National Security Guard (NSG)
- The NSG is a counter-terrorism unit that formally came into existence in 1986 by an act of Parliament- ‘National Security Guard Act, 1986’.
- The idea behind raising such force came in the aftermath of Operation Blue Star (an Indian military action carried out to remove militant religious leader from the Golden Temple, Amritsar) in 1984, Akshardham Temple attack and the assassination of former PM Indira Gandhi, for ‘combating terrorist activities with a view to protect states against internal disturbances.’
- It operates under the Ministry of Home Affairs and is a task-oriented force that has two complementary elements in the form of:
- Special Action Group (SAG) comprising of the Army personnel- is the main offensive or the strike wing of the NSG, and
- Special Ranger Groups (SRG) comprising of personnel drawn from the Central Armed Police Forces/State Police Forces. They generally handle VIP
- The head of NSG- designated as Director General (DG), is selected and appointed by the Minister of Home
- The motto of ‘Sarvatra, Sarvottam, Suraksha’ has always been upheld by it with a focus on its basic philosophy of swift and speedy strike and immediate withdrawal from the theatre of
- National Security Guard has been given the specific role to handle all facets of terrorism in any part of the country as a Federal Contingency Force.
- The NSG is trained to conduct counter-terrorist task including counter hijacking tasks on land, sea, and air; Bomb disposal (search, detection, and neutralization of IEDs), Post Blast Investigation (PBI), and Hostage Rescue
- The NSG personnel are often referred to in the media as Black Cat Commandos because of the black outfit and black cat insignia worn on their
Operations undertaken:
- Operation Black Thunder (Golden Temple, Amritsar, 1986 & 1988)
- Operation Ashwamedh (Indian Airlines Flight-IC427 hijacking, India, 1993)
- Operation Thunderbolt or Vajra Shakti (Akshardham Temple attack, Gujarat, 2002)
- Operation Black Tornado (Mumbai Blasts, 2008)