Apr 15, 2014

Poorly managed India

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India is a poorly managed country, that is over populated. It contains 1200 million people, where 500 million would have been better.

Its elite is a thoroughly Anglophile, foreign educated group whose money is abroad and their souls, also in the West. This is confirmed by 'Bollywood' movies where the stars prance around clappy happy with awful songs in nice Western locations.

India elite language is English. In India you are not smart and part of the ruling class unless you speak Inglish...have a bank account in the West; send your children to be educated there; take your favorite loot money shopping sprees in the West.

India STILL proudly celebrates the utterly evil British empire which claimed the lives of 30 million Indians between 1757--1947. Even though to this day elements of the British state, linked to the Rothschild say that everything in India is worthless with a snooty racist menace.......in comparison to Malaysia...China....Mongolia...North Korea....Indonesia.

The Third World Indian military official language is English.

India was 'given independence' and did not fight for it.

The wrong crowd controls the STATE.

Now according to CIA/State Department dictates Communal Modi must be the next PM of the country. The Indian Anglophile elite enables Western manipulation/penetration of the Indian State. CIA assets in Congress have gone silent as Modi takes over.....Chidambaram, Sonia, ManMohan Singh and all the other CIA assets. The rest of Congress make childish jibes against the former cha wallah which makes the average voters eyes roll against Congress.

Modi is of low working class background, with a chamar appearance and thus cannot offer anything of significance to India. He served in the Fascist RSS and obtained an university education through his connections to the RSS. He is beholden to the RSS, and all his utterances points in that direction. A man who sold tea near railway stations. A man energized by hate, and nothing more. A man with with close links to Israel. A man who is butch gay.

BUT India is fed up with CORRUPTION, misgovernance.....and mesmerized naively by Modi's bold simplistic assertions that hark back to a yearning for a warrior king. They have watched too many Bollywood movies and RSS type ZEE TV mass hypnosis diabolical religious based drama's that target North India. The Anglophied media is behind Modi.

If Modi becomes PM he may destroy India. Talking tough in Gujjiland is one thing, but FOR THE OF WHOLE INDIA, as its PM quite another. We will see internal strife....that which energizes and focuses the butch gay mind of Modi. AND what of delicate relations with China, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and pro-India Bangladesh?

The Indian military is a grossly mismanaged, poorly equipped, thoroughly distrusted institution that is held in utter contempt by all political parties in India, including the 'patriotic' BJP. In such a scenario it should not be tested against any of its neighbors under butch gay Modi.

MASS BJP CORRUPTION.....in case we forget.





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India ninth biggest military spender in world



India is the world's ninth biggest military spender, sandwiched between Germany-Japan on one side and South Korea-Italy on the other, in the latest list for the 15 countries with the highest defence expenditure.

While this may gladden some hawkish hearts here, it's also quite true that India simply does not get the biggest bang for its buck despite being the only country that shares two long, unresolved borders with nuclear-armed neighbours, with whom it has fought wars in the past.

But first the data released by Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) on Monday. As per the noted think-tank, the world military expenditure fell to $1.75 trillion in 2013 — a dip of 1.9% in real terms from 2012 — due to cutbacks by the US and other western countries.

The fall in military expenditure by the US, by far the largest spender with $640 billion in 2013, can be traced to the end of the Iraq war, launch of the Afghanistan drawdown and planned budgetary cuts. Austerity measures amid a slowdown have hit defence spending in western and central European nations.

China, Russia and Saudi Arabia, the next three on the list, substantially hiked their military budgets in 2013. Saudi Arabia, with an eye on Shia-led Iran but also as a hedge against an internal Arab Spring-like uprising, has jumped over UK, Japan and France to take fourth position.

"The increase in military spending in emerging and developing countries continues unabated. While in some cases, it's the natural result of economic growth or a response to genuine security needs. In other cases, it represents a squandering of natural resource revenues, the dominance of autocratic regimes, or emerging regional arms races," said Sam Perlo-Freeman of SIPRI.

India, of course, cannot afford to lower its guard against both China and Pakistan. Military experts here, in fact, have long demanded the country spend 3% of its GDP on defence, instead of letting it wallow around 1.8% like it currently does.

There are other problems as well. India has the world's second-largest standing army with 1.18 million soldiers, and a navy and air force in the top five, but its armed forces suffer from a poor teeth-to-tail ratio with "fighting elements" being outstripped by "support" ones.

The ongoing raising of the new mountain strike corps against China will add another 90,000 soldiers to the fold. The annual defence budget already hovers around 60:40 in favour of revenue expenditure (day-to-day running costs, salaries) as compared to the capital (modernization, acquisition of new weapon systems) one.

Moreover, the miserable failure to build a strong domestic defence-industrial base has meant that India remains the world's largest arms importer, with 65% of its military hardware and software being sourced from abroad.

"Most acquisitions are done in a muddled manner, with no long-term strategic plan to systematically build military capabilities with proper inter-Service prioritization. The long delays in decision-making lead to huge cost escalations in virtually every project," said a senior official.

As if all this was not enough, recurring arms scandals derail crucial projects time and again. Consequently, India might be spending a lot but its armed forces continue to grapple with big operational gaps ranging from mountain howitzers, night-vision devices, air defence weapons to fighters, helicopters, mortars...AND strategic infrastructure.