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Mr Bond, is it? Or, Mr Bean-counter?

I don't know, maybe the checks stopped coming from LM but he was certainly the most vocal proponent for the F-35 for a long time in India:

Broadsword: Scrap the MMRCA: buy US F-35s
Ajai Shukla: End this MMRCA hara-kiri | Business Standard Column
Ajai Shukla: Buy a fighter for war, not air shows ~ PAKISTAN DEFENCE BLOG

Looks like he wants anything apart from rafale.

While i agree that f-35 is the best jet overall but only if fielded in huge numbers to utilize their network centric capability to the fullest so its not good for subcontinent and india.

Secondly its mainly for air to ground missions and will not be very successful in air to air

Thirdly it will be complete dud in wvr.........it will be shot down easily by even mki every time.

Fourth we get no tot,no local production and there always remains a risk of sanctions

Fifth huge operational costs associated

Lastly we have already decided to go for pakfa/fgfa so no need for 2 different 5 generations made for different operational capabilities in mind.

Wow!
Some PRO, he is:o:

He seems to have taken money to oppose rafale...................any other would suffice:lol:
 
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Looks like he wants anything apart from rafale.

While i agree that f-35 is the best jet overall but only if fielded in huge numbers to utilize their network centric capability to the fullest so its not good for subcontinent and india.

Secondly its mainly for air to ground missions and will not be very successful in air to air

Thirdly it will be complete dud in wvr.........it will be shot down easily by even mki every time.

Fourth we get no tot,no local production and there always remains a risk of sanctions

Fifth huge operational costs associated

Lastly we have already decided to go for pakfa/fgfa so no need for 2 different 5 generations made for different operational capabilities in mind.



He seems to have taken money to oppose rafale...................any other would suffice:lol:
I've been doing a lot or reading on the F-35 of late and my assessment of it gets gloomier and gloomier with each passing week. I'm very pleased the IAF has avoided being lured in to the sales pitch of the USG/USAF/LM (I know for a fact these guys were pushing HARD for the F-35 in the IAF) because otherwise I would see the IAF being set to be in deep, DEEP sh!t for the next 3-4 decades.


The FGFA /PAK-FA will rip the F-35 apart in terms of sensors, WVR, BVR etc.


I know off topic but I'm even hoping the IN picks the F-18 "silent Hornet" or Rafale F4+ for their next generation ACCs whereas before I had wanted to see the F-35C prevail.
 
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Very saddening to read :( I hope the new govt can look into them, an revive the unit, esp. given the new Offensive-Defence that our new NSA is a fan of, these people are exactly what we need. But the problems they face personally because of they way they were treated :(

It really is stunning the number of times our ops have been "reset" by these type of things.

The entire incident between VK.Singh and the corrupt lobby was just painful to watch, with stuff that shouldnt be revealed on TV being used as tools to smack each other.

At this point I've pretty much decided that our media is anti national. I am extremely skeptical of their reports, .A lot of them seem like they constantly peddle other countries viewpoints, NDTV even called Kashmir, "Indian occupied Kashmir" on their reports, constantly doubting security forces, demonizing them, while glamourizing terrorists, and then Shekar Gupta sees solidiers marching and writes about a military coup :hitwall:, there were reports that the story was planted at the behest of a minister.Not only that the, previous govt even funded propaganda against the army (like last year there was a movie that was funded by the IB which pretty much talked smack about the army and human rights nonsense)

It just feels like others have a large number of assets that need to be cleaned out, which I'm hoping this govt will do, but they seem to be cozing up to these journos

There need of the hour is to have a highly polished channel that closely aligns, that people watch, something like RT (this is supposed to be DD, but it doesnt have as much impact as of now)
 
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I know off topic but I'm even hoping the IN picks the F-18 "silent Hornet" or Rafale F4+ for their next generation ACCs whereas before I had wanted to see the F-35C prevail.

Rafale hands down.It will be cheaper as we are already gonna be making 108 in house(at least)and its more capable too than f-18sh with no worry of sanctions.

And indeed fgfa will be a monster in the air with the largest aesa ever fitted on a fighter aircraft(2300 t/r elements and 3 arrays).Plus our version will come with engines producing 170-180 kn.
 
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And indeed fgfa will be a monster in the air with the largest aesa ever fitted on a fighter aircraft(2300 t/r elements and 3 arrays).Plus our version will come with engines producing 170-180 kn.
A real shame it will (likely) never fly off the IN's ACCs though (as the IN is pushing ahead for catapults and the Russians don't seem interested in developing the PAK-FA for catapult launches) ! That would have been a real game changer and would make the IN's CBGs arguably the most potent on the planet.

Rafale hands down.It will be cheaper as we are already gonna be making 108 in house(at least).

I'm more than confident the Rafale will also be the more capable machine than the F-35 in almost every way for the foreseeable future.
 
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A real shame it will (likely) never fly off the IN's ACCs though (as the IN is pushing ahead for catapults and the Russians don't seem interested in developing the PAK-FA for catapult launches) ! That would have been a real game changer and would make the IN's CBGs arguably the most potent on the planet.

They don't have the money plus fgfa is too huge anyways for a 65000 tonne ship(proposed).
But yes it would have been a dream.
 
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They don't have the money plus fgfa is too huge anyways for a 65000 tonne ship(proposed).
But yes it would have been a dream.
I agree that the size of the N-FGFA would have been a serious constraint on medium-sized ACCs that the IN is designing but then I think the capabilities of the N-FGFA would more than make up for this issue. If the Chinese can operate Su-33s (massive jets) off their 45,000 tonne carrier then it is clearly viable.

It would be in the IN's interests to fund the naval version but it is too late now.
 
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I agree that the size of the N-FGFA would have been a serious constraint on medium-sized ACCs that the IN is designing but then I think the capabilities of the N-FGFA would more than make up for this issue. If the Chinese can operate Su-33s (massive jets) off their 45,000 tonne carrier then it is clearly viable.

It would be in the IN's interests to fund the naval version but it is too late now.

1)Chinese carrier is 60000 tonnes+
2)Su-33 is a huge failure for them too,,they failed to make it operational with any useful load.Even russians abandoned their su-33 for mig-29k.
 
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A covert Army team of spies was disbanded. Former members are now counting blankets, repairing leaky pipes and counting beans. What happened to the Indian Army’s hotshot Technical Support Division?

View attachment 164643
When elephants fight, the grass is crushed. The Swahili proverb has come painfully true for half a dozen officers who were part of the Indian Army's top covert operations unit.

They were recruited in the wake of the 26/11 attacks in Mumbai in 2008, to stage counter-attacks on enemy targets. But, they were soon caught in the crossfire between the Army's top brass, which included three chiefs. Today, the super spies who sneaked into terrorist hideouts, blasted their depots and did such covert jobs are serving time in sinecure jobs—counting blankets and shoes, checking accounts, and overseeing repair work to residential quarters.

The story of the top-secret spy unit, officially the Technical Support Division, goes back to the days immediately after 26/11. Rattled by the audacity of the attack, the then National Security Adviser, M.K Narayanan, met heads of all spy and security agencies individually to find out if they had the capability to attack home bases of terror groups in Pakistan and Azad Kashmir. None had. Narayanan asked them to raise a team, if they could.

Sources said that neither the heads of agencies nor the director-general of military operations went back to the NSA on this issue. Then Army chief General Deepak Kapoor also did not give much thought to the idea. In March 2010, Lt Gen R.K. Loomba, then director-general of Military Intelligence, approached the new chief, General V.K. Singh, saying that he could raise and train a special ops team. Singh gave his go-ahead.

Loomba then handpicked one of his finest spies, Colonel Hunny Bakshi, to raise and train the unit. Bakshi is among the few officers who joined the directorate-general of Military Intelligence directly from the Indian Military Academy. While serving in Jammu and Kashmir he risked his life to save a Brigadier who was ambushed by terrorists.

Bakshi's first pick was Lt Col Vinay B. aka Birdie, who had served in the Research and Analysis Wing, the external intelligence agency. He was awarded a gallantry award for his role in a classified operation. He was Bakshi's point man against terrorist groups in the northeast and Jammu and Kashmir.

Lt Col Sarvesh D. was the second man to be picked. The veteran skydiver with 3,000 jumps under his belt commanded an Army company during the Kargil war. Later, he was part of a special action group of the National Security Guard. During a counter-terrorist operation in Sopore, Jammu and Kashmir, Sarvesh sensed that his men were in danger and barged into a house where Afghan terrorists were holed up. He killed them all and saved his men.

No 3 was Lt Col Alfred B., a seasoned negotiator. While serving with 28 Assam Rifles, he created assets in the dreaded United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA). These assets were later used to persuade the ULFA leadership to come to a truce with the Army, which ensured peace in Assam for quite a while.

Lt Col Zir was the fourth. Known for his wide network among terror groups in the northeast, Zir had brought about the cease-fire deal with the Dima Halim Daogah ultras of Assam. He had played a key role in the arrest of some DHD leaders. Zir gathered crucial intelligence on arms trafficking into India from Myanmar and helped intercept consignments.

Bakshi's best pick, perhaps, was Lt Col Anurag aka Naughty. Diabetic and overweight, he looked quite unlike an Army spy. A training injury meant that he could not work out and, thus, he gained weight. Many laughed when Bakshi picked him. But, they soon found that he could walk for miles through the hilly Jammu and Kashmir terrain with a walking stick for support. A master in cultivating assets among the terrorist groups, he was the one who helped the Army identify the real troublemakers during the stone-pelting protests in Kashmir in the summer of 2010.

The going was good for a short while. The team was following the likes of Syed Salahuddin, the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen chief, in occupied Kashmir. A board of officers' report confirmed this and the Army had forwarded the report to the defence ministry. The report also mentioned other operations done by the team, including ones in the northeast and in Pakistan. Especially highlighted was one in an Inter-Services Intelligence office in Faisalabad, Pakistan. “The unit was working very efficiently. It was an asset for the Army and the country,” said Loomba, about the TSD.

While the group was establishing contacts and assets in occupied Kashmir, the weather was getting rough in the Army HQ. General V.K. Singh and the defence ministry were slugging it out over his age. A.K. Antony was defence minister. It was perceived that Singh wanted to scuttle the chances of General Bikram Singh and the incumbent General Dalbir Singh Suhag succeeding him.

The ministry started questioning V.K. Singh's initiatives, and top among them was the TSD. Singh's detractors alleged that TSD was snooping on Antony and defence ministry officials. Army sources to whom this reporter talked for this story said the equipment alleged to have been used by the TSD for snooping could not zero-in on a particular mobile number. So, it would have been very difficult to track Antony's number using off-the-air interceptors. Moreover, all classified communication goes through encrypted RAX lines and not through regular service providers or devices.

As soon as he took over as Army chief, Bikram Singh ordered a probe into the activities of the TSD. He suspended its operations and virtually disbanded it. The Army HQ also wanted an inquiry into the TSD by the Central Bureau of Investigation. Antony rejected the demand fearing that this would affect India's relations with countries where TSD operatives had been active.

Once Bikram Singh pulled the plug on the TSD, it was a free for all. Some alleged that auditors had found Rs8 crore missing from TSD accounts. V.K. Singh used the money, others alleged, to bribe ministers and destabilise the Omar Abdullah-led government in Jammu and Kashmir.

The TSD was also blamed for the public interest litigation that alleged that Bikram Singh was awarded a gallantry medal for a fake encounter which happened in 2001. The general was injured in the firefight. The Army said that a Pakistani militant was killed in the encounter, while his family claimed that he was Kashmiri and a labourer. In April 2012, the Supreme Court dismissed the PIL and cleared the decks for Bikram Singh's promotion as Army chief.

As the fight intensified, allegations and counter-charges were leaked to the media, and names of TSD officers were bandied about. In the midst of this came the Tatra truck scam, where V.K. Singh alleged that Lt Gen Tejinder Singh, former chief of the defence intelligence agency, had offered him Rs14 crore for clearing the procurement of 614 Tatra heavy-duty trucks.

The covert team got more bad press when Tejinder Singh, who was then facing a CBI probe in the scam, allegedly barged into the TSD premises in Delhi cantonment area for “collecting evidence”. Reports said that the lieutenant general and a journalist were apprehended by sentries on duty.

Strangely, instead of moving against Tejinder Singh, the Army moved against Birdie, who was the officiating commander of the TSD then. A court of inquiry was set up to look into Birdie leaking a “sensitive document”. The document was a questionnaire sent by a TV channel to the Army's public relations wing, seeking information about the TSD.

That was just the first inquiry. Officers and troops of the TSD have since been subjected to several inquiries, but nothing unlawful has been established to date. As no charge held water, the officers were shunted out to nondescript jobs. The ill-treatment of these officers continues under the present chief.

V.K. Singh has since joined politics, contested polls, and is now a minister, but these men continue to suffer the indignities heaped on them.

The leader of the team, Bakshi, is with a unit in Ladakh, where his job is to count snow-jackets and shoes being stocked for the winter. Despite being close to the Chinese border, the super spy has no role in monitoring activities of Chinese troops. Shattered by the hostility shown to him by colleagues and seniors, Bakshi underwent psychiatric treatment in a Delhi hospital. His wife told the defence ministry and the prime minister that he has developed suicidal tendencies.

His son, an engineering student in a college outside Delhi, fears payback from those his father took on, while in the TSD. On his mother's instructions, he now skips the direct bus from home to college; he changes three buses every day. His mother had written to Antony, requesting security. Antony instructed the Army to provide security, but she says she has not received any.

Instead, the Army asked her to appear before a court of inquiry ordered by a formation under its western command. Its mandate was never disclosed to her, and she was never told what it was trying to find out. When she filed an RTI application, she was informed that the court of inquiry had been called off. She alleged that a senior officer had warned her that it was dangerous to dodge the military court. Coming from a military background—her father and brother were officers—she wonders how information on something as secret as the TSD was leaked.

She has now written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking justice for her husband. She wrote that he has been subjected to “extreme humiliation, indignity and fear by the hands of the top-most hierarchy of country's Army”, despite not having any cases against him.

All top guns of the TSD are in Bakshi's shoes. Birdie is with the Military Engineering Services in Shillong, where he oversees plumbers and masons who maintain the official quarters of Air Force officers. Sarvesh, the skydiver, maintains land records of a small formation in Jharkhand. Alfred used to manage a poly-clinic in Deolali in Maharashtra. After his father, a retired Major, wrote to the Army that his son was threatening to kill himself, Alfred was posted closer to home—as a National Cadet Corps officer in Rajasthan. Zir is at a poly-clinic in Karnataka, clearing medical bills of retired officers and jawans. Naughty, too, is with a medical facility in Madhya Pradesh.

More than the humiliation of these postings, the officers are tormented by the strain on their families. Two are facing divorce proceedings, with their wives alleging prolonged years of separation.

What should be worrying the country more is that the Army today has hardly any capability for covert ops. When he took over from V.K. Singh, Bikram Singh instituted a board of inquiry to look into the operations of the TSD. It was headed by Lt Gen Vinod Bhatia, then director-general of military operations. “The panel went beyond its actual brief of reviewing the functioning of the unit and started investigating its activities, which were clandestine in nature,” said an officer in the directorate-general of military intelligence. “Covert capability is supposed to be covert and there is always the factor of deniability. But, if our own people start documenting the deeds of intelligence officers and start feeding it to the media, then we are destroying our present and future assets.”

Covert units have been similarly shut down in the 1977-1979 Janata period, and, later, during the 1996-1998 United Front period, when, under the spell of I.K. Gujral's namesake doctrine, all covert operations were called off. “In the earlier two instances, the covert strike capabilities suffered due to politicians,” said a Military Intelligence officer. “But, in this case, they have suffered due to military people who are supposed to order these people. Not only that, they have even resorted to leaking information about the operations carried out by such units, compromising the country's standing at the international level.”

View attachment 164644

@Abingdonboy @scorpionx @SarthakGanguly @sreekumar @sancho @he-man @ranjeet @levina @Koovie @SpArK @Robinhood Pandey @Echo_419 @Mike_Brando @TejasMk3 @janon @GR!FF!N @sathya @nair @OrionHunter @PlanetWarrior @Dash @seiko @Hareeshu IA MBT @Ammyy @DRAY @Skull and Bones

Felt very sad after reading this. All was lost because of some ego clashes!!

Seriously man am heart broken. We wasted great asserts of our country . Am speech less . There must be reviving our entire intelligent wings . But very hopeful about current govt.
 
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So long story short, no hot shot team in India capable of taking down the likes of Hafiz Saeed or even get a fix on the location of Dawood Ibrahim?
Do you think we can't do that ? We already been there. May be We are right now . So its not about we can or not . But the consequences are heavy to pay. We can afford but unnecessary at the time India I aspires to be Asian Super power.

Koi Bat Nae ...give it another try!:tongue:
Of course I am . I don't even want to see this kind of news out on media . Which has every single details about our operatives. They all served for my nation . Things they did was not just another operation but actually saved many innocent life. If these squad's personal details are released what will the effects on their family members ? But when weirdest things happen we must have enquiry and find out the truth.
 
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Do you think we can't do that ? We already been there. May be We are right now . So its not about we can or not . But the consequences are heavy to pay. We can afford but unnecessary at the time India I aspires to be Asian Super power.


Of course I am . I don't even want to see this kind of news out on media . Which has every single details about our operatives. They all served for my nation . Things they did was not just another operation but actually saved many innocent life. If these squad's personal details are released what will the effects on their family members ? But when weirdest things happen we must have enquiry and find out the truth.
han na...innit!
 
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Rightly said. Media should be sensible. This NDTV in anti India part which always spread fear among Muslim community. Very sad to read indeed
Very saddening to read :( I hope the new govt can look into them, an revive the unit, esp. given the new Offensive-Defence that our new NSA is a fan of, these people are exactly what we need. But the problems they face personally because of they way they were treated :(

It really is stunning the number of times our ops have been "reset" by these type of things.

The entire incident between VK.Singh and the corrupt lobby was just painful to watch, with stuff that shouldnt be revealed on TV being used as tools to smack each other.

At this point I've pretty much decided that our media is anti national. I am extremely skeptical of their reports, .A lot of them seem like they constantly peddle other countries viewpoints, NDTV even called Kashmir, "Indian occupied Kashmir" on their reports, constantly doubting security forces, demonizing them, while glamourizing terrorists, and then Shekar Gupta sees solidiers marching and writes about a military coup :hitwall:, there were reports that the story was planted at the behest of a minister.Not only that the, previous govt even funded propaganda against the army (like last year there was a movie that was funded by the IB which pretty much talked smack about the army and human rights nonsense)

It just feels like others have a large number of assets that need to be cleaned out, which I'm hoping this govt will do, but they seem to be cozing up to these journos

There need of the hour is to have a highly polished channel that closely aligns, that people watch, something like RT (this is supposed to be DD, but it doesnt have as much impact as of now)

han na...innit!
Wat ever u want to think .
 
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A covert Army team of spies was disbanded. Former members are now counting blankets, repairing leaky pipes and counting beans. What happened to the Indian Army’s hotshot Technical Support Division?

View attachment 164643
When elephants fight, the grass is crushed. The Swahili proverb has come painfully true for half a dozen officers who were part of the Indian Army's top covert operations unit.

They were recruited in the wake of the 26/11 attacks in Mumbai in 2008, to stage counter-attacks on enemy targets. But, they were soon caught in the crossfire between the Army's top brass, which included three chiefs. Today, the super spies who sneaked into terrorist hideouts, blasted their depots and did such covert jobs are serving time in sinecure jobs—counting blankets and shoes, checking accounts, and overseeing repair work to residential quarters.

The story of the top-secret spy unit, officially the Technical Support Division, goes back to the days immediately after 26/11. Rattled by the audacity of the attack, the then National Security Adviser, M.K Narayanan, met heads of all spy and security agencies individually to find out if they had the capability to attack home bases of terror groups in Pakistan and Azad Kashmir. None had. Narayanan asked them to raise a team, if they could.

Sources said that neither the heads of agencies nor the director-general of military operations went back to the NSA on this issue. Then Army chief General Deepak Kapoor also did not give much thought to the idea. In March 2010, Lt Gen R.K. Loomba, then director-general of Military Intelligence, approached the new chief, General V.K. Singh, saying that he could raise and train a special ops team. Singh gave his go-ahead.

Loomba then handpicked one of his finest spies, Colonel Hunny Bakshi, to raise and train the unit. Bakshi is among the few officers who joined the directorate-general of Military Intelligence directly from the Indian Military Academy. While serving in Jammu and Kashmir he risked his life to save a Brigadier who was ambushed by terrorists.

Bakshi's first pick was Lt Col Vinay B. aka Birdie, who had served in the Research and Analysis Wing, the external intelligence agency. He was awarded a gallantry award for his role in a classified operation. He was Bakshi's point man against terrorist groups in the northeast and Jammu and Kashmir.

Lt Col Sarvesh D. was the second man to be picked. The veteran skydiver with 3,000 jumps under his belt commanded an Army company during the Kargil war. Later, he was part of a special action group of the National Security Guard. During a counter-terrorist operation in Sopore, Jammu and Kashmir, Sarvesh sensed that his men were in danger and barged into a house where Afghan terrorists were holed up. He killed them all and saved his men.

No 3 was Lt Col Alfred B., a seasoned negotiator. While serving with 28 Assam Rifles, he created assets in the dreaded United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA). These assets were later used to persuade the ULFA leadership to come to a truce with the Army, which ensured peace in Assam for quite a while.

Lt Col Zir was the fourth. Known for his wide network among terror groups in the northeast, Zir had brought about the cease-fire deal with the Dima Halim Daogah ultras of Assam. He had played a key role in the arrest of some DHD leaders. Zir gathered crucial intelligence on arms trafficking into India from Myanmar and helped intercept consignments.

Bakshi's best pick, perhaps, was Lt Col Anurag aka Naughty. Diabetic and overweight, he looked quite unlike an Army spy. A training injury meant that he could not work out and, thus, he gained weight. Many laughed when Bakshi picked him. But, they soon found that he could walk for miles through the hilly Jammu and Kashmir terrain with a walking stick for support. A master in cultivating assets among the terrorist groups, he was the one who helped the Army identify the real troublemakers during the stone-pelting protests in Kashmir in the summer of 2010.

The going was good for a short while. The team was following the likes of Syed Salahuddin, the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen chief, in occupied Kashmir. A board of officers' report confirmed this and the Army had forwarded the report to the defence ministry. The report also mentioned other operations done by the team, including ones in the northeast and in Pakistan. Especially highlighted was one in an Inter-Services Intelligence office in Faisalabad, Pakistan. “The unit was working very efficiently. It was an asset for the Army and the country,” said Loomba, about the TSD.

While the group was establishing contacts and assets in occupied Kashmir, the weather was getting rough in the Army HQ. General V.K. Singh and the defence ministry were slugging it out over his age. A.K. Antony was defence minister. It was perceived that Singh wanted to scuttle the chances of General Bikram Singh and the incumbent General Dalbir Singh Suhag succeeding him.

The ministry started questioning V.K. Singh's initiatives, and top among them was the TSD. Singh's detractors alleged that TSD was snooping on Antony and defence ministry officials. Army sources to whom this reporter talked for this story said the equipment alleged to have been used by the TSD for snooping could not zero-in on a particular mobile number. So, it would have been very difficult to track Antony's number using off-the-air interceptors. Moreover, all classified communication goes through encrypted RAX lines and not through regular service providers or devices.

As soon as he took over as Army chief, Bikram Singh ordered a probe into the activities of the TSD. He suspended its operations and virtually disbanded it. The Army HQ also wanted an inquiry into the TSD by the Central Bureau of Investigation. Antony rejected the demand fearing that this would affect India's relations with countries where TSD operatives had been active.

Once Bikram Singh pulled the plug on the TSD, it was a free for all. Some alleged that auditors had found Rs8 crore missing from TSD accounts. V.K. Singh used the money, others alleged, to bribe ministers and destabilise the Omar Abdullah-led government in Jammu and Kashmir.

The TSD was also blamed for the public interest litigation that alleged that Bikram Singh was awarded a gallantry medal for a fake encounter which happened in 2001. The general was injured in the firefight. The Army said that a Pakistani militant was killed in the encounter, while his family claimed that he was Kashmiri and a labourer. In April 2012, the Supreme Court dismissed the PIL and cleared the decks for Bikram Singh's promotion as Army chief.

As the fight intensified, allegations and counter-charges were leaked to the media, and names of TSD officers were bandied about. In the midst of this came the Tatra truck scam, where V.K. Singh alleged that Lt Gen Tejinder Singh, former chief of the defence intelligence agency, had offered him Rs14 crore for clearing the procurement of 614 Tatra heavy-duty trucks.

The covert team got more bad press when Tejinder Singh, who was then facing a CBI probe in the scam, allegedly barged into the TSD premises in Delhi cantonment area for “collecting evidence”. Reports said that the lieutenant general and a journalist were apprehended by sentries on duty.

Strangely, instead of moving against Tejinder Singh, the Army moved against Birdie, who was the officiating commander of the TSD then. A court of inquiry was set up to look into Birdie leaking a “sensitive document”. The document was a questionnaire sent by a TV channel to the Army's public relations wing, seeking information about the TSD.

That was just the first inquiry. Officers and troops of the TSD have since been subjected to several inquiries, but nothing unlawful has been established to date. As no charge held water, the officers were shunted out to nondescript jobs. The ill-treatment of these officers continues under the present chief.

V.K. Singh has since joined politics, contested polls, and is now a minister, but these men continue to suffer the indignities heaped on them.

The leader of the team, Bakshi, is with a unit in Ladakh, where his job is to count snow-jackets and shoes being stocked for the winter. Despite being close to the Chinese border, the super spy has no role in monitoring activities of Chinese troops. Shattered by the hostility shown to him by colleagues and seniors, Bakshi underwent psychiatric treatment in a Delhi hospital. His wife told the defence ministry and the prime minister that he has developed suicidal tendencies.

His son, an engineering student in a college outside Delhi, fears payback from those his father took on, while in the TSD. On his mother's instructions, he now skips the direct bus from home to college; he changes three buses every day. His mother had written to Antony, requesting security. Antony instructed the Army to provide security, but she says she has not received any.

Instead, the Army asked her to appear before a court of inquiry ordered by a formation under its western command. Its mandate was never disclosed to her, and she was never told what it was trying to find out. When she filed an RTI application, she was informed that the court of inquiry had been called off. She alleged that a senior officer had warned her that it was dangerous to dodge the military court. Coming from a military background—her father and brother were officers—she wonders how information on something as secret as the TSD was leaked.

She has now written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking justice for her husband. She wrote that he has been subjected to “extreme humiliation, indignity and fear by the hands of the top-most hierarchy of country's Army”, despite not having any cases against him.

All top guns of the TSD are in Bakshi's shoes. Birdie is with the Military Engineering Services in Shillong, where he oversees plumbers and masons who maintain the official quarters of Air Force officers. Sarvesh, the skydiver, maintains land records of a small formation in Jharkhand. Alfred used to manage a poly-clinic in Deolali in Maharashtra. After his father, a retired Major, wrote to the Army that his son was threatening to kill himself, Alfred was posted closer to home—as a National Cadet Corps officer in Rajasthan. Zir is at a poly-clinic in Karnataka, clearing medical bills of retired officers and jawans. Naughty, too, is with a medical facility in Madhya Pradesh.

More than the humiliation of these postings, the officers are tormented by the strain on their families. Two are facing divorce proceedings, with their wives alleging prolonged years of separation.

What should be worrying the country more is that the Army today has hardly any capability for covert ops. When he took over from V.K. Singh, Bikram Singh instituted a board of inquiry to look into the operations of the TSD. It was headed by Lt Gen Vinod Bhatia, then director-general of military operations. “The panel went beyond its actual brief of reviewing the functioning of the unit and started investigating its activities, which were clandestine in nature,” said an officer in the directorate-general of military intelligence. “Covert capability is supposed to be covert and there is always the factor of deniability. But, if our own people start documenting the deeds of intelligence officers and start feeding it to the media, then we are destroying our present and future assets.”

Covert units have been similarly shut down in the 1977-1979 Janata period, and, later, during the 1996-1998 United Front period, when, under the spell of I.K. Gujral's namesake doctrine, all covert operations were called off. “In the earlier two instances, the covert strike capabilities suffered due to politicians,” said a Military Intelligence officer. “But, in this case, they have suffered due to military people who are supposed to order these people. Not only that, they have even resorted to leaking information about the operations carried out by such units, compromising the country's standing at the international level.”

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Felt very sad after reading this. All was lost because of some ego clashes!!

I think I heard it on a news channel, frankly I was shocked to see the names of the officers leaked to the media.
The humiliation these officers must 've faced is beyond my imagination and add to it the harassment from seniors. Gen VK singh -Bikram Singh era wasnt really the best for IA.
If I'm not wrong all this had prompted Col. Bakshi to apply for a premature retirement which he later withdrew.
I hope these men 'll get justice or a post which they deserve.

The things that go on behind the scenes in militaries and governments around the world defies all logic and highlights our petty and tribalistic nature.
Trust me there 're a lot of bloated egos and politics played within army.
 
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