Mumbai terror attack on 26 Nov 2008 should be seen as a watershed event for
Is it a defining moment for us? Will there be a paradigm shift in our thinking about our security? Or will it pass as another terrorist event that we will discuss on talk-shows and promptly put it out of our memory, like many times earlier.
Will we let the sobriquet of “soft state” become our indelible definition?
Or we shall wake up and do something about it.
It is no secret that
The democratic
With Mumbai terror attack, our security preparedness (or absence of it) has been laid bare.
Our large security apparatus has been left looking largely ineffective and slow to respond. The agencies that carry the responsibility of monitoring, pro-actively preventing or responding to an actual occurrence have failed to build processes and systems that can prevent or handle terrorist attacks.
The intelligence agencies are multifold and serve a particular force in their specialist function. There is no effective information collection, collation and disbursal system, despite the fact that
The security apparatus has been incrementally built bottom upwards. Interoperability and synthesis of effort were neither thought of, nor built in.
In summary,
For example, during Mumbai attacks, the Federal bureau had the intelligence about impending attacks, which it sent to Home Ministry, which was not shared with Maharashtra, and the local police had no clue when the Mumbai outrage took place, NSG did not have transport arrangements to fly them from Delhi, and no road transport after landing at Mumbai Airport, all active forces did not know which equipment is available with other forces.
It looks like a study in chaos. The only winning grace is the bravery and some extra-ordinary leadership by our fighting-forces that carries the day.
Will it work against a more organized guerilla forces, which is certain consequence of Talibanization of Pakistan?
Why we need to change it?
Because the geo-political situation in our neighborhood will remain hostile in the foreseeable future.
As long as these targets are exposed because of lack of security umbrella around them, it is with minimal effort that the terrorist groups will slip through the cracks in security environment and continue their nefarious designs of damaging
Secondly and more importantly, the payoff. It is estimated that the logistics of the attack have cost the perpetrators peanuts. The damage they caused to the business houses is estimated to be ten billion dollars. And we are still not factoring in the negative sentiment and the ignominy of being considered a slipshod country. So terrorists will get encouraged in their misplaced zeal to wreak heavier damage at nominal cost.
We need to build systems that will exact a heavy price from the attackers and also make our assets secure from attrition.
The need of the hour is change in the mindset about security (away from the indifferent attitudes), effective surveillance systems, real-time information systems and “state of the art” response systems (weapons, skills, technologies). Hope we can harness new awareness and technologies to thwart any future attacks.