that while France and Australia are taking proactive steps, including military and related to cybersecur­ity, India is yet to take any such initiative­s.

The Sunday Guardian reached out to the Minister of Informatio­n Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw and the department secretary through email seeking their responses on the steps, if any, the ministry was taking, to safeguard these undersea cables. No response was received till the time this report went to press.

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Undersea-cable networks.

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