As the Indian Navy prepares for Golden Jubilee celebrations next year to commemorate the induction of its first submarine in 1967, it has been struck
by a story in an Australian newspaper which
disclosed that 22,400 pages of documents pertaining to its Scorpene
submarine programme, codenamed Project-75,
had been leaked. This has caused
quite a stir in defence circles
around the globe and raised many
pertinent questions related to
management of major projects in
increasingly technical environments.
But the vulnerability that has always existed when dealing with private defence companies and arms dealers has gained another dimension with the data theft. The leak has happened just after DCNS snapped a $38-bn
deal to build Australia's next generation
of submarines. It has been speculated that the leak has been engineered by rival companies who lost the Australian deal to DCNS. If true, the perpetrators were seeking to sabotage the deal through undermining the French company's trustworthiness. After all, disguising the stealth capabilities and their parameters is what makes the submarine such a potent
weapon.
But companies have only themselves to blame when they fall victims to hackers and corporate espionage. DCNS had entrusted the design documentation to
consultants and sub-contractors for various aspects of the $3.5-bn deal like traniSlating documents from French to English, finalising the specifications, and procuring
supplies of equipment and parts. It is hardly surprising then that DCNS lost
the plot and its ability to keep tight control over who could access the documents.
Perhaps more important than the question
of what has been leaked is how it was leaked. Based on the evidence so far, it can be
reasonably assumed that the source of the
leak was DCNS. Corporate rivalry is
seen as the most likely reason. The
fact that one individual was able to access such a large trove of documents covering all the major sub-systems when most such organisations work on
the "need to know" principle, needs
to be enquired into by the French
govt. By completing the enquiry at
the earliest, punishing the guilty and
fixing the loopholes, France will be
able to satisfy the concerns of India.
Any exercise limited only to damage
control will do disservice to India's national security.Subscribe now iit jee study material
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