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THE NATION: DEFENCE DEALS |
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| The Caging of George | |||
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The defence minister is on the Opposition's hit list yet again. The half truths of the CAG indictment and the full truth of the Kargil war purchases. |
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Fernandes has courted controversies as defence minister: be it the sacking
of Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat in December 1998 or his unilateral declaration
of China as India's enemy No. 1 earlier that year. But he became the Opposition's
prime target only in March this year following Tehelka's expose of shady
defence deals that lead to his resignation. That was till December 13. The terrorist attack on Parliament has taken some wind out of the attack on Fernandes. But issues raked up by the CAG's special review of purchases for Operation Vijay during the Kargil war go much deeper. Has the CAG, known to nitpick over small expenses, been its usual nagging self? Or is its review a serious indictment of politicians and bureaucrats feasting on something as sensitive as the Kargil war? The 40-odd specific cases of irregularities pointed out in the CAG's review amount to four major charges against the Defence Ministry: Inflated Prices According to the CAG, the Defence Ministry contracted Buitron and Baize of the US in August 1999 for the import of 500 aluminium caskets at a price of $2,500 a casket. The contract was worth $1.5 million (Rs 6.55 crore). However, an Indian commander of the UN Peace Keeping Force deployed in Somalia said in 1994 the price of these caskets was as little as $172 a unit.
The first lot of 150 caskets that arrived in India in December 1999 weighed 55 kg each against the specification of 18 kg. The ministry cancelled the contract, but had already paid 90 per cent of the price of 150 caskets-$337,500 (Rs 1.47 crore). It did not pay the remaining 10 per cent and also enchased the Rs 6-crore warranty bond furnished by the supplier. But Rs 1.02 crore is still to be recovered from Buitron and Baize. The CAG's conclusion: the deal achieved nothing other than benefit (Rs 1.02 crore) the supplier. The ministry is also reported to have bought 22.5 million rounds of ammunition for AK-47 rifles and spares for 155-mm guns at inflated prices. In all, the ministry paid an excess of Rs 44.21 crore across several purchases. The Rebuttal: The Government points out two fundamental errors in CAG's findings. The commander's claim of the UN having purchased caskets for $172 was never verified after 1994. Moreover, the demand for aluminium caskets was first raised in 1996 and price quotes obtained in April 1997 through the Indian military attaché in Washington DC were in the range of $2,500 to $2,118. These prices were also negotiated with Buitron and Baize. To recover the money already paid for the 150 unused caskets, the ministry will go in for arbitration. Delay in Purchases The Rebuttal: The Government's reply is simple. At the time of war nobody knew when it would end. In fact, the armed forces were asked to prepare for a full-fledged conventional war against Pakistan if the intruders did not vacate Kargil. The threat of a war in September 1999 was very high and it continued to remain so till the summer of 2000. That's why purchases continued well after July 1999. Defence Ministry officials say they had shared this information with the CAG one month before it submitted the review. The CAG was also shown secret records of the meetings of the Cabinet Committee on Security and intelligence and military inputs on the post-Kargil threat perception. The ministry has decided to submit these documents to the Parliamentary Accounts Committee, which reviews all cag reports and suggests action on them. Substandard Supplies The Rebuttal: Ministry officials say that during the Kargil war, the army's ammunition stocks had to be replenished urgently. The demand was so critical that ammunition was bought from whoever was ready to sell. That was also the time when post-Pokhran sanctions had made defence purchases difficult. The sudden spurt in demand from India had led to hikes in prices of equipment and ammunition. Admitting that some expired ammunition was imported, the ministry promises action against erring officials. Needless Imports The Rebuttal: Former army generals contest some of the CAG's
allegations. Lt-General Vijay Oberoi, who retired as vice-chief of the
army staff in September this year, feels that the CAG review "focuses
only on financial accountability and is oblivious of operational requirements".
The Defence Ministry further points out that it was Fernandes who had
requested a special audit of all Kargil-related purchases. He would not
have done so if he had anything to hide. -with Sharad Gupta |
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