NEW DELHI – India’s cybersecurity chief Saturday stressed the need for aunified public relations command for the three wings of the armed forces toensure an upper hand in the narrative warfare with Pakistan, which, heopined, has “got its act together” through its Director General InterServices Public Relations (DG-ISPR).
National Cyber Security Coordinator Lieutenant General Rajesh Pant (retd)said the three wings of the armed forces have their own public relationsofficers and “they are going in different ways”.
“When are we going to have our own equivalent of the DGISPR because the(Indian armed forces) services have their own PRs and they are going indifferent ways. Somebody at the national level now has to look at thenarrative warfare and how to implement it in various domains,” he said.
Talking about the Director General Inter Services Public Relations(DGISPR), which serves as the spokesperson for the Pakistan Armed Forces,Pant said the neighbouring country got its act together in narrativewarfare through the agency.
“What we are finding from the other side – from the western border – thatsince the time they have created the DGISPR, they have got their acttogether,” he said here at a seminar on the topic of ‘Securing the FutureBattlespace: Information and Space Warfare’.
According to official Twitter handle @OfficialDGISPR, Major General AsifGhafoor is serving the post since December 2016.
Lt Gen (Retd) Rajesh Pant added, “When they (DGISPR) conduct narrativewarfare, let’s say in the case of Kashmir, the message they send to Europeis that human rights are being infringed.”
While when they engage with Islamic nations they tell them that Islam isunder threat, noted Pant, adding, “What they told southeast Asia is thatthere is a regional instability,” said Pant.
“So, they seem to have got their act together,” he concluded.
It is important to clarify what the three services of Indian armed forcesimply and mean by ‘information warfare’, he said.
“They should come out with the definition because now they are using theterms – as you are aware – like ‘narrative warfare’,” he said, India Todayhas reported.