Ashok Chaturvedi | |
---|---|
Secretary of R&AW | |
In office 1 February 2007 –31 January 2009 | |
Preceded by | P. K. H. Tharakan |
Succeeded by | K. C. Verma |
Personal details | |
Nationality | Indian |
Ashok Chaturvedi,IPS (1947 - September 18,2011) was the chief of India's external intelligence agency the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) from 1 February 2007 to 31 January 2009. Chaturvedi succeeded P.K.H. Tharakan,a 1968 batch officer of the IPS Kerala cadre who retired on 31 January 2007.
Chaturvedi was part of the Indian Police Service (IPS) as a 1970 batch officer from the Madhya Pradesh cadre before joining R&AW's own service cadre the Research and Analysis Service (RAS). Chaturvedi,who was an analyst on Bangladesh and Nepal,had also served in the United Kingdom and Canada besides a stint in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir. [1]
Controversy and media speculation about his future has also continued to follow Chaturvedi's career with his failed attempts to ban the publication and sale of the book,India's External Intelligence:Secrets of Research and Analysis Wing R&AW,written by Major General V.K. Singh,formerly a colleague and Joint Secretary in R&AW. In the book,V.K. Singh made a number of claims about R&AW including petulant conduct from a senior officer within the organization who went on unauthorised leave for eight months after being overlooked for promotion and who was tagged with malfeasance and ineptitude. The book was published and distributed both in India and abroad in June 2007 and the matter had largely been forgotten. [2] [3]
However,Chaturvedi curiously resurrected the issue months later when V.K. Singh's home was raided on 21 September 2007 by officials from the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI). A case was registered against V.K. Singh under the Official Secrets Act of India (OSA). The following day the offices of the publishers of the book,Manas Publications,were also raided. [4] [5]
Addressing a media conference where former intelligence officials were present to support him,V.K. Singh spectacularly revealed that the R&AW officer who went on an eight-month leave of absence without permission was in fact Ashok Chaturvedi. [6] Singh said that,
... an act of gross indiscipline…can he (Chaturvedi) bring discipline to the organization if he does not attend office for eight months? [6]
The investigative magazine, Outlook ,stated that Chaturvedi appeared to have a personal vendetta against V.K. Singh. They also claimed that sources from the CBI had confirmed to them that the R&AW officer,mentioned in VK Singh's book,who went on unofficial leave for eight months was indeed Chaturvedi. [7]
The raid on V.K. Singh's house had also been embarrassing for Chaturvedi as initially the wrong address,belonging to another retired R&AW official,was raided in East Delhi instead of the author's house in Gurgaon. It took the officials another three hours before they finally reached the correct residence. Ironically,the whole controversy has embarrassed the Indian government and revived the sales of Singh's book. In fact,the publishers ordered another print run of 3,000 copies because of the high demand. The whole incident has also created a new debate over the freedom of expression in India and the level of public accountability of the countries' intelligence agencies. Legal experts also believe it would be a futile attempt to charge V.K. Singh under the Official Secrets Act,particularly as other former intelligence officials have released books that have been deemed to be more damaging in terms of disclosing R&AW's secrets,but no action was ever taken against them. [3] [8] [9]
Chaturvedi had sanctioned publication of a book written by K. Sankaran Nair,a former head of R&AW,in which the Gandhi family,particularly former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi,is reported to have been behind a number of controversial deals involving bribery. It has been questioned as to why Chaturvedi tried to gag V.K. Singh yet allowed Nair's book to be published without any scrutiny. This has brought Chaturvedi into a direct confrontation with the Nehru-Gandhi Family. [10] [11] [12]
After the V.K. Singh book dispute,Chaturvedi issued a directive wanting all R&AW's current employees to sign a declaration that they would not write about their careers after they leave the agency. Opinion,however,is divided on the issue as many say it's unfair to censor such voices. The declaration wants to bar officers from writing about the agency even after the two-year cooling off period post-retirement. The new ruling would mean that officers would have to take permission to write and even then it cannot be published without prior clearance from the agency. The declaration says for any violation the officer will be held "liable for action",such as no pension,to charges under the Official Secrets Act. [13] [14]
In October 2007 another highly damaging controversy erupted for Chaturvedi when it transpired R&AW was forced to recall one of its officers who was stationed at the Indian High Commission in Colombo,Sri Lanka. Ravi Nair,who held the rank of Joint Secretary within R&AW,was sent back to New Delhi when it transpired that he had developed "irregular relations" with a Chinese woman. Officials posted at the Indian High Commission,sent reports about Nair to their respective departments paving the way for his recall. What was of particular concern,was that Nair had started the relationship with the same woman during a previous posting to the Indian Consulate in Hong Kong. He apparently continued to maintain ties with her after he was posted to Colombo in 2006. [15] [16]
Infighting within R&AW also may have led to the Nair's recall from Sri Lanka. In fact,Nair's activities had aroused suspicion prior to his posting in Colombo,whilst at the agency's Chennai office when it was alleged he was involved in another extramarital affair. Following reports from the Chennai office,then head of R&AW P.K.H. Tharakan,directed his second-in-command at the time and the current R&AW chief Ashok Chaturvedi to conduct an inquiry and take suitable steps. However,Chaturvedi did not take any action and conversely Nair's name was put forward for the Colombo posting,considered one of R&AW's most sensitive stations. Outlook Magazine stated that had Chaturvedi conducted an inquiry and taken action at Tharakan's behest,Nair would never have been considered for the posting to Sri Lanka and R&AW could have saved itself the embarrassment Nair has caused. [17] [18]
The Colombo and Chennai scandals were apparently not Nair's first transgression. At various other foreign postings and travels,several allegations were filed against him in internal R&AW reports by senior intelligence officers. Prior to his posting in Sri Lanka,Nair had previously been stationed to the United States,Bhutan,Pakistan and Hong Kong but despite all the controversy surrounding him,Nair continued to receive support from Chaturvedi and another former head of R&AW,K. Sankaran Nair. Instead of being reprimanded by Chaturvedi,Nair has been allowed to carry on with his duties. [17] [19] [20]
In December 2007,it was revealed that there had been a massive intelligence failure inside R&AW. It was in relation to the state of emergency declared by the President of Pakistan,Pervez Musharraf. Apparently,just days before Musharraf installed emergency rule,Chaturvedi had advised the Indian Prime Minister,Manmohan Singh,that the situation in Pakistan was stable and that there was no chance that Musharraf would declare martial law. [10]
Not anticipating any major change in Pakistan,Chaturvedi did not feel the need to prepare for any unpredictable change in circumstances. On 3 November 2007,Musharraf suspended the constitution and declared a state of emergency. New Delhi was caught completely off guard and the Indian prime minister apparently "was livid."
Unlike his predecessors who specialised in Pakistan or China,Chaturvedi is the first head of India's Intelligence agency whose area of expertise is Nepal. However,in December 2007 the R&AW Chief faced another embarrassing scandal when the 'Nepal Weekly' magazine revealed that R&AW was trying to interfere in the internal political dynamics of Nepal. The magazine also revealed the names of various R&AW agents working at the Indian embassy in the Nepalese capital,Kathmandu which included Suresh Dhundiya,R&AW's station chief in Kathmandu,and his deputies Alok Tiwari posted as First Secretary (Education) and K. V. Johri,a counsellor. It was also publicized that Dhundiya was being replaced as station chief by Alok Joshi. This revelation resulted in Joshi being exposed before he even assumed his new position thus compromising R&AW's intelligence apparatus in Nepal. To make matters worse,Nepalese newspapers were also able to find out the detailed travel plans of Chaturvedi's visit to Nepal in December 2007,including the airline he flew on and which hotel he stayed in. [21] [22]
Chaturvedi forced the interim government of Girija Prasad Koirala to award a contract to an Indian firm for a hydropower project. It has also been alleged that Chaturvedi may have financially benefited personally from the deal. Questions have been raised in India as to why the head of an Indian intelligence agency was promoting a commercial company in Nepal. [23]
The timing of these events coincided with worsening relations between India and Nepal. In a snub to India,Nepal's Foreign Minister Sahana Pradhan requested a high level Chinese delegation visiting Kathmandu to extend the Tibet rail into Nepal. The request carries significance against the backdrop of Nepal's warning to India not to go ahead with a proposed highway along the India-Nepal border. [22]
The Telegraph Weekly of Nepal commented that "With R&AW facing continuous debacle in its Nepal affairs,it is highly likely that the R&AW machinery will come in a heavy way in order to regain its lost ground in Nepal. Chaturvedi is being told to pack up by the New Delhi set-up,it is talked". [21]
In a number of important meetings,Chaturvedi did not appear to know who he was actually meeting. On one particular occasion,Timothy J. Keating,the commander of the United States Pacific Command made an official trip to India in August 2007 and met a number of senior Indian defense and intelligence chiefs including Chaturvedi. However,Chaturvedi did not know who Keating was,and kept referring to him as John Negroponte,the U.S. deputy Secretary of State. In another episode,before leaving on a trip to China in January,Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh asked Chaturvedi for a briefing about his perspectives of the current senior leadership in China. Instead of delegating the task to the China section within R&AW,Chaturvedi attempted to put together his own report which talked about Jiang Zemin and Zhu Rongji,the former president and premier respectively,both of whom retired in 2003. [23] [24]
Because of the repeated instances of incompetence and scandals during Chaturvedi's tenure and the continuing decline of the intelligence agency,it had been reported by the Indian and foreign press that the R&AW chief would be removed from his post,which has never happened before. [23] [24] [25] [26]
It was reported that several Western intelligence agencies were reluctant to share classified information with R&AW's top officials,because of Chaturvedi. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and other senior officials of his secretariat were unhappy with him as a result. [24]
The Middle East Times revealed that at a closed-door meeting at the start of 2008 which all of India's intelligence and military chiefs were present,Chaturvedi was asked for his opinion on the upcoming security challenges the country faced. The R&AW chief presented his views while chewing tobacco and sounding incoherent. Narayanan asked him to clean out his mouth. But "Embarrassment turned to humiliation when Chaturvedi resumed his analysis only to be told by Narayanan that he was making more sense when the tobacco was in his mouth." [27]
The pressure to sack him on the grounds of gross incompetence had reached Prime Minister Manmohan Singh,who supported by senior leaders in the ruling Congress Party,gave his approval to quietly remove Chaturvedi. [27]
Chaturvedi made a direct personal appeal to Congress Party President Sonia Gandhi to save his job,claiming that he was not in good health and that he should be allowed to serve out the remainder of his service period. Gandhi,passed the responsibility for the decision to Narayanan with her recommendation for a review. Narayanan deferred making any decision thus reprieving Chaturvedi. G.S. Bajpai,a former head of R&AW and Tripathi's father-in law,also intervened and pleaded the case to keep Chaturvedi when it looked like he would be sacked. Quoting sources from the Prime Minister's Office,the Middle East Times claimed that "The Congress Party was worried that if Chaturvedi was sacked it would be a sign of admitting that they had made a mistake." [27]
Criticism has focused on Narayanan himself,who despite being a respected figure within India for his record with the domestic spy agency,the Intelligence Bureau (IB),he has had to take criticism for sanctioning Chaturvedi's appointment and continuing in persisting with him. [27]
In the 8 February 2010 edition of Outlook Magazine it was reported that following his retirement,Chaturvedi had a diplomatic passport issued for himself and his wife and was able to utilize Government of India funds for their personal international trips. According to Outlook Magazine,"Only grade ‘A’ambassadors—usually IFS (Indian Foreign Service) officers posted in key countries like the UK and US—are allowed to hold diplomatic passports after retirement. The majority,who do not fit that bill,hold passports issued to ordinary citizens. In fact,all former R&AW chiefs Outlook spoke to confirmed they had surrendered their diplomatic passports the day they retired. And their spouses weren’t entitled to diplomatic passports even while they were in service." [28]
The Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) is the foreign intelligence agency of India. The agency's primary function is gathering foreign intelligence,counter-terrorism,counter-proliferation,advising Indian policymakers,and advancing India's foreign strategic interests. It is also involved in the security of India's nuclear programme.
C. D. Sahay is a retired IPS officer who served as the chief of Research and Analysis Wing,India's external intelligence agency,from 1 April 2003 to 31 January 2005. He is a Karnataka cadre IPS officer of the 1967 batch.
Rabinder Singh was an Indian civil servant and military officer,who has served as a Joint Secretary of the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW). He defected to the United States in 2004.
The Directorate General of Forces Intelligence,commonly known by its acronym DGFI,is the defense intelligence agency of the Bangladesh Armed Forces,tasked with collection,collation and evaluation of strategic and topographic information,primarily through human intelligence (HUMINT). As one of the principal members of the Bangladesh intelligence community,the DGFI reports to the Director-General under the executive authority of the head of government,the Prime Minister,and is primarily focused on providing intelligence for the Prime Minister,the Cabinet of Bangladesh,and the Armed Forces of Bangladesh.
The National Security Advisor is the senior official on the National Security Council of India,and the chief advisor to the Prime Minister of India on national security policy and international affairs. In 2019,the term of Ajit Doval the current NSA was extended for another 5-year term,and has been assigned the rank of a Union Cabinet Minister and ranks at the seventh position in the Indian Order of Precedence.
Rameshwar Nath Kao was an Indian spymaster and the first chief of India's external intelligence agency,the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) from its founding in 1968 to 1977. Kao was one of India's foremost intelligence officers,and helped build R&AW.
The Aviation Research Centre (ARC) is India's imagery intelligence organisation,a part of the Directorate General of Security,run by the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW). It started functioning in November 1962,in the wake of the Sino-Indian War,as an extension of the Intelligence Bureau,but placed under the Ministry of External Affairs.
Below is a list of speculated CIA activities in India.
Krishan Chander Verma was the Director of Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW),the external intelligence agency of India,his official designation was Secretary (R). He did his schooling from Mayo College,Ajmer. He belongs to the 1971 Jharkhand IPS cadre. He started his career at the Intelligence Bureau,was appointed as head of the Narcotics Control Bureau in 2005,and was later elevated to the position of Secretary (Security) and also served as Internal Security Adviser to Home Minister. He was laterally transferred to head R&AW after Ashok Chaturvedi retired from the post on 31 January 2009. One of the major challenges for K. C. Verma had been professionalise and streamline the agency,which had been in news in recent times for various scandals and controversies.
Nambi Narayanan is an Indian aerospace scientist who worked for the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). As a senior official at the ISRO,he was briefly in charge of the cryogenics division. He was awarded the Padma Bhushan,India's third-highest civilian award,in March 2019.
Ravindra Kaushik was an Indian Research and Analysis Wing agent who spied for India from 1975 until he was captured in 1983. Also known as The Black Tiger,Kaushik is considered as one of India's greatest spies. He successfully infiltrated the Pakistan Army and reached the rank of major.
Vikram Sood is the former head of India's foreign intelligence agency,the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW),and an advisor to the Observer Research Foundation,an independent public policy think tank in New Delhi. Sood was an officer of the Indian Postal Service (IPoS) before he joined the intelligence organisation R&AW and later served as its secretary from 2000 to 2003. He retired as a career intelligence officer with 31 years of service on 31 March 2003.
Kulbhushan Sudhir Jadhav is an Indian national who has been incarcerated in Pakistan since 2016. The Pakistani government alleges that he is a spy for the Research and Analysis Wing,India's intelligence agency,and was arrested in the Pakistani province of Balochistan. The Indian foreign ministry says that he was kidnapped from Iran and illegally rendered to Pakistan.
K. Sankaran Nair,known as Colonel Menon among his colleagues,was an Indian civil servant,diplomat and the director of Research and Analysis Wing. He served as the Indian High Commissioner to Singapore from 1986 to 1988 and was the last surviving member of the Indian Imperial Police. He was reported to have played a crucial role in the formation of Bangladesh,through R&AW operations during the Bangladesh Liberation War.
The Unending Game:A Former R&AW Chief's Insights into Espionage is a 2018 book by Vikram Sood,former head of India's foreign intelligence agency,the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW). According to Sood his book is not a memoir but a beginner's guide in intelligence and espionage. Sood tries to clarify that the real world of espionage is not like James Bond movies and much more than just "cloak and dagger" operations;with John le Carre's novels about George Smiley being a better comparison to the reality. The book further gives insights into the methods of intelligence collection and espionage and the relevance in the scope of a country's national interests.
The Spy Chronicles:RAW,ISI and the Illusion of Peace is a 2018 book in the format of a dialogue between two intelligence chiefs of India and Pakistan,AS Dulat and Asad Durrani,and moderated by Aditya Sinha. The conversations between the two intelligence chiefs took place during 2016 and 2017 in Istanbul,Kathmandu and Bangkok. AS Dulat is a former head of India's external intelligence agency,the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW),Lt. Gen. Asad Durrani is a former head of Pakistan's external agency,Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI),and Aditya Sinha is an Indian journalist.
R.N. Kao:Gentleman Spymaster is a biography of Rameshwar Nath Kao,the founding chief of India's external intelligence agency,the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW). Written by Nitin A. Gokhale,the book was published by Bloomsbury India in November 2019. The book is being adapted into a movie by Karan Johar.
Open Secrets:India's Intelligence Unveiled is a 2005 personal memoir by Indian intelligence operative Maloy Krishna Dhar. The central theme throughout the book is that of the need for legislative oversight and checks for intelligence agencies in India. Dhar,a former Intelligence Bureau of India joint director,provides a top down view of the intelligence establishment in India and the types of pressures that it has to face in carrying out its duties including those of how the agencies are used for 'personal-political agendas'. As a historical memoir,it was as of 2015,the only information available of the Intelligence Bureau that was in the public domain. Dhar wrote this in a time when writing about the intelligence community was frowned upon to the extent of being an act of betrayal. The book remained a number one non-fiction best seller for months after its publication and stirred many a national debate.
Technical Support Division (TSD) was an hypothetical ad hoc Indian Army Military Intelligence unit formed in 2010 under the then Chief of Army Staff General V K Singh. After the functioning of the TSD was questioned for falling prey to politics,including politics between the three military chiefs,among other things,it was disbanded in 2012 following the retirement of General V K Singh after all officers assigned to the division were transferred out and nobody new replaced them.
ISRO espionage case involved discredited allegations of espionage made by Indian investigation agencies in the 1990s against some scientists of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). Indian intelligence agencies and the Kerala police arrested some senior aerospace engineers on charges of attempting to sell confidential documents containing designs of indigenous rocket engine developed by ISRO.