My
father, during his active years, always kept a 12 bore handgun ready
in a corner of his bedroom with few live cartridges handy. The gun
manufactured by the British company BSA was a potentially lethal
weapon. I once asked him, why he keeps the gun ready?
Instead
of answering my query directly, he asked me to describe location of
our house. I thought for some time and then described our house
location to him saying that we have our bungalow on the outskirts of
the city, almost as if we were is a rural area. There are just few
houses in neighbourhood and their numbers can be counted by fingers
on my hand. On east, we have, guava orchards spread over few miles.
On north we have a water canal with reasonable amount of shrubs grown
on both sides and towards west we have a patch of wilderness that
ends with some foothills of the Western Ghat mountains, where real
forest area begins.
My
father responded by saying that with that kind of setting around the
house, he is always afraid of two things. Proximity of canal and
foliage next to house, means that an occasional snake or even a cobra
might want to look around in our yard for some rodents and secondly,
our house being isolated with so much wilderness nearby, there is
always that slimmest chance of robbery in the dead of the night. So
with my gun ready at my bed side, I and for that matter, all of us,
can sleep soundly. That is why I keep the gun ready. I knew he was
absolutely right because I then remembered few occasions, when some
poisonous snakes were detected in the yard, and my father had shot
them.
India
test launched its longest range, nuclear warhead capable, missile,
Agni V, for the second time yesterday, 15th
September 2013 successfully. There has been a debate in some media
about relevance of Agni programme. I feel that Agni V, has more or
less relevance for the country, that my father's 12 bore shotgun had
for our family. The Agni-V is the most advanced version of the
indigenously built Agni ( Fire), series, part of a programme that
started in the 1960s. First tested in April 2012, it is mostly
domestically built and has a range of about 5,000 km (3,100 miles).
This means that it can even reach Beijing in China and much of
Europe.
India
is hardly a war mongering country. People are peaceful by nature. So
what is the need of such an missile? Answer to that is very simple,
India has two neighbours on its west and east, who are ruled by
hostile regimes, who keep on creating trouble on the borders. This
means that India must have a strongest deterrent that would restrain
these two from raking up any major trouble as they have done in past.
What better way is there for deterrence, than having a nuclear tipped
missile ready with us that can hit even remotest corners of our
hostile neighbours?
This
morning, I read few comments about Agni launch in some foreign
media. I found this comment saying: Is
anybody really surprised that nearly half of India’s 1.2 billion
people have no toilet at home?
Quiet interesting! But obviously the commentator is missing the
point. For an individual or a nation, safety has to be its paramount
concern. A measure to protect oneself, can not be just compared with
number of toilets or any other amenity.
Just
like my father's shotgun, Agni V is therefore very relevant and
necessary. It has to be ready all the time, so all the Indians can
sleep peacefully.
17th
September 2013
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