Arun Singh asked me to review shortlisted guns: Sundarji
Former army chief General Krishnaswamy Sundarji says Arun Singh,
then minister of state for defence, specifically asked him in November 1985 to
review the guns shortlisted for purchase by the army.
The general said several factors
influenced the government's decision to buy the Bofors gun,
though the shortlist prepared by army headquarters from
mid-1984 had the French Sofma gun at the top.
Quick delivery, the extent of transfer of technology offered by
the manufacturers and political reliability, he said, were the three
main factors that favoured the Bofors howitzer.
There was no other major consideration that went into the
decision, the general said, as all the guns on the shortlist were ''fit
for the army.''
Arun Singh, who was apparently unhappy with
the attempt being made then to project the Sofma as the only
suitable gun, asked Sundarji to review the shortlist after he was
named General Arun S Vaidya's successor in November 1985 .
Sundarji said he had made it clear to
Vaidya that ''I am not going to do anything behind your back'' and
that the review would be done by a committee.
At a meeting with Arun Singh when views on the guns
were presented, it was made clear that both the Bofors and Sofma
guns were ''acceptable.''
Besides Vaidya, the meeting was attended by
Sundarji, Lieutenant General Ajay Singh and Brigadier D P Singh.
It was then agreed that both the guns were acceptable, but the
Bofors howitzer had ''a slight edge.''
Sundarji regretted that an attempt was made earlier by
army headquarters to place the range of the howitzer gun at 24
km suppressing the fact that it had a range of 30 km.
Meanwhile, the Central Bureau of Investigation recorded the statement of a
third retired army officer on Thursday in connection with the $ 1.3 billion
howitzer purchase.
CBI sources refused to identify the former army officer by name, only mentioning his rank --
lieutenant general. The 'examination' lasted over three hours, by far the
longest so far.
This was the second day of examination of witnesses in the
Bofors case since the 500-odd page Swiss bank accounts
relating to the gun deal were taken possession of by CBI Director
Joginder Singh in Berne, Switzerland, on January 21.
Two other retired lieutenant generals, Hriday N Kaul and K B Mehta, were
examined on Tuesday by the CBI's special
investigation team probing the Bofors case. Both meetings were short,
the one with the former lasting less than half-an-hour.
General Sundarji will be interviewed by the SIT on Monday, February 10, on why the Bofors
gun gained precedence over the French Sofma gun.
The army officer, who turned up at the CBI headquarters on Thursday, eluded the
posse of reporters and camera crews who waited for him for hours outside.
He left by the rear gate.
Sources said those co-operating with the CBI in its probe of the Bofors
kickbacks case preferred anonymity which suited the agency as this facilitated
smooth conduct of the investigations.
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