Posted on 04/15/2010 9:30:53 PM PDT by bruinbirdman
Indian security chiefs are testing unmanned aerial surveillance drones made by US-based Honeywell International for potential use in the battle against Maoist guerrillas, who killed 76 paramilitaries in an ambush last week.
The demonstrations, carried out this week in the central state of Chhattisgarh, came amid a heated parliamentary debate and the eruption of disputes within the ruling Congress party over how India should respond to the Maoist rebels, who now control territory in remote tribal areas.
This battle cant be fought half-heartedly, Arun Jaitley, a senior leader of the Hindu nationalist opposition Bharatiya Janata party, told Indias upper house of parliament. We cant afford to do that. This battle has to be won.
The massacre last week of 76 Central Reserve Police Force troops the highest toll inflicted on Indian security personnel in a single incident has propelled the conflict to the top of New Delhis agenda.
P. Chidambaram, the interior minister, is seeking greater air power to support efforts by state police and paramilitary forces against the well-trained and highly motivated militants, who operate over a large area across many states, where state forces are reluctant to move beyond main roads.
The drone tested this week Honeywells T-Hawk Micro Air Vehicle weighs just 17lbs, can be carried into the jungle and then can hover at 10,000ft for around 50 minutes, streaming real-time images to forces on the ground.
Advocates say the drones could boost Indias capacity to battle the rebels, although others say they are too noisy and would alert the Maoists to security forces presence.
But within the Congress party, some leaders feel that defeating the Maoists will depend less on high technology than on reaching out to long-neglected and alienated tribal people, who now actively support the leftist guerrillas.
Tensions on the issue within the ruling party spilled into the public realm this week when Digvijay Singh, a senior Congress party leader, accused Mr Chidambaram of intellectual arrogance and of being extremely rigid once he makes up his mind.
He is treating [this] purely as a law and order problem without taking into consideration the issues that affect the tribals, Mr Singh wrote in a newspaper column. We cant solve this problem by ignoring the hopes and aspirations of the people living in these areas.
The BJP has seized on the divisions within the ruling party, warning on Thursday that the Maoists could be just a few years away from encircling cities.
Unless there is a complete unanimity of purpose, warned Yashwant Sinha, a BJP parliament member, we will not win this war.
Sounds like a better Maoist-trap!;)
Good. Then, turn them loose in tribal Pakistan. I don’t trust Obama to hold the line. A strong India is in our interests.
LOL!
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