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The Directorate General of Security is an organisation of covert operations under India's Cabinet Secretariat. It is one of the four legally defined intelligence organisations of India and listed in the Schedule of the ''Intelligence Organisations (Restriction of Rights) Act, 1985'', the other three being I.B., R&AW and NTRO. Since 1971, the Secretary,
Research and Analysis Wing The Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) is the foreign intelligence agency of the Republic of India. The agency's primary function is gathering foreign intelligence, counter-terrorism, counter-proliferation, advising Indian policymakers, and a ...
has usually held the post of Director General. This organisation used to be composed of Special Service Bureau (now
Sashastra Seema Bal The Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB; ) is a Central Armed Police Forces, central armed police force in India under the Ministry of Home Affairs (India), Ministry of Home Affairs. It is responsible for guarding Border guard, India’s borders with Indi ...
),
Aviation Research Centre The Aviation Research Centre (ARC) is India's imagery intelligence organisation, a part of the Directorate General of Security, run by the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW). It started functioning in November 1962, in the wake of the Sino-Ind ...
, Special Frontier Force and Chief Inspectorate of Armaments. Since the shifting of SSB and CIOA to the
Ministry of Home Affairs An interior ministry or ministry of the interior (also called ministry of home affairs or ministry of internal affairs) is a government department that is responsible for domestic policy, public security and law enforcement. In some states, the i ...
in 2001, DGS consists of ARC and SFF only. The Special Group, a non-Tibetan and
Sarsawa Sarsawa is a town at the border of Haryana and a municipal board in Saharanpur district in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. Sarsawa is a Nagar Palika Parishad town in Nakur tehsil district of Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh. The Sarsawa city is div ...
-based unit of SFF, is also a DGS component.


Early history

In the wake of the
Sino-Indian War The Sino–Indian War, also known as the China–India War or the Indo–China War, was an armed conflict between China and India that took place from October to November 1962. It was a military escalation of the Sino–Indian border dispu ...
of 1962, the Intelligence Bureau raised four new organisations in 1962-63:
Indo-Tibetan Border Police The Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) is a Central Armed Police Forces, central armed police force in India under the Ministry of Home Affairs (India), Ministry of Home Affairs. It is responsible for guarding Border guard, India’s border with ...
(originally raised as ''Frontier Rifles''), SFF, SSB and ARC. Of these four, only ITBP was an open force; one of the joint directors of IB, Sardar Balbir Singh, became its founder chief, while still retaining his post in the IB. The other three organisations were covert. Of these, SFF and ARC were set up with
CIA The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA; ) is a civilian foreign intelligence service of the federal government of the United States tasked with advancing national security through collecting and analyzing intelligence from around the world and ...
help, as a part of CIA Tibetan program. To monitor these two, a CIA-IB joint operations centre was set up in November 1963 and was given the name, ''Special Centre''. When B. N. Mullik,
Director of the Intelligence Bureau The Director of the Intelligence Bureau (DIB) is the chief executive of the Intelligence Bureau, India's premier domestic-intelligence agency. The DIB is the senior-most Indian Police Service officer of India. The current director of Intellige ...
retired in October 1964, he was re-employed to oversee these covert operations. His position got formalised in February 1965 as ''Director General of Security''. The DGS was established in the Prime Minister's Secretariat (now Prime Minister's Office). SFF, ARC and SSB, already shifted from the Ministry of External Affairs to the Prime Minister's Secretariat on 1 January 1965, became components of this new organisation. The whole set-up was moved to the Cabinet Secretariat on 1 September 1965. Another organisation, Inspectorate of Armaments (later, Chief Inspectorate of Armaments) was created as a part of DGS in 1969.Major (Retd.) P.S. Karki vs Union of India on 7 August, 2015
Central Administrative Tribunal, Principal Bench: New Delhi
The DGS was declared as a ''force'' under section 45(b)(iii) of the
Arms Act, 1959 The Arms Act, 1959 is an Act of the Parliament of India to consolidate and amend the law relating to arms and ammunition in order to curb illegal weapons and violence stemming from them. It replaced the Indian Arms Act, 1878. The Arms Act wa ...
on 21 August 1969.


Organisational structure

The DGS was headed by a Director General, the post being generally held by the Secretary, R&AW. The No. 2 post was called Principal Director, who actually ran the organisation. Below him, there were five set-ups: #Secretariat, headed by Joint Director (Planning & Coordination). #Special Service Bureau, headed by Director. Field formations were headed by Divisional Organisers. The divisions were: ##Manipur & NagalandHistory of Guwahati Frontier
SSB website
archived copy
/ref> (This division was called ''Village Volunteer Force'') ##Arunachal Pradesh (The Divisional Organiser had dual charge, the other being Security Commissioner of NEFA) ##North Assam ##North Bengal & Sikkim ##South Bengal ##Uttar Pradesh ##Punjab & Himachal Pradesh ##Jammu & Kashmir ##Rajasthan & Gujarat ##Shillong #Aviation Research Centre, headed by Director. Field formations, at Charbatia, Odisha, headed by Joint Director;Nirmal Samantray vs Aviation Research Center on 21 October, 2019
Central Administrative Tribunal, Cuttack
Doom Dooma, Assam, headed by Deputy Director; Sarsawa, Uttar Pradesh, headed by Deputy Director; Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh; Leh, Ladakh, headed by Assistant Director. Has an air base at Palam, Delhi. #Special Frontier Force, headed by Inspector General. Field formation at Chakrata, Uttarakhand, known as Establishment 22, headed by Commandant (equivalent to brigadier). Another field formation at Sarsawa, Uttar Pradesh, which houses the Special Group. Battalions known as ''Vikas'' battalions. #Chief Inspectorate of Armaments, Delhi-based, headed by Chief Inspector (equivalent to lieutenant colonel).


Major missions


Nanda Devi and Nanda Kot Missions

Both of these were joint covert operations of CIA and ARC. The purpose was to place a nuclear-powered telemetry relay listening device on a sufficiently high mountain to listen to Chinese radio signals. First attempt was for Mount
Nanda Devi Nanda Devi is the second-highest mountain in India, after Kangchenjunga, and the highest located entirely within the country. (Kangchenjunga is on the border of India and Nepal.) Nanda Devi is the 23rd-highest peak in the world and ranked 74t ...
in 1965, which failed due to a severe blizzard. Second attempt was for Mount
Nanda Kot Nanda Kot ( Kumaoni-नन्दा कोट) is a mountain peak of the Himalaya range located in the Pithoragarh district of Uttarakhand state in India. It lies in the Kumaon Himalaya, just outside the ring of peaks enclosing the Nanda Devi ...
in 1966, which succeeded. Team leader of the expedition was Navy Captain Mohan Singh Kohli.


SSB's resistance movement in 1965

During the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965, village volunteers, male and female, trained in armed guerrilla warfare by SSB, had participated in protecting the Indian border. The founder chief of DGS and SSB, B. N. Mullik described this in details in his 1973 article, ''The Motto of SSB''. Mullik also wrote in that article that by 1965, a million and a half men and women had been trained throughout the border.


Training of Mujib Bahini

The training of
Mukti Bahini The Mukti Bahini, initially called the Mukti Fauj, also known as the Bangladesh Forces, was a big tent armed guerrilla resistance movement consisting of the Bangladeshi military personnel, paramilitary personnel and civilians during the Ba ...
was arranged by R&AW at camps of BSF, CRPF, Assam Rifles and Rajasthan Armed Constabulary. But the members of the Mujib Bahini, drawn from
Bangladesh Chhatra League Bangladesh Chhatra League, simply Chhatra League (), is the student wing of the political party, Bangladesh Awami League, founded by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on 4 January 1948. The organisation is banned and listed as a terrorist organisation in B ...
, did not want anything to do with Mukti Bahini and the provisional government. So they were trained by SFF at Tandawa, near
Chakrata Chakrata is a cantonment town and also a sub district/tehsil, in Dehradun district. in the state of Uttarakhand, India. It lies between the Tons River, Tons and Yamuna rivers, at an elevation of 2118 m, 98 km from the state capital, Dehrad ...
, and by SSB, at Haflong training centre.


Operation Mountain Eagle

This is the engagement SFF's Tibetan soldiers in the
Chittagong Hill Tracts The Chittagong Hill Tracts (), often shortened to simply the Hill Tracts and abbreviated to CHT, refers to the three hilly districts within the Chittagong Division in southeastern Bangladesh, bordering India and Myanmar (Burma) in the east: Kh ...
during the
Bangladesh War The Bangladesh Liberation War (, ), also known as the Bangladesh War of Independence, was an War, armed conflict sparked by the rise of the Bengali nationalism, Bengali nationalist and self-determination movement in East Pakistan, which res ...
, described in depth by SFF chief Sujan Singh Uban in his ''Phantoms of Chittagong: The "Fifth Army" in Bangladesh''.


SSB operations during Bangladesh War

Other than training activities, SSB also ran intelligence operations and refugee relief camps on a major scale during the Bangladesh War. As a result, Hara Nath Sarkar and Debakant Kakati, Divisional Organisers of North Bengal and North Assam Divisions, respectively, were awarded the
President's Police Medal The President's Police Medal is a decoration awarded to members of law enforcement in India. Established on 1 March 1951, the medal was originally called the President's Police and Fire Service Medal. The medal is awarded for either gallantry or di ...
for Meritorious Service (Bangladesh Special Award).


Raising the Special Group

This force was raised in 1981, under command of IG, SFF. This unit, unlike Tibetan refugees, is composed entirely of deputationists from the Army. By 1984, it had become the primary counter-terrorism force of India. This force was deployed in
Operation Blue Star Operation Blue Star was a military operation by the Indian Armed Forces conducted between 1 and 10 June 1984 to remove Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and other Sikh militants from the Golden Temple (Harmandir Sahib), a holy site of Sikhism, and i ...
. After the assassination of
Indira Gandhi Indira Priyadarshini Gandhi (Given name, ''née'' Nehru; 19 November 1917 – 31 October 1984) was an Indian politician and stateswoman who served as the Prime Minister of India, prime minister of India from 1966 to 1977 and again from 1980 un ...
, the SG was given the responsibility of prime ministerial security till the raising of the
Special Protection Group The Special Protection Group (SPG) is an agency under the Cabinet Secretariat of the Government of India, whose sole responsibility is protecting the Prime Minister of India and, in some cases, their family. It was formed in 1988 by an Act of ...
.Indian Special Frontier Force (SFF)
Boot Camp & Military Fitness Institute


Raising the National Security Guard

R. T. Nagrani, the then Principal Director, DGS, was tasked with the SG operations in the Golden Temple (Both Sundown and Blue Star; Sundown was aborted). After this, under advice of R. N. Kao, who had come back from retirement as Senior Advisor to the Prime Minister (precursor post of today's National Security Advisor), the PM asked Nagrani to raise a separate force for counter-terrorism. Nagrani did it with a core group of SG operatives. This became known as the
National Security Guard The National Security Guard (NSG) is a central armed police force in India under the Ministry of Home Affairs. It is the primary counter-terrorism force of the Government of India. It was founded on 16 October 1984, following Operation Blue ...
. Nagrani became its first DG, while still retaining his post of Principal Director, DGS and later, DG (Security).


Operation Meghdoot

Operation Meghdoot Operation Meghdoot was the codename for the Indian Armed Forces operation to take full control of the Siachen Glacier in Ladakh. Executed on the morning of 13 April 1984, it marks the highest battlefield in the world. This operation preempted Pa ...
was launched by the Indian Army in 1984 to capture the
Siachen Glacier The Siachen Glacier is a glacier located in the eastern Karakoram range of the Himalayas, just northeast of the point NJ9842 where the Line of Control between India and Pakistan ends in northeastern Kashmir. At long, it is the longest glaci ...
, in which SFF commandos played a pivotal role. One of the Tibetan battalions of SFF is still deployed there.


Operation Vijay

The DGS had used SFF in the
Kargil War The Kargil War, was fought between India and Pakistan from May to July 1999 in the Kargil district of Ladakh, then part of the Indian-administered state of Jammu and Kashmir (state), Jammu and Kashmir and along the Line of Control (LoC). In In ...
in 1999. Earlier, ARC surveillance missions had verified presence of Pakistani troops on the Indian side with photographic evidence.


Operation Snow Leopard

In the ongoing
Sino-Indian border dispute The Sino–Indian border dispute is an ongoing territorial dispute over the sovereignty of two relatively large, and several smaller, separated pieces of territory between China and India. The territorial disputes between the two countries st ...
, India used Tibetan components of SFF in
2020–2021 China–India skirmishes Beginning on 5 May 2020, People's Liberation Army, Chinese and Indian Army, Indian troops engaged in aggressive melee, face-offs, and skirmishes at locations along the Sino-Indian border, including near the disputed Pangong Lake in Ladakh and t ...
, to capture prominent hill tops south of the
Pangong Tso Pangong Tso or Pangong Lake (; zh, s=班公错, p=Bān gōng cuò; ) is an endorheic lake spanning eastern Ladakh and Ngari Prefecture, West Tibet situated at an elevation of . It is long and divided into five sublakes, called ''Pangong Tso' ...
in Ladakh on 31 August 2020 and thereafter in the Galwan River Valley conflict.India’s use of secret guerrilla force SFF in Ladakh signals a larger design to contain China
''The Print'', 7 September 2020
'Secret force' comprising Tibetans gets award for operation against China in Ladakh
''India Today'', 26 January 2021


Service chiefs

From 1965 to 1971, the Director General of Security was a separate post; since then the post has been held by Secretary, R&AW, except a brief interlude, when R. T. Nagrani held the post separately. After creation of the post of Principal Director, the incumbent of that post ran the organisation under the overall command of Secretary (R). The post of PD was shifted to the Ministry of Home Affairs on 15 January 2001 as Director General, SSB; when SSB and CIOA were moved. Thereafter, the post of Director, ARC was raised from Additional Secretary to Special Secretary level with the concomitant role of Head of Department, SFF.O.A. No.2701/2009 vs Union Of India on 7 January, 2010
Central Administrative Tribunal, Delhi


Director General (Security)


Principal Director, DGS

Incumbents of this post ran the DGS organisation since 1974 under overall command of Secretary (R).


Special Secretary, ARC


Rank structure

Note: Combatised personnel of SFF have pay parity with the Army, ''vide'' Cabinet Secretariat Order dated 16.10.2009; pension & pensionary benefits to SFF personnel are also at par with Indian Army for Group 'Y' 'Personnel Below Officer Rank' (PBORs). In addition, army personnel on deputation to Special Group (4 Vikas) of SFF get special force allowance (SFA) and para pay.Office Manual, Part X, Volume II
Defence Accounts Department, 2014, page 40
archived copy
/ref>


References

{{Reflist, 2 Indian intelligence agencies