PM seeks strategies to counter terror from sea
Friday, January 9, 2009 at 5:01 am
Against the backdrop of Pak-based terrorists using sea route for the Mumbai strikes, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Thursday (January
said the country faces such threats not only in the Arabian Sea but also in the Indian Ocean and there was need for credible strategies to counter them.
The Mumbai attacks have highlighted the need for heightened vigilance and response to asymmetric threats from the sea, he said adding “we face such threats not only in the Arabian Sea but also in the Indian Ocean”.
Opening the Indian Naval Academy here, about 40 km from Kannur on the Arabian Sea coast, he said “there is a marked increase in the attempts by various terrorist and other groups to use the blue waters around India for nefarious purposes. This is a matter of concern.
“It is essential for the Navy, Coast Guard and the intelligence agencies to coordinate their efforts much more closely. We need to develop credible strategies to counter all threats from the sea.”
Maintaining that Indian Navy must have a much greater role in safeguarding the country’s vital security interests, he said the emerging maritime security environment greatly enhances Navy’s responsibilities.
He said the importance of the Navy in safeguarding India’s vital interests has become paramount and there can thus be no doubt that the Indian Navy must be the most important maritime power in this region. ”On its part the government will take all necessary measures to ensure that the Coast Guard and the Navy are fully equipped to protect the seas and oceans around us,” he said.
Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan, Defence Minister A K Antony, Naval Chief Sureesh Mehta were among those present on the occasion. The Prime Minister released a postal cover to commemorate the occasion.
Singh said India has a coastline of over 7,600 km with over 1,200 island territories spread across the Indian Ocean. “We have a large Exclusive Economic Zone. We have a vital interest in the Indian Ocean and a close relationship with countries of the Indian Ocean Rim and specially the Gulf region,” he said.
Singh said that India should also recognise that there would be other competing interests whose maritime presence in the sphere of “our interest and our influence will have to be carefully monitored”.
Another key role the Indian Navy will play, he said, would be the safeguard the sea-lanes of communication, through which pass the bulk of India’s energy supplies and sea-borne trade. As India’s oil and gas imports increase, demands on the Navy would become further pronounced. “There is an inextricable link between our economic resurgence and our maritime power,” he said.
The Prime Minister said as economic power shifts to Asia, the demand for energy and the volume of trade passing through the Indian Ocean region would expand rapidly. This shift is being accompanied by the emergence of a host of threats that travel through the oceans.
“These include the transportation of weapons of mass destruction, small arms and other weaponry through the oceans to the hinterland; the threat of piracy in international waters; organised crime; drug trafficking; environmental degradation; rising sea levels; illegal migration and human smuggling,” he said.
(With inputs from agencies)
( This post is from an independent writer. The opinions and views expressed herein are those of the author and are not endorsed by APakistanNews.Com.)
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