29 November 1971 — Pri Minister's War Cabinet Room, South Block, New Delhi
The room didn't feel tense.
It felt… contained.
Like sothing volatile had been sealed inside and everyone present knew it could break if pushed the wrong way.
The heavy curtains shut out the evening. The long table in the center reflected the dim light in a dull sheen. Files were placed, but not opened. Water glasses untouched.
No one was here for routine discussion.
Indira Gandhi sat at the head of the table, still, composed, her fingers lightly resting together. Her expression gave nothing away—but her eyes were alert, moving, weighing.
To her right sat Jagjivan Ram, shoulders squared, jaw tight. To her left, Y. B. Chavan leaned back slightly, more observant than vocal—for now.
Further down, Swaran Singh sat with a file closed in front of him, fingers resting on it without opening it.
Across from them, Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw looked almost at ease, one arm resting lightly, but his gaze missed nothing.
Beside him, Air Chief Marshal P. C. Lal sat upright, calm, precise, waiting.
At the far end—
The Soviet Ambassador.
Still. Polite. Watching.
The silence stretched just long enough.
Indira broke it.
"General."
Manekshaw leaned forward slightly.
"We are out of ti," he said.
No preface. No hesitation.
Jagjivan Ram exhaled through his nose. "We are always 'out of ti' before a conflict," he said. "That does not justify bypassing process."
Manekshaw turned his head toward him, not offended—just direct.
"With respect," he said, "process doesn't hold a position under fire."
A faint shift across the table.
Swaran Singh glanced once at Indira, then back.
Manekshaw continued.
"Our formations are ready. But readiness is not just numbers—it's reliability. And right now… that reliability is uneven."
"Uneven how?" Chavan asked, finally speaking.
Manekshaw tapped the file lightly.
"Delayed deliveries. Inconsistent quality. Systems that pass inspection and fail in field conditions."
Jagjivan Ram's voice hardened slightly. "You're making a broad accusation."
"I'm making a field report," Manekshaw replied.
That ended that angle.
The Soviet Ambassador leaned forward just enough.
"The Soviet Union has ensured consistent support to India," he said smoothly. "There should be no gaps significant enough to justify… alternative arrangents."
Manekshaw's lips curved faintly.
"Yes," he said. "After negotiation. After tilines. After… patience."
A quiet pause.
Not quite a clash.
But not neutral either.
Indira's voice ca again.
"Continue."
Manekshaw opened the file.
"Certain units," he said, "have been testing non-standard equipnt in limited conditions."
That word—non-standard—tightened the room instantly.
Jagjivan Ram leaned forward. "On whose authorization?"
"Mine."
Flat.
Chavan looked at him more closely now.
"That's not a small decision, General."
"No," Manekshaw agreed. "It isn't."
A short silence followed.
Then Lal spoke, voice asured.
"The systems tested have shown improved targeting stability and faster operational response," he said. "Nothing experintal. Just… better execution."
"From where?" Jagjivan Ram asked.
No one said the na.
They didn't need to.
Swaran Singh spoke quietly.
"If these systems are what we think they are… then the question is not performance."
"It's control," Jagjivan Ram said imdiately.
That word shifted everything.
"Yes," he continued, leaning forward now. "If private industry begins supplying the military independently, what remains of state authority?"
Chavan added, slower, more careful, "Today supply. Tomorrow pricing. Then influence."
"Or dependency," Swaran Singh murmured.
The Soviet Ambassador nodded slightly.
"In other countries," he said, "such developnts have… complicated governance structures."
Manekshaw didn't look at him.
"Here," he said, "it's simplifying outcos."
That drew a few looks.
Jagjivan Ram's tone sharpened.
"This is not about outcos alone. This is about who controls them."
"Then control sothing that works," Manekshaw replied.
A faint reaction moved across the table.
That line landed harder than expected.
Chavan leaned forward, fingers tapping once.
"Let's be clear," he said. "We are discussing Shergill Industries."
No one denied it.
"And they are currently producing defense-grade systems outside full state supervision."
"Yes," Manekshaw said.
Jagjivan Ram leaned back slightly.
"That is not acceptable."
Swaran Singh didn't respond imdiately. Then—
"Is it unacceptable," he asked quietly, "or is it inconvenient?"
Jagjivan Ram turned toward him. "You're defending this?"
"I'm questioning timing," Swaran Singh replied. "We are days away from escalation. Disruption now—whether justified or not—has consequences."
"That is precisely why control is necessary," Jagjivan Ram said.
"Control that delays supply?" Manekshaw asked.
"Control that prevents future imbalance," he shot back.
The Soviet Ambassador leaned forward again.
"There is another factor," he said.
All eyes shifted.
"The regional situation is evolving," he continued. "There are… signals that external powers may increase presence."
No one asked which power.
He didn't need to say it.
Then he did.
"The deploynt of the USS Enterprise (CVN-65) in the region is being discussed."
The room stilled.
Completely.
That changed the scale.
Swaran Singh's fingers tightened slightly over the file.
Chavan leaned back, eyes narrowing.
Jagjivan Ram didn't speak imdiately.
Indira's gaze remained steady—but sharper now.
The Ambassador continued, voice calm.
"In such a situation… coordination between friendly nations becos critical."
A pause.
"Support," he added, "is not automatic. It depends on alignnt."
That wasn't a statent.
It was a condition.
Manekshaw's eyes shifted toward him.
"You're saying support depends on our internal decisions?" he asked.
"I'm saying stability encourages cooperation," the Ambassador replied smoothly.
Chavan exhaled slowly.
"That's not cooperation," he said. "That's leverage."
The Ambassador didn't deny it.
Silence stretched.
Then—
A knock.
Sharp. Controlled.
The Cabinet Secretary stepped in, holding a sealed docunt.
"Pri Minister."
Indira nodded once.
He hesitated only briefly.
"A communication from the parliantary bloc."
Jagjivan Ram frowned. "Which bloc?"
The answer ca carefully.
"The Sovereign Bloc."
That changed the room more than the Soviet warning had.
Indira didn't react outwardly.
"Read it."
The Secretary unfolded the paper.
"The undersigned mbers… representing a working legislative majority… wish to note that any abrupt disruption of active industrial supply chains at this stage would be… difficult to support within the current parliantary frawork."
No one moved.
The Secretary continued.
"Such actions may compel a reassessnt of legislative alignnt going forward."
Chavan muttered under his breath, "That's carefully worded."
Jagjivan Ram didn't.
"That's a threat," he said flatly.
The Secretary didn't stop.
"The bloc further notes that responsibility for any operational shortfall resulting from such disruption would be… publicly attributed."
Silence.
Heavy.
Swaran Singh spoke quietly.
"How many?"
The Secretary answered just as quietly.
"Enough to change the outco of a vote."
No exaggeration.
No drama.
Just fact.
Manekshaw leaned back slightly, watching reactions now instead of speaking.
Chavan ran a hand across his chin.
"So we have," he said slowly, "external pressure… internal production… and parliantary numbers… all converging at once."
"And losing control," Jagjivan Ram added.
"Or recognizing reality," Swaran Singh said.
Jagjivan Ram turned sharply. "You're comfortable handing defense production to a private entity?"
"I'm not comfortable disrupting it mid-crisis," Swaran Singh replied.
"That's not the sa thing."
"No," he said. "But it's the relevant thing."
The Soviet Ambassador spoke again.
"Rapid policy shifts under pressure," he said, "often lead to unintended consequences."
Chavan looked at him.
"So does delayed decision-making," he replied.
The Ambassador inclined his head slightly.
"Of course."
Indira finally leaned forward.
The movent was small.
But it reset the room.
"If we nationalize," she said, voice calm, "we disrupt production."
No one argued.
"If we do nothing," she continued, "we lose control."
No one denied that either.
She let the silence stretch.
Then—
"The Bill introduced today provides a frawork."
"It is not passed," Jagjivan Ram said imdiately.
"No," she agreed.
A pause.
"Which is why we will not wait."
Heads lifted.
Chavan watched her carefully now.
"You're considering an ordinance."
"I'm deciding it," she replied.
That ended the debate.
Imdiate reactions—
"This legitimizes—"
"This creates precedent—"
"This weakens—"
Indira raised her hand.
Silence.
"This is not a permanent structure," she said. "It is a warti necessity."
She looked at Jagjivan Ram directly.
"Control can be restructured later."
Then at Swaran Singh.
"Disruption cannot be undone."
Then at the Ambassador.
"India will manage its own decisions."
That line wasn't loud.
But it closed the door.
She turned to the Secretary.
"Prepare the ordinance."
No vote.
No delay.
Just execution.
Manekshaw leaned back, a faint exhale leaving him.
Not relief.
Just confirmation.
Lal remained composed—but there was quiet approval in the stillness.
Chavan said nothing—but didn't object again.
Jagjivan Ram sat back, jaw tight—but silent.
The Soviet Ambassador didn't speak.
But his eyes had changed.
The eting dissolved slowly. Chairs moved. Papers gathered.
No one argued anymore.
Because they all understood—
This wasn't about winning the debate.
It was about surviving the mont.
Outside, Delhi remained dark under blackout.
Inside South Block—
Power hadn't shifted loudly.
But it had shifted enough.
And everyone in that room knew it.
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