The appointment of Ajit Doval as India's 5th National Security
Adviser (NSA) on Friday was never in doubt once Narandra Modi swept to power and
took office as Prime Minister earlier this week.
For the past nine
years, he was heading the Vivekananda International Foundation (VIF), a think
tank known to be close to the BJP but more importantly doing significant work on
critical issues in the realm of comprehensive national security.
Doval, a legend
in the secretive world of intelligence and covert operations, retired as
Director Intelligence Bureau in January 2005.
But he had
attained fame much before he rose to the top. As a mid-level IB officer in the
north-east, he infiltrated the underground Mizo National Front (MNF), then
waging an insurgency against Indian state, weaned away half a dozen of its top
commanders and all but broke the back of the MNF, forcing its leader Laldenga to
sue for peace. The Mizo Accord of July 1986--after 20 years of insurgency--was
propelled largely by Doval's initiative.
But his exploits
did not end there.
In the late 1980s
when Punjab militancy was at its peak, Doval walked into the besieged Golden
Temple in Amritsar, posing as a Pakistani agent months before the 1988 Operation
Black Thunder and obtained vital intelligence on the militants holed up inside.
Doval, an 1968
batch IPS Officer of the Kerala cadre, also did his tour of duty in Pakistan,
considered a high-risk, high reward assignment in an intelligence officer's
career. He also has the rare distinction of being the recipients of India's 2nd
highest gallantry award--the Kirti Chakra--for his daring exploit in the Golden
Temple Operation. In Kashmir, he lured away prominent militants like Kukkay
Parey and turned him and his colleagues into counter-insurgents, a policy
criticized in some quarters but also praised by others as an effective tool that
help combat militancy in Kashmir at its peak.
One of his last
high profile acts in a career spanning 37 years was as part of the behind the
scene negotiating team during the December 1999 hijack of the Indian Airlines
flight IC 814 to Kandahar.
Doval was headed
to an important post-retirement assignment if the NDA was voted back to
power--as was largely predicted in 2004--but the BJP was narrowly beaten to the
second place by the Congress, leading to the formation of UPA I government,
effectively ending the chances of any role for Doval in the national security
set up.
For majority of
the past decade, Shiv Shankar Menon, a career foreign service officer, guided
India's foreign, diplomatic and security policies. But as NSA, Doval is expected
to be different than his predecessor.
Exactly 10 years
after he saw his big opportunity slipping away, Doval now has a chance to shape
India's national security policy.
Prime Minister
Narendra Modi and Ajit Doval, both staunch believers in a strong state and
stronger counter-terrorism measures, are likely to concentrate more on internal
security situation, improving India's covert operations capability in
the neighbourhood even while they put in place an equally robust foreign and
defence doctrine.
Doval, more George Smiley than James Bond, is truly India's spy who came in from the
cold.
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