My first Magazine Wings of Fire | Seite 96

Joshi, and Air Chief Marshal SK Kaul. and debated as a collective endeavour. Thus, a high level body called the Missile Technology Committee was formed within DRDL. The concept of management by participation was evoked and earnest efforts were made to involve middle-level scientists and engineers in the management activities of the laboratory. Days of debate and weeks of thinking finally culminated in the longterm ‘Guided Missile Development Programme’. I had read somewhere, “Know where you are going. The great thing in the world is not knowing so much where we stand, as in what direction we are moving.” What if we did not have the technological might of the Western countries, we knew we had to attain that might, and this determination was our driving force. To draw up a clear and well-defined missile development programme for the production of indigenous missiles, a committee was constituted under my chairmanship. The members were ZP Marshall, then the Chief of Bharat Dynamics Limited, Hyderabad, NR Iyer, AK Kapoor and KS Venkataraman. We drafted a paper for the perusal of the Cabinet Committee for Political Affairs (CCPA). The paper was given its final shape after consulting the representatives of the three Defence Services. We estimated an expenditure of about Rs 390 crores, spread over a period of twelve years. Development programmes often get stuck by the time they reach the production stage, mainly because of lack of funding. We wanted to get funds to develop and produce two missiles—a low-level quick reaction Tactical Core Vehicle and a Medium Range Surface-to-Surface Weapon System. We planned to make a surface-to-air medium range weapon system with multi-target handling capability during the second phase. DRDL had been known for its pioneering work in the field of anti-tank missiles. We proposed to develop a third generation anti-tank guided missile having ‘fire-and-forget’ capabilities. All my colleagues were pleased with the proposal. They saw an opportunity to pursue afresh activities initiated long ago. But I was not entirely satisfied. I longed to revive my buried dream of a Re-entry Experiment Launch Vehicle (REX). I persuaded my colleagues to take up a technology development project to generate data for use in the design of heat shields. These shields were required for building up capability to make longrange missiles in the future. I made a presentation in the South Block. The presentation was presided over by the Defence Minister of the time R Venkataraman, and attended by the three Service Chiefs: General Krishna Rao, Air Chief Marshal Dilbagh Singh and Admiral Dawson. The Cabinet Secretary, Krishna Rao Sahib, Defence Secretary, SM Ghosh and Secretary, Expenditure, R Ganapathy were present. Everyone seemed to have all sorts of doubts— about our capabilities, about the feasibility and availability of required technological infrastructure, about the viability, the schedule and cost. Dr Arunachalam stood by me like a rock throughout the entire question-answer session. Members were skeptical and apprehensive of drift—which they felt was common among scientists. Although some questioned our ambitious proposal, everyone, even the doubting Thomases, were very excited about the idea of India having her own missile systems. In the end, we were asked by Defence Minister Venkataraman to meet him in the evening, about three hours later. We spent the intervening time working on permutations and combinations. If they sanctioned only Rs 100 crores, how would we allocate it? Suppose they gave us Rs 200