Saturday, 22 March 2014

DC Pathak on effective ways to counter Naxals

The massive attack by armed Naxalites on a road opening contingent of the CRPF in the Maoist belt of Sukma district in Chhattisgarh, resulting in the death of fifteen of the paramilitary personnel and looting of over a dozen automatic rifles, draws attention to the fact that for nearly two decades now, the handling of this prime challenge to national security had not yielded lasting results.

Serious Challenge

An intelligence alert about the organised movement of Maoist cadres from Odisha to this area also did not help. The event raises questions on the strategy and policy response that the Centre and state governments had adopted in dealing with the escalating threat of Naxalism in a vast area spread across Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Odisha.

It is instructive to recall that it was in the mid- Nineties that the Indian intelligence had unearthed the plan of the then underground Naxalite leadership to operationally unite the Maoist Communist Centre(MCC)of Bihar and the People's War Group (PWG) of Andhra Pradesh by utilising the intervening Dandakaranya forest belt as the corridor. The ambitious plan even envisaged the spread of the movement to the North- East where it would seek linkage with left-of-the-centre insurgent groups active in the region. In spite of the initial success of the Andhra Pradesh police in combating the movement militarily, Naxalism steadily traversed the map of India and became a trans-national threat. Today, Naxals are posing a serious challenge to our paramilitary forces in the forest and hilly terrain of thousands of kilometres in the hinterland of India.

Originating in West Bengal in the late Sixties, Naxalism went through an uncertain period of advocacy of the Maoist doctrine of 'power coming through the barrel of the gun' before it gained ascendancy in the Nineties and rapidly spread to new areas on the strength of its underground organisational planning, rising number of trained cadres, and acquisition of arms and explosives.

Built on the combination of an ideological pull, the atmospherics of disgruntlement prevailing in the remote interiors of India particularly in the tribal belts and the unfortunate "withdrawal" of local administration in the affected areas on the first appearance of the gunmen, the Maoist movement has succeeded in establishing a "parallel government" in certain pockets of the country.

Joint Strategy

What has come in the way of a sustainable strategy being developed against "the biggest threat to national security" - as the Prime Minister described it more than once - is the unwillingness of the political leadership to accept that while police and law and order are in the domain of the state, dealing with issues of national security requires a joint strategy between the Centre and the states. In handling cross border terrorism, the Centre has to be the lead player but the fight against Naxalism - still a largely indigenous challenge - has to be led by the states. Unlike terrorism, the Maoist threat requires an "area" domination and the emphasis on "intelligence from below." The Centre's role is to make paramilitary forces in adequate strength available to the state in conducting area- specific operations, share such intelligence about the plans and movement of the armed Naxalites, as the national agencies are able to lay their hands on, and not let any politically motivated blame game overshadow the lessons that must be drawn from an incident of the kind that occurred in Sukma district.

For far too long has the threat of Naxalism been looked upon as a mere police problem. The present dimension of Maoist insurgency has called for an effective "combat" strategy in which any contingent in the lead will be backed by stronger formations covering the flanks and the entire operation would be directed by a designated senior officer in the field. Sending out a 'road opening patrol' of a dozen of men -who were left on a limb, was repeated in Sukma as no lessons were apparently drawn from what had happened earlier in this area.

External Threat

The Maoist cadres use a 'war' strategy under the guidance of the Central Military Commission of the organisation in planning their offensive based on their own information. The counterinsurgency response, on the other hand, hardly has a blueprint defining the area of operation, the command structure and the plan of securing area domination. Our counterinsurgency drive should have the benefit of aerial surveillance to locate the moving formations of Naxalites. The police leadership of the state must lead from the front as otherwise there will be a demoralising loss of personnel or a wild resort to force of the kind that will cause avoidable collateral damage. The strategy should be to create an effective island of peace so that development activity can be conducted there without hindrance.

In a welcome correction of policy, the Centre has accepted the view that Naxalism required handling of the security development interface and is not merely a police response. Funding for development is being enhanced in the affected areas through the Planning Commission. In the security- development paradigm, security comes first sequentially and it can be achieved through time- bound and area specific 'combat' operations. In the cleaned up territory, peace must be held long enough to complete the development objectives. The entire energy of the state government will have to be devoted to this large mission. This is a tall order considering the current state of Centre- state relationships in our country but there is no short cut to this. The challenge will multiply if our adversaries decide to provide an external input to what is still by and large an internal danger.


(The writer is a former Director Intelligence Bureau)

Source: indiatoday.intoday.in 22 March, 2014

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