ISRO as an organization of India has many detractors who think that a not so rich country like India with so many poor ppl should not allocate so much to the space program.
In view of this, ISRO cannot escape public scrutiny in the event of a massive failure like that of GSLV since all main Indian future missions are dependent only on GSLV.
So, its very important for ISRO to clarify that nothing is wrong with the design, instead it were the components which failed the mission.
And if the components turn out to be Russian, so why not blame them?
We are just calling "spade", a "spade".
What about the cries of economic boom then?
or future superpower..
an organization like ISRO furthers that idea..
there is calling a spade a spade..
but then the whole suite should come under scrutiny.. instead of just the jack of spades..
A Russian component failed.. sure..
happens..
but why was it allowed in the first place.. knowing these are old designs.. and their reliability was ensured to be less than stellar.
The statement itself seems to show the ISRO as the victim of Russian complacency..
whereas even if the component was of European, American or Burmese.. it fell upon the ISRO to ensure it met their standards..unless these were low in the first place.
I am in R&D.. I expect components to fail.. but i make sure they fail in my lab.. under test conditions..
I do not okay them from my project onto my "product" unless I am 99.99% certain that it will not fail under the tested conditions.
Now.. here is the key.. did I miss a tested condition??
that is upto the ISRO highups to check...
although it may not have to be publicized.. but whatever GoI accountability section monitors the ISRO should be informed of this.. and monitor any rectification moves.