N Manoharan
The recent arrest of Sri Lankan national Arun Selvarajan in Chennai by
the National Investigation Agency (NIA) for spying on behalf of
Pakistan’s ISI is concerning. He is the third Sri Lankan arrested for
spying in the past over one year. Earlier, two Sri Lankan Muslims
(Mohammed Sakir Hussain and Suleman Hussain) and an Indian (Thameen
Ansari) were apprehended on similar charges. The arrestees confessed
that their handlers were agents posted at Pakistani High Commission
based in Colombo. Previously, it was Amir Zubair Siddiqui, who was
posted as visa counsellor, and later it was Haji alias Siraj Ali.
Sri Lanka and the ISI
Sri Lanka may not be conniving with Pakistan against India, but is being
used as a base by the ISI. Sri Lanka never allowed its territory for
any anti-India activities and the ISI operations may be happening
without Colombo’s knowledge.
Why Sri Lanka has been chosen as a base by the ISI? Why are the Sri
Lankans citizens involved? What is the purpose behind the Colombo
module? What is the state of counter-intelligence capability of India?
The ISI has been operating from some of the neighbouring countries of
India like Nepal, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Myanmar and even Maldives.
The southern front of India remained unpenetrated for quite some time.
Sri Lanka could be the best base to do that for two specific reasons:
• Given the proximity and similarity of language and appearance, Sri Lankan Tamils and Sri Lankan Muslims, who also speak Tamil, would not find it difficult to reach Tamil Nadu and mix-up with the local population. Presence of large number of Sri Lankan refugees is yet another facilitating aspect.• Pakistan’s activities in Sri Lanka have not been seen with suspicion by the security establishment of the island state. Sri Lanka-Pakistan relations have been good without any irritants. Sri Lanka is ever grateful to Pakistan for all the military support during the Eelam War. In addition, when Sri Lanka was hauled by the international community for human rights excesses during that War, Islamabad rendered unstinted diplomatic support.
ISI and the Involvement of Sri Lankan Citizens
There are various reasons for the involvement of Sri Lankan Tamils and
Muslims in the spy ring. The primary motivation is financial. Unemployed
youth are easy targets. There is a theory that argues that part of the
reason for the involvement of Sri Lankan Muslims in ISI’s spy network is
their increasing radicalisation. But, the theory may explain if they
are involved in spying western targets based in India, but not acting
against Indian targets.
Pakistan obviously has denied the existence of an ISI base in Sri Lanka
targeted against India as “speculative” and “malicious media campaign”.
The denial is not surprising. Pakistani ISI has been assiduously
pursuing the objective of establishing espionage networks for collection
of India’s defence related information with reference to
deployment/movement of armed forces, information relating to vital
installations including sensitive information pertaining to the latest
knowhow with reference to technological advancement etc. For this
purpose, it has been able to organise resident agents and even allure
the lower staff in sensitive organizations for collection and
communication of sensitive information. When there is a roadblock there,
it has moved on to tap ethnic similarities in the neighbourhood.
Sri Lanka as a base: What is ISI’s Endgame?
What is concerning is the security dimension of the espionage. There are
two aspects to spying. One is to just gather information about the
enemy for the purpose of having information advantage. The second aspect
is to collect information with the aim to inflict damage.
Reconnaissance of Kalapakkam nuclear plant site, NSG Hub in Chennai,
Coast Guard installations on the eastern coast, Officers’ Training
Academy (OTA) in Chennai, Nagapattinam Port, the Madras Regimental
Centre in Wellington, harbours in Chennai and Ennore, DGP office and the
High Court complex in Chennai and Vizag and Kochi ports have been
carried out. Places like the Sulur Air Base, the Naval detachment in
Karaikal, naval installations located in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands
were on the pipeline. But, by then the spies have been arrested. Going
by the confessions of the arrestees, information gathering was meant for
planning a terror attack. The first ever terror attack in Chennai in
May this year is not unconnected to the larger ISI plot.
Meeting the Challenge: What is required?
Whoever has been arrested is only a tip of the iceberg. It is important
to find out how many more spies are on the prowl. This requires a
thorough review and revamping of counter-intelligence capabilities of
India. Counter-intelligence continues to be a weak spot in the Indian
intelligence infrastructure. It is important to develop a totally
different set of intelligence capabilities to cater to rapidly changing
threat environment. This needs to be done at several levels—from
training modules to doctrines to equipment to motivation. Intelligence
at the state level requires modernisation. Human intelligence (HUMINT)
requires more attention than just technical intelligence (TECHINT). Not
the least, the intelligence flow has to be both ways: from the Centre to
States and vice versa.
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