The country’s highest decision-making body on security affairs, the Strategic Policy Group (SPG), is meeting on Monday to discuss the ramifications of China’s anti-satellite weapon test last month and formulate an Indian response to this major military development in the neighbourhood.
That India has quietly noted the message of the Chinese test on January 11 is loud and clear. Talking to The Sunday Express, Air Chief Marshall S.P. Tyagi said: “Space is the new frontier and will acquire a more and more important role in warfare without even weaponisation. Anything that possibly disturbs assets in space will have a direct bearing on the result of war. Therefore, the Chinese test is significant.”
Tyagi refused to elaborate on the test in which Beijing is said to have shot down an old weather satellite with a medium-range ballistic missile 535 miles above in space, the first such test in the past 20 years. China acknowledged the test on January 23 after United States and Japan sought explanation for this military measure.
While New Delhi has maintained silence on the Chinese move, the SPG, headed by Cabinet Secretary B K Chaturvedi, will meet the three Service Chiefs, Home, Defence and External Affairs Secretaries, Director Intelligence Bureau and Secretary (R&AW) on Monday to discuss Beijing’s move.
At this meeting, the intelligence agencies will give a detailed readout of the Chinese test and its impact on the region as well as the big picture with the US.
Preliminary assessment done by the government suggests that China tested the weapon to demonstrate its capability and technological prowess and give a message of its global reach to the world.
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