Monday, August 26, 2013

‘Nehru allowed CIA to use Indian airbase’




‘Nehru allowed CIA to use Indian airbase’


Washington:India allowed the US to use one of its air bases for refuelling CIA’s U-2 spy planes to target Chinese territories after its defeat in the 1962 war, a declassified official document said on Friday.
    Then Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru approved overflight by U-2 missions covering the border areas with China on November 11, 1962, the independent National Security Archive (NSA) said in a report based on the latest set of declassified documents it obtained from the CIA (Central Intelligance Agency) under the Freedom of Information Act.
    The use of Charbatia, an 
abandoned World War II base in Orissa, was agreed during a meeting between the then US President John F Kennedy and Indian President S Radhakrishnan on June 3, 1963, but Indian work to improve it took longer than expected, so the missions resumed from Thailand’s Takhli, NSA said, based on the 400-page CIA report it has released.
    According to the report, which details the spying programmes conducted with the planes from 1954 to 1974, the U-2 mission on November 10, 1963 was the longest yet flown by a U-2 at 11 hours 45 minutes, and the pilot was so exhausted that
project managers limited future flights to 10 hours endurance.
    In fact, the longest U-2 mission to date was the one flown from Takhli on September 29, 1963, it said. NSA said the first deployment to Charbatia in May 1964 ended because Nehru died.
    According to a newly declassified CIA history of the U-2 programme, it was the secret flights made by these U-2s aircraft by the CIA, which informed India about the nature of Chinese incursions inside Indian territory.
    “Charbatia was still not in early 1964, so on 31 March, 1964 
Detachment G staged another mission from Takhli. The first mission out of Charbatia did ot take place until 24 May 1964. Three days later Prime Minister Nehru died, and further operations were postponed,” the report says.
    “The pilots and aircraft left Charbatia but others remained in place to save staging costs. In December 1964, when Sino-Indian tensions increased along the border, Detachment G returned to Charbatia and conducted three highly successful missions, satisfying all of COMOR’s requirements for the Sino-Indian border region,” it said. PTI

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