Challenges before India's new intelligence chiefs
http://www.rediff.com/news/column/challenges-before-india-s-new-intelligence-chiefs/20121128.htm
Protection
of our national security and other critical infrastructure from cyber
threats orchestrated by State and non-State actors is now an important
task of the intelligence community as a whole.
The new chiefs of the Intelligence Bureau and the Research and Analysis Wing will be required to play a leadership role in the matter, says B Raman, India's [ Images ] leading expert on counter-terrorism.
The new chiefs of the Intelligence Bureau and the Research and Analysis Wing will be required to play a leadership role in the matter, says B Raman, India's [ Images ] leading expert on counter-terrorism.
The Intelligence
Bureau, which is currently celebrating its 125th anniversary, and the
Research & Analysis Wing, the external intelligence agency which
came into being in September 1968, will have new chiefs for a period of
two years from January 1, 2013.
The Cabinet Appointments Committee, headed by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh [ Images ], is reported to have chosen Asif Ibrahim, an Indian Police Service officer of the Madhya Pradesh [ Images ] cadre, to head the Intelligence Bureau, and Alok Joshi, an IPS officer of the Haryana cadre, to head R&AW.
Both are highly experienced and competent officers who will do credit to the two organisations.
While Ibrahim's experience has been in
his state, Madhya Pradesh, and the IB, that of Joshi has been in his
state, Haryana, as well as in the IB and R&AW.
The two officers will head their
respective organisations at a time when they will implement the
recommendations of the Naresh Chandra Task Force on National Security,
submitted to the prime minister on May 24.
The task force report contains important
recommendations for the revamp and modernisation of our national
security set-up, including the various agencies of our intelligence
community and the agencies responsible for cyber security.
This is the first revamp being undertaken 10 years after the earlier revamp undertaken after the Kargil [ Images
] conflict of 1999. The effectiveness of the new revamp and
modernisation will depend on the cooperation between the agencies of the
intelligence community in the implementation.
Both Ibrahim and Joshi have a
well-established reputation as excellent team players and this should
help in the smooth implementation of the recommendations.
They will head their agencies at a time when globally intelligence agencies are re-strategising their charter.
For 10 years after 9/11, their focus was
largely on counter-terrorism. As a result, the focus on area studies
somewhat suffered. There is now an attempt to pay more attention to area
studies without diluting the focus on counter-terrorism.
Non-traditional threats to national
security form an important component of this new strategy under
formulation. Cyber security is one of the non-traditional threats
receiving increasing attention.
Protection of our national security and
other critical infrastructure from cyber threats orchestrated by State
and non-State actors is now an important task of the intelligence
community as a whole.
Ibrahim and Joshi will be required to play a leadership role in the matter along with their other colleagues in the community.
The reported fact
that Ibrahim, apart from being an expert in counter-terrorism,
counter-insurgency and counter-intelligence related intelligence tasks,
is also well-versed with cyber security, should be of help to the
government in this regard.
Ibrahim will take over at a time when the
exercise for the revamping of our counter-terrorism architecture has
run into a road-block due to the political mishandling of the creation
of the National Counter-Terrorism Centre.
In whatever form the NCTC is ultimately
set up to meet the sensitivities of the state governments, the
Intelligence Bureau's multi-agency centre -- set up under the
post-Kargil revamp -- will be an important core of it.
Better coordination and understanding
between the IB and the state police under Ibrahim's stewardship would be
important in this regard.
Both the IB and R&AW have previously
been headed by officers belonging to non-Muslim minorities. This is the
first time since 1947 that a Muslim officer will head the most important
agency of the intelligence community.
Many countries in the democratic world
have been debating for some years now how to give better representation
to religious and ethnic minorities and women in the intelligence
profession and how to enhance their leadership role.
Ibrahim's nomination to head the
Intelligence Bureau is not only a recognition by the government of his
record and competence, but also an acknowledgement that the time has
come to give this debate greater prominence and meaning in our country.
Not only religious and ethnic minorities,
but women too are inadequately represented at leadership levels in our
intelligence community. This needs to be rectified.
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