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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, August 30, 2001 |
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Defence purchases and transparency
IT IS QUITE clear that the veil of secrecy drawn over defence
procurements has played a major role in contributing to
corruption and sleaze. Cumbersome procurement rules and
procedural loopholes, coupled with a total lack of transparency,
have resulted in a situation where defence deals are invariably
attended by political lobbying and influence-peddling of the most
worrying kind. Against this background, the Defence and External
Affairs Minister, Mr. Jaswant Singh's announcement that a Defence
Procurement Board will be in place within a fortnight could not
have come sooner. The idea of such a Board has been in the offing
since it was okayed by the Group of Ministers which assessed the
recommendations of the Task Forces that were set up following the
submission of the Kargil Review Committee report at the end of
1999. So much so, the concept of a Defence Procurement Board is
part of the larger resolve to restructure the existing defence
set-up and introduce measures which improve the management of the
country's defence.
Important details about the Board - such as the composition and
the exact powers it will enjoy in the business of procurement -
have not been spelt out yet. But while addressing the Rajya
Sabha, Mr. Jaswant Singh - who made other important
announcements, most notably the setting up of an Andaman and
Nicobar strategic command - did suggest that not only will the
procedures for procurement be simplified but that they will also
be made much more transparent. An aspect that the Tehelka
investigation highlighted was the danger of a system in which
defence deals are struck under a cover of overwhelming secrecy.
It would have been impossible for the portal's journalists, who
posed as arms dealers, to gain access and bribe key functionaries
in the country's defence establishment under a system where the
methods for procurement were open and transparent. The success of
the investigation depended critically on the fact that the
methods by which defence purchases are finalised are opaque and
outside the purview of the press and the public.
Significantly, Mr. Jaswant Singh has hinted that a decision will
be taken shortly on whether or not to permit agents in
facilitating defence deals. From these remarks, it seems that the
Centre is prepared to consider rationalising the system of
middlemen, who play a role in defence dealings virtually all over
the world. Agents or middlemen were banned for the controversial
Bofors howitzer deal 15 years ago and have been proscribed since
then. Ironically, the ban has encouraged brokers and influence-
peddlers to illegally lobby those in Government behind closed
doors and in a clandestine manner. However, any system which
legitimises the official agents of arms manufacturers should be
re-introduced only in the most open and transparent manner.
Following the Tehelka expose, which resulted in the setting up of
a probe to inquire into all defence procurements referred to in
the secretly-filmed videotapes, apprehension has been expressed
in certain quarters that officials in the Ministry of Defence are
reluctant to go ahead with big-ticket procurements for fear of
being called into question or investigated later. Among the
significant purchases that are pending are that of the 44,500-
tonne aircraft carrier `Admiral Gorshkov' and over 40 MiG-29Ks
(estimated at around $1.5 billions). Defence purchases cannot
afford to be held up and, in the prevailing atmosphere of
uncertainty about further procurements, the quick establishment
of a Defence Procurement Board may provide the right measure of
confidence to go ahead with the proposed acquisitions.
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