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Foundation Stone
Laying Ceremony (11th June 2005)
On 11 June,
2005 the
Governor of Maharashtra,
Shri S. M. Krishna
laid the foundation stone of the
National Center of
International Security and Defence Analysis (NISDA)
at Dr.
Babasaheb Ambedkar Bhavan
in the premises of the University of Pune.
The Chancellor evinced keen interest in the nature and activities of
NISDA. In his message he encouraged NISDA faculty and wished a
successful future to NISDA.
Former UGC
chairman Dr. Hari Gautam also graced the occasion.
Dr. Hari
Gautam’s Address:
His Excellency,
the Governor of the State of Maharashtra and the Hon’ble
Chancellor of University of Pune, Prof. Ashok Kolaskar, the
distinguished Vice Chancellor of the University of Pune, Prof.
Gautam Sen, Sawarkar Professor of Strategic Studies and Founder
Director of National Centre of International Security and the
Defence analysis, Eminent academicians, Esteemed former Vice
Chancellors of University of Pune, Faculty Members, Members of
the Press, Ladies and Gentleman.
It is indeed a great honour and elated privilege for me to have
been invited to be present at this great occasion. It is an
event of history. It is a milestone in the history of higher
education not only in India but the world over. The National Center of International Security and Defence analysis shall
define, redefine and reorient the holistic aspect of the
academic cum practical security, international security
encompassing various disciplines through a inter disciplinary
and multi disciplinary activities.
University Grants Commission way back on 27th November 2001
declared – “…in the interest of nation and education, the
University Grants Commission has, this year approved to
establish a NATIONAL CENTER OF INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND
DEFENCE ANALYSIS at the University of Pune”. It was then decided
by the UGC to first create the National Center, which hopefully
shall grow into what we believed into the “National Institute of
International Security and Defence Analysis”. Rupees Five crores
were awarded as the seed money for the establishment of the
National Center while Rupees Sixteen crores was parked,
specially earmarked for this centre to grow into the National
Institute of International Security and Defence Analysis. The
National Center located in the Pune had a unique and special
advantage to coordinate and collaborate with around 23 defence
establishments existing in the city alone. Such a combination I
believe could not be possible at any other location in India.
The University of Pune is one of the foremost universities in
India. It has attained the UGC status of the “University of
Excellence”. The progress of this university has been directly
linked with sincere commitments and immense sense of dedication
on the part of dynamic and eminent Vice-Chancellor – Dr. Ashok
Kolaskar. My complements to him. I also complement and
congratulate Prof. Gautam Sen, Founder Director of National
Center of International Security and Defence Analysis for having
created this history in the field of higher education. I prey
God to bless their efforts. I prey God to bless NISDA and I prey
God to bless the University of Pune.
We all are great and immensely obliged to His Excellency Shri S.
M. Krishna to have been with us at this historical event. He has
done a great favour in laying the foundation stone of the main
building of the NISDA – one of the milestone in the history of
academics.
Prof. Gautam Sen,
Founder Director of NISDA
also addressed the distinguished gathering.
Prof. Gautam
Sen’s address:
Your Excellency
Mr. S.M. Krishna, Chancellor and Governor of the State of
Maharashtra,
Dr. Hari Gautam, Former Chairman of the University Grants
Commission,
Prof. Ashok Kolaskar, Vice Chancellor, University of Pune,
Former Vice Chancellors – Dr. Ram Takawale, Dr. V G Bhide and
Dr. Vasant Gowarikar,
Colleagues, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen.
On behalf of the University of Pune and NISDA, I am taking this
opportunity to welcome all of you for today’s function which has
been organized to record the formal laying of the Foundation
Stone of the building which will house NISDA and the FM Radio
Station of University of Pune in the hands of Mr. S M Krishna,
the Chancellor and the Governor of the State of Maharashtra.
Both have great significance as well as relevance for the
academic community.
NISDA represents the effort to bridge the gap between the realms
of ideas and the domain of public policy making while the FM
radio Station represents the extension of the Information
Technology in the very core of existence of the University on a
day-to-day basis.
Some twenty five years back, on a cold December night in 1980, I
received a call at Boston from late Mr. P.V.R. Rao, the former
Defence Secretary and President of the Asian Development Bank.
In his typical characteristic way he told me that my eight-year
holiday in the United States as graduate student and as a
research associate was over. I was asked to return back to India
and create a National Center for the study of national security
affairs within the University system. A few months later when I
formally joined the Department of Defence Studies at the
University of Pune to hold the first endowed chair professorship
in defence studies in India, I realized that the old man has had
the last laugh on my carefree life style at Harvard and the MIT.
National security analysis was then conducted within the
fortified domain of bureaucratic organizations viz. the
Ministries of Defence, External affairs, Home etc. The study of
national security affairs by incorporating the core values and
the civilizational pre conditions of a nation state by the
academia in the institutes of higher education was nonexistent.
The gap between national security analysis which was policy
oriented and national security studies which was policy relevant
was enormous.
Your Excellency, one of your illustrious predecessors, Air Chief
Marshal Latif was the then Governor of the state of Maharashtra
and with whom I had interacted in the Joint Planning Staff while
I was a staff officer at the Army Headquarters during my earlier
career in the Indian Army. He and Professor V G Bhide, the then
Vice Chancellor of the University of Pune came to my aid and
with their help changed the existing name of the Department to
Department of Defence and Strategic Studies (DDSS). I also
created the National Security Forum (NSF) whose founding members
were Mr. Ram Sathe, former foreign secretary, Admiral J G
Nadkarni, former Chief of the Naval Staff and Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, Air Marshal Y B Malshe, former
Vice Chief of the Air Staff amongst others. The NSF was
addressed regularly by the serving Service Chiefs, Ambassadors,
Academics including Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh in May
1991, when he was the Chairman of the University Grants
Commission just before he took over as the Minister of Finance.
The NSF soon became the Center of Advance Strategic Studies
(CASS), an independent NGO with Admiral J G Nadkarni as the
first Director of CASS and continues to be housed within the
DDSS. The rest is history.
Having initiated the system as I have indicated earlier along
with the incorporation of Sawarkar Memorial and BC Joshi
Memorial Lecture series, creation of Chhatrapati Shivaji Chair
on Policy Studies with an endowment from the Indian Army and the
Resident Scholars Program funded by the Indian Army, I was quite
content by 2001, that I had created a tolerably good department
for the study of national security affairs till this gentleman
sitting next to you, Dr. Hari Gautam, the then Chairman of the
UGC decided that I had not done enough as yet. Your Excellency,
in a lighter vane, may I add that a conspiracy was hatched
between him and Professor Ashok Kolaskar against me – the
outcome being NISDA which you have inaugurated formally by
laying the foundation stone of its building today.
NISDA is the first National Center to be an integral part of a
university department in any Indian University. NISDA has
quickly gone ahead and instituted the first Chair Professor of
Air Power Studies by creating an endowment fund for the same.
NISDA has similar plans to create an endowed Chair Professorship
for Naval Studies. Empirically, between NISDA and the DDSS there
are three chair professors, two full professors, one reader, two
lecturers, fourteen resident scholars from the Indian Army, one
research associate and two project associates. From a two-member
faculty in 1980, NISDA-DDSS conglomerate is the largest entity
in any Indian University dedicated to study national security
affairs. The two memorial lecture series have been addressed by
Dr. A P J Abdul Kalam the present President of India, late Nani
Palkhiwala, the serving Service Chiefs of the Indian Armed
forces, Ambassadors, Chairmen of the Atomic Energy Commission,
Governor of State, eminent educationalist, scientists and many
others since 1982. We will soon be bringing out a published
volume of these public lectures delivered under the two memorial
lecture series.
NISDA’s mission is to create human resources, expertise and a
school of thought to contribute to strategic policy making to
safeguard our national interests and harmonize them with
universal security concerns. Security is no longer the
responsibility of the Armed Forces alone. The world in the post
cold war period has been overtaken by the information
revolution. The country today has to be more concerned about
securing the non-strategic dimensions of ecology, environment,
pollution, energy and the rights of the unborn. In this sense,
security has become an amalgamation of efforts achieved through
the coercive use of force on one hand and policies at diplomatic
management with security assessment on the other. We hope that
NISDA operating through its five divisions viz. Modeling and
Simulation Studies, Science Technology and International
Security Studies, Policy and management Studies, Area studies
and Non Traditional Security Studies will provide policy
relevant outputs to the decision makers in our country.
Your Excellency, you will recollect that when you took over as
the Governor of the State of Maharashtra, I wrote to you my
views on institutions of higher education in India. It is
relevant to quote the same here for record that
“I remain concerned with the existing asymmetry arising out of
the present leadership in institutes of higher education
responsible for guiding the destiny of research, teaching and
training…. This has lead to proliferation of ideas and
methodologies, which in the long run, may not contribute to
consolidation and integration of efforts to further the cause of
basic research so essential for converting the science of today
into implementable appropriate technologies for tomorrow….
Secondly, I believe that at the core of any transformation is
the ability to establish a civil society where there is a total
guarantee of human security…. Modular shifts without
interdependent modes have to be restrained from being
institutionalized… Universities therefore have to be protected
to continue as a place to remain endowed with idle capacity to
think conceptually and perpetuate abstraction with logical
empiricism.”
I have a fond hope that NISDA in years to come will be able to
fulfill the vital role that I have enumerated in my address
today.
Your Excellency, thank you for sparing your time to come to the
University of Pune. It is more significant to all of us since
you have been a hardcore academic having taught International
Law and also the first Fulbright Scholar to become a Governor of
State in India. Please consider University of Pune as your own
and give us the privilege to share your thoughts with us
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University of Pune. All Rights
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