To drive the point home, he broke into a simile describing the woes in the locality near his home in Goa.
“Everyone
has at least one neighbour with whom you have problems. One must
prepare for the eventuality and live with the difficulties,” he said.
“There
was a family in my neighbourhood that used to make a lot of noise and
create nuisance… I figured out that he was an alcoholic… I met the
person who used to supply him liquor and asked him to make my neighbour
stay longer at the place where he used to consume liquor,” Parrikar
said, explaining how he had tackled the problem in his neighbourhood.
“If
you have strength, the neighbour will be controlled,” said Parrikar
when asked about the threats posed by China and Pakistan though he
emphasised that the best way was to be a good neighbour and also
simultaneously prepare for any eventuality.
Wars won
Former
Army chief Gen Bikram Singh said the armed forces have been winning the
war against insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir and the north-east.
Touching
upon the larger issues plaguing the armed forces, Parrikar and Gen
Singh agreed on the urgent need to appoint a Chief of Defence Staff
(CDS), a proposal that has been hanging fire since 2001.
Parrikar
said that the CDS was a must and hoped to propose a mechanism for the
creation of the post within the next three months.
He said it was the key to integrate the three services, something that was currently missing.
“Integration
has to be there and the Chief of Defence Staff is a must. How do you
work it out? Give me some time and I will work it out because the
integration of the three forces does not exist in the existing
structure,” he said.
Apart
from the integration issues, one of the major stumbling blocks in the
way of modernisation of the armed forces is the slow acquisition
process.
The recent cases of alleged corruption in arms deals are not helping the cause.
Parrikar said the policy of putting a blanket ban on the tainted companies was not working.
The defence ministry has even started giving specific waivers to ensure that the national security was not compromised.
Citing
an example, he said the army was facing problems in getting an adequate
number of trucks after the supplier was blacklisted on corruption
charges.
The Army has not bought any new piece of artillery since the Bofors scandal came to light.
“Every
gun in the country is called Bofors,” he said in a lighter vein to
highlight how the scandal has been hogging the nation’s attention.
Saying that he was currently busy clearing the backlog of work and projects, Parrikar promised to ramp up the speed.
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