Why the west hate india
As you know recently our Indian Space Research
Organization(ISRO) had been successfully did soft
landing on the South Pole of the Moon and launched
Aditya-L1 to do research of the Sun. Some countries
like the U.S.A are congratulating on the face but some
countries are doing media propaganda. Will you
believe me that this Chandrayaan mission would have
been succeed in 1991?
CIA’s Role In Delaying Chandrayaan
The LVM3-M4 rocket through which Chandrayaan 3 succeeded is
made up of the Cryogenic engine which contains of Oxygen (O 2)
and Hydrogen (H2) as an fuel. Not only this rocket, every rocket is
made up of this engine only. So exactly these capabilities India
should not get so they imposed sanctions on India in the year
1992.In this Russia gave us full support. After imposing sanctions
work was not done as India was not able to stop it’s work until it’s
done.USA released its CIA into the ground to make sure that India
should not get these engines from any other country too. Before this
India thought of importing cryogenic engines from other countries.
This engine looks like this.
Please the see the below table
Name of the Country of Deal Technology Name of the
cryogenic origin transfer company giving
engine
RL-10 U.S.A 6,617 No General
cr Dynamics
HM7B France 9,951 Yes(limited) Arian space
cr
11D56 Russia 240 cr Yes GLAVKOSMOS
In the year 1988 a US space company named General
dynamics offered a cryogenic engine named RL-10 at
the cost of 6,617 cr with no technology. Another space
company of France named Arian Space offered a
cryogenic engine named HM7B at the cost of 9,951 cr
with limited technology transfer. Fortunately in 1989 a
space company of Russia named GLAVCOSMOS
which is the commercial wing of the ROSCOSMOS
offered a cryogenic engine named 11D56 at a cost of
240 cr with technology transfer. As this deal was
economically and technologically was best. Foreign
this deal was accepted. But USA was not happy with
these and imposed sanctions on India and Russia as
said above by saying that India and newly formed
Russia are not the member of the MTCR(Missile
Technology Control Regime) and thus they cannot do
deal of cryogenic engine. See the level of hierocracy
when India asked this engines then there was no
MTCR violation but Russia came into picture they
imposed sanctions on us and also in the year 1992 the
current US president was Bill Clinton was warning
Russia like this.
”I am confident that the Russian leaders recognize the
wisdom of stopping the sale once they see the risk of
losing their economic aid. This no minor sale; this is
dangerous.” LA times quotes Bill Clinton from
1992.The then Senate committee (of which Senator
Joseph was member) threatened to block $24 billion in
aid to Russia.
USA was misusing it’s power as often it does with
other countries. But after these complications India’s
dream of cryogenic engine came true by two young
scientists. They were:
Director of Cryogenic department: Nambi
Narayan
Deputy Sasikumaran
They thought of to take the Russia’s cryogenic
engine to India. As you know already USA had
imposed sanctions on India’s ISRO and on the
Russia’s ROSCOSMOS. So their plane was to
import these engines from Russia so they paid Ural
airline extra to carry these cryogenic engines to
India. This was the set back for CIA. Sam Rajappa
a journalist of The Statesman news published a
detailed article about this.
The statesman News article
The Supreme Court judgment of 14 September in the infamous ISRO
espionage case has made only partial reparation to S Nambi Narayanan,
former director of ISRO’s cryogenic engine project. A three-judge
Bench led by Chief Justice Deepak Misra found “no scintilla of doubt
that the appellant, a successful scientist having national reputation, has
been compelled to undergo immense humiliation and ignominy.”
The Bench agreed with Narayanan that a mere compensation does not
serve him complete justice and directed for the constitution of a three
member committee headed by retired Supreme Court judge DK Jain to
investigate the role of the police officers who played a pivotal role in
implicating the former ISRO scientists in the cooked-up espionage case.
More than the Kerala police, the role of senior Intelligence Bureau
officers who plotted a conspiracy to sabotage India developing
cryogenic engine technology needs to be investigated and exposed,
particularly that of MK Dhar and Ratan Sehgal, joint directors of the IB,
and RB Sreekumar, deputy director of IB’s Kerala unit who was
formerly Commandant in charge of security of the Vikram Sarabhai
Space Centre, Thiruvananthapuram. Sreekumar went on to become
DGP, Intelligence, Gujarat. Since the Kerala police was dealing with an
extremely sensitive case and set in motion the criminal law without any
basis, the State government transferred the case to the CBI which found
the case fabricated by the CIA infiltrated IB in New Delhi.
ISRO made its first foray into cryogenic technology in 1970, led by VR
Gorariker, but was abandoned in 1974 and shifted its focus on the
development of liquid propellant engine that resulted in the manufacture
of Vikas engines used in the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle. On 15
October 1994, ISRO launched PSLV-D2 and put in orbit Indian Remote
Sensing Satellite IRS-P2. It was the first successful launch of an Indian
rocket that could be used for commercial satellite launches, hitherto the
preserve of the USA, Russia and the European Space Agency.
The next step for ISRO to remain relevant as a space-age nation was to
develop the GSLV (Geo Synchronous Launch Vehicle) capable of
carrying heavier payloads which required cryogenic engines. India’s
quest for mastering cryogenic technology was almost given up in 1974
and remained in cold storage till the 1980s. When ISRO decided to
procure the technology, it found the price quoted by the USA and France
exorbitant.
On 18 January 1991, ISRO signed an agreement with Glavkosmos,
commercial wing of the Russian space agency, for the supply of seven
cryogenic engines and transfer of technology. The USA promptly
imposed sanctions on India and Russia under provisions of the Missile
Technology Control Regime and forced Russia to annul the contract
although cryogenic engines were not used in missiles. ISRO, however,
managed to take possession of the contracted cryogenic engines with
technical drawings and managed to cart them to Thiruvananthapuram in
spite of Air India refusing to touch the cargo for fear of American
sanction.
ISRO, meanwhile, continued to remain content with a single operational
launch vehicle, the PSLV with limited payload capacity, and a single
launch site, Sriharikota. India’s space programme could not advance at
the pace envisioned by its founders because of its troubled history with
cryogenic engine development and sanctions imposed on ISRO by the
USA. Thanks to the ingenuity of Nambi Narayanan and his personal
contact with top scientists in Glavkosmos, he was able to secure the
seven cryogenic engines contracted by ISRO and move them to India in
four chartered flights.
It only added to the determination of the USA to scuttle ISRO’s
cryogenic engine technology development programme. Towards the
second half of 1994, Nambi Narayanan and his deputy P Sasikumaran
were “at the cusp of a cryogenic leap” when the Kerala police swooped
down on them with the fabricated charge of selling the Russian drawings
and blueprint of cryogenic engines to Pakistan for money through two
Maldivian women, Mariam Rasheeda and Fauziyya Hassan. The media,
particularly the Malayalam press, went along with the Kerala police in
full steam.
Rasheeda’s crime was resisting sexual overtures by police inspector
Vijayan who was looking after foreigners’ registration in
Thiruvananthapuram. According to the IB, Narayanan and Sasikumaran
took casual leave on 23 and 24 September 1994 and took Fauziyya to the
Liquid Propulsion Systems Centre and later went on a picnic to
Aruvikara dam, near Thiruvananthapuram. Official records show neither
had taken casual leave on those days. The visitor’s book at LPSC had no
entry of Fauziyya’s visit. So reckless was the police in making
allegations without any basis.
The IB team came with an agenda and stuck to it. Led by Messrs Dhar
and Sehgal, all they wanted was a confession from Narayanan.
Sasikumaran, unable to withstand torture, fell in line. Narayanan was
made of sterner stuff. Though physically broken down, he withstood all
their third degree methods of interrogation. In the end, CBI, which took
over the investigation, found no evidence to support the accused had
committed “any acts which were prejudicial to the sovereignty, integrity
and security of the state and violative of the Official Secrets Act, 1923.”
Accepting the findings of the CBI, the Chief Judicial Magistrate,
Ernakulam, discharged all the accused in the ISRO espionage case.
Dhar, one of the key fabricators of the spy case under the influence of
the CIA, was to retire by the beginning of 1995. He made desperate
attempts to change his date of birth so that he could get an extension of
service even after the Chief Judicial Magistrate dismissed the case for
lack of any shred of evidence. Sehgal, his co-conspirator, was caught
having clandestine meetings with CIA’s station chief in Delhi, Timothy
Long, and his deputy, Susan Brown.
Counterintelligence officers had found him receiving a huge packet of
money from one of the CIA officials in Delhi outside Ambassador
Hotel. Sehgal was given the choice of facing prosecution or put in his
papers. He chose the latter and settled down in the USA. Then Prime
Minister PV Narasimha Rao during a discussion in Parliament hinted at
the involvement of a ‘foreign country’ in thwarting the Russian
cryogenic engine contract. Timothy Long and Susan Brown were
expelled from India.
As a result of these shenanigans, ISRO’s work on cryogenic engine
technology got derailed and continues to remain dependent on the
European Space Agency to launch its heavier satellites from its launch
site in French Guyana. Many of the ISRO scientists were reluctant to
take up the challenge for fear of what happened to Narayanan and his
team.
After years of perseverance, the country’s first indigenous cryogenic
engine was successfully put through ground test for 12 minutes in 2007.
It took almost another decade for launching the first successful
operational flight of GSLV Mk-II with an indigenous cryogenic engine
and placed the heaviest satellite so far, INSAT- 3DR weighing 2,211 kg
in its intended geostationary orbit, and followed it by the first
development flight of GSLV Mk-III, the heaviest rocket ever made in
India, on 5 June 2017.
As you are seeing this flow chart IB had given orders
to the Kerala police to arrest the two scientists and the
Pakistani women under the orders of CIA. These all
came to know when CBI came to the ground.CBI also
came when Kerala police had wrote in the FIR that
these secretes ere received by Nambi Narayan through
K.Chandrashekar for $50,000.K.Chandrashekar was
also space scientist and also his business was connected
with Prabhakar Rao who was the son of the Prime
Minister of that who was P.V Narasimha Rao. The
moment this name came Kerala police transferred the
case file to the CBI. As I told you Nambi Narayan and
Sasikumaran were proved innocent in CBI
investigation. This whole trap was set up by the CIA
through the IB. Intact the former Sc judge D.K Jain
asked our scientists to get compensate but
unfortunately the hurt to reputation was done. Kerala
police’s third-degree torture and 6 months jail made
the dream of the Cryogenic engine delay. India healing
it’s hurts and getting help from the Europe Space
Agency(ESA) until 2017 when India’s first GSLV Mk-
III Cryogenic rocket was launched.
This was not the first attack to ISRO. China is also
targeting from long time. From now 4 years ago before
the launch of Chandrayaan 2 some days ago ISRO got
a mail full fishy virus. By mistakenly some employees
opened the mail. That virus had given the control of
ISRO system’s to the hackers.
Please the given report below
Ndtv’s report
North Korean Hackers May have Targeted ISRO
During Moon Mission: Report
At the time the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)
was trying to land Chandrayaan 2 spacecraft's Vikram lander
on the Moon, suspected North Korean hackers might have
attacked the space agency, the Daily Mail reported on Friday.
The ISRO was one of five government agencies to come
under their attack, said the report, adding that officials denied
that the attack impacted the Moon mission.
Employees are feared to have accidentally installed malware
on to their systems after opening phishing emails from North
Korean spammers.
According to a report in the Financial Times, ISRO was
warned of the cyber attack during the Chandrayaan-2 moon
mission in September.
Experts believe the attack was conducted using DTrack, a
type of malware linked to the Lazarus group which is believed
by the US authorities to be controlled by the North Korean
government.
According to cybersecurity firm Kaspersky, the malware has
been detected in financial institutions and research centres in
18 Indian states.
The reports on cyber-attack on ISRO came after the Nuclear
Power Corporation of India (NPCIL) last week confirmed the
presence of malware in its system at the Kudankulam nuclear
plant, which has been traced to North Korea's DTrack.
In a press statement, the NPCIL said "identification of
malware in NPCIL system was correct" but added that the
"infected PC" belonged to a user "who was connected in the
internet connected network used for administrative purposes".
It said the infected PC "has been isolated from the critical
internal network" and that the "networks are being
continuously monitored".
Explaining about Dtrack, Kaspersky's Security Researcher
Konstantin Zykov, in a recent event in Delhi, had said: "The
large amount of Dtrack samples we found demonstrated that
Lazarus is one of the most active APT (Advanced Persistent
Threat) groups, constantly developing and evolving threats in
a bid to affect large-scale industries and seeking to evade
detection."
"Their successful execution of Dtrack RAT proves that even
when a threat seems to disappear, it can be resurrected in a
different guise to attack new targets."
ISRO lost contact with its Vikram lander during the last stage
of the Moon landing operation on September 7, minutes
before it was due to land near the South Pole of the Moon.
As we all know North Korea is also called as the
“Puppet state of China.” Now coming from ISRO
itself they accepted the cyber attack that because of
this ISROS’s data was not compromised and it was
not the reason of the Chandrayaan 2 failure.
See the below report
Daiji World
The ISRO was one of five government agencies to come under their
attack, said the report, adding that officials denied that the attack
impacted the Moon mission.
Employees are feared to have accidentally installed malware on to
their systems after opening phishing emails from North Korean
spammers.
According to a report in the Financial Times, ISRO was warned of
the cyber attack during the Chandrayaan-2 moon mission in
September.
Experts believe the attack was conducted using DTrack, a type of
malware linked to the Lazarus group which is believed by the US
authorities to be controlled by the North Korean government.
According to cybersecurity firm Kaspersky, the malware has been
detected in financial institutions and research centres in 18 Indian
states.
The reports on cyber-attack on ISRO came after the Nuclear Power
Corporation of India (NPCIL) last week confirmed the presence of
malware in its system at the Kudankulam nuclear plant, which has
been traced to North Korea's DTrack.
In a press statement, the NPCIL said "identification of malware in
NPCIL system was correct" but added that the "infected PC"
belonged to a user "who was connected in the internet connected
network used for administrative purposes".
It said the infected PC "has been isolated from the critical internal
network" and that the "networks are being continuously monitored".
Explaining about Dtrack, Kaspersky's Security Researcher
Konstantin Zykov, in a recent event in Delhi, had said: "The large
amount of Dtrack samples we found demonstrated that Lazarus is
one of the most active APT (Advanced Persistent Threat) groups, c
onstantly developing and evolving threats in a bid to affect large-scale
industries and seeking to evade detection."
"Their successful execution of Dtrack RAT proves that even when a
threat seems to disappear, it can be resurrected in a different guise to
attack new targets."
But this was China’s indirect attack. But ISRO’s
commercial space agencies ANTRIX and IN-SPACE
were attacked directly by China.
On July 2015 ANTRIX website was hacked and
Chineese ads started to display. India’s cyber experts
had recovered in half day but for India it is matter of
concern. This incident was happened after 2 days after
launch of 5 British satellites where it was creating
reputation loss before the people.