Did the Indian Coast Guard goof up in treating
a mere fishing boat that had strayed from Pakistan off the Gujarat Coast on New
Year’s Eve as a rogue boat carrying terrorists or at least explosives and guns?
Was the Indian Coast Guard guilty of using excessive force against some poor smugglers who were trying to earn a living by running contraband as some
accounts have suggested?
Or did the Coast Guard take appropriate action
which forced what it calls a ‘suspicious boat’ to self-destruct mid-sea to
prevent incriminating evidence stashed on board?
The sequence of events I have managed to put
together after speaking to people in the know in various agencies, suggests
that the Coast Guard did what it is supposed to do: Take appropriate action
against rogue elements after following all SOPs (Standard Operating Procedures). Knowledgeable commentators with better access
and even better understanding may differ with this account, but as a foot
soldier of the national security beat, I have no other choice but to believe
what my sources have told me. So here goes.
December 31: 0735hrs: The NTRO (National
Technical Resource Organisation) sends out a specific input marked to all those
it is required to keep in the loop, giving exact lat-long (latitude-longitude)
of a boat that had sailed from Keti Bunder near Karachi and was headed towards
the Gujarat Coast. The input had a rough description of the boat too. The
intelligence input was based on a communication interception that the NTRO had
managed.
0855 hrs: COM-CG, Gujarat, the Coast Guard’s
Gandhinagar-based regional HQ received the details at 8.55 from Coast Guard HQ
in Delhi.
0935hrs: A Dornier aircraft of the Coast Guard
located at Porbander takes off for the first sortie. After about 90 minutes, it
cites the boat, bobbing around in mid-sea roughly at the spot that the NTRO had
indicated. The Dornier crew relays the information back to Porbander and
Gandhinagar. After a 3.40 minute sortie, the Dornier returns to Porbander.
1235 hrs: Another Dornier aircraft is airborne
even before the first one lands back. It keeps a hawk’s eye on the boat and
sends back detailed description.
1330-1400hrs: NTRO listens in to another three-way
conversation between the boat and presumably their handlers based in Karachi (probably
personnel of the Pakistani Martime Security Agency) and someone based in Thailand.
Occupants of the boat are heard telling their superiors ‘we are waiting.’ Coast
Guard decides to keep the air surveillance going by sending a replacement for
the second aircraft and also divert a ship, ICG Rajrattan which was on a task
in a different area.
1730, 2030 and 2230 hrs: Coast Guard’s
Dorniers are launched at these times to keep an eye on the boat which is
neither fishing nor moving but is just hanging around.
2200hrs: INS Rajrattan makes an RV (rendezvous)
with the boat after travelling more than eight hours.
The crew tries to raise the boat and its
occupants but the moment Rajrattan’s presence is noticed, the lights on the
boat are switched off. The boat also tries to move away towards the International Maritime
Boundary Line (IMBL).
23330hrs: The Rajrattan aware of the possibility of
explosives and arms stored onboard the boat keeps circling around it which
nevertheless continues its dash towards the IMBL. After about an hour of the
cat and mouse game, the Coast Guard ship fires several warning shots. Perhaps
finding no other alternative, the occupants onboard the boat decided to set in
on fire. Several loud explosions occurr and a massive fire brakes out on the
boat. At least four men were spotted on the boat before it sank, a ministry of
defence statement had said.
0430hrs-0630hrs, 1st
January: The boat gradually sinks even as Rajrattan stays in the vicinity to look for any
survivors.
Given that the attackers in the 26/11 mayhem had come
into Mumbai via sea, immediate parallels were sought to be drawn to that
episode but on available evidence, it is still not clear if Mumbai was the
target or if the occupants on destroyed boat were assigned to carry out any terrorist
attack. What is clear however is the boat was no ordinary fishing vessel.
Neither was the behaviour of the people on board normal.
There have been suggestions that the boat was used by diesel and liquor
smugglers. As Coast Guard officials point out, smugglers when caught don’t try
to run away. Instead, they normally surrender. And they certainly don’t kill
themselves. Occupants of the suspicious boat however not only behaved
abnormally but chose to embrace death instead of being caught.
Why? Simply because they had something to hide even if
one was to assume that they were not terrorists but were simply couriers out to
deliver deadly cargo of explosives and arms.
Could the Coast Guard have done
anything different? Could it have asked for reinforcements from the Navy? Is it
guilty of not following SOPs? The Ministry of Defence and India’s security establishment
will of course review the entire operation and plug whatever gaps exist.
The fact is: the country's western sea
coast is most vulnerable to intrusion of the 26/11 kind despite the fact that
India's maritime surveillance and prevention capabilities have improved
significantly. The coordination between different agencies is now almost real
time as this operation has demonstrated. Despite such a progress there's no
guarantee that future terror attacks can be prevented simply because terrorist
have the luxury of choosing the time and space for the attack.
For the past three months, several intelligence inputs have
indicated that Pakistan’s ISI continues its relentless attempts to send hit
squads of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) into India both through the land and
maritime boundaries. Increased vigil by the Indian agencies has prevented any
major attack so far but there is no room for self-congratulations or
complacency as New Year day’s episode on the high seas has shown.
CG may have followed the SOP but what is intriguing is that there is no sign or talk of any debris. Can a boat with 4 men disappear without any trace? Nothing in/on the boat was buoyant? Not easy to digest.
ReplyDeleteI dont understand why congress is defending these terrorists by raising questions on the credibility of Coast gaurd... When it comes to National Interest political parties should forget party differences.
ReplyDeleteCongress doesn't have a opposition leader like Vajpayee..
Just out of curiosity, the Navy vessel took 8 hours to reach the spot. I understand the vessel was in a different sea/mission...but is this usual? wouldn't there be any other vessel closer? 8 hours appear long but I am may be wrong...
ReplyDelete