THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 29 MARCH 2019 (Power in space: on Mission Shakti (The Hindu)

Power in space: on Mission Shakti (The Hindu)

Mains Paper 1: Science and Technology
Prelims level: Mission Shakti
Mains level: Space technology

Context

  • India has entered an elite space club with the Defence Research and Development Organisation blowing up a satellite in a Low Earth Orbit into smithereens.
  • Such Indian capability to take out moving objects has never really been in doubt.
  • The DRDO announced it as early as in 2011.
  • India has been in the business of testing long-range missiles for years, although public attention on the space programme has been mostly on its civilian and scientific aspects.

Background

  • The military dimension, though always latent, had not seen a verifiable demonstration as in the case of Mission Shakti, the Anti-Satellite (ASAT) missile test.
  • The display of technological prowess through the test accentuates the military dimension and brings into play an overwhelming assurance of what the Ministry of External Affairs describes as a ‘credible deterrence’ against attacks on India’s growing number of space assets.
  • Although only three other countries, the U.S., Russia, and China, have previously demonstrated this capability.
  • It is possible to surmise that countries with long-range missiles could do the same with equal effectiveness. But India, surely, is staking a forward claim as a space weapons power.

What is significant about Mission Shakti?

  • The country celebrates the test as a scientific achievement, it must also dwell on the possibility that this might goad its none-too-friendly neighbour Pakistan into a competitive frenzy.
  • Also, in the absence of a credible threat to India’s space assets from China or any other country with Anti-Satellite missile capabilities, whether the ‘deterrence’ sought to be achieved by this test would lead to a more stable strategic security environment is not certain.

Will the test spur space weaponisation?

  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi, while announcing the success of the test, was clear that India wanted to maintain peace rather than indulge in warmongering.
  • And, by targeting a low-orbit satellite, the missile test did the utmost possible to minimise space debris, which is an issue of international concern.
  • But, within India, the timing of the test, when the country is already in election mode, does raise concerns whether this was aimed at the domestic constituency.
  • The Election Commission is now seized of the question whether the Prime Minister might have violated the Model Code of Conduct.
  • If it does find the timing amiss, the Modi government could be in for some serious embarrassment.
  • The test should not have been a matter for a partisan political debate, but given the hypernationalist political plank of the Bharatiya Janata Party, Mission Shakti might have more reverberations on the ground than it has had in space.

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1) Ranganthittu Bird Sanctuary is located in which of the following states?
(a) Tamil Nadu
(b) Andhra Pradesh
(c) Karnataka
(d) Kerala

Ans: C

Mains Questions:
Q.1) What is significant about Mission Shakti?