Concepts

National Security Guard (NSG)

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectPolity

Definition

India's elite federal counter-terrorism and counter-hijack contingency force, raised under the National Security Guard Act, 1986, and deployed for hostage rescue, neutralising terrorists, and VIP protection.

Key points

  • It was raised in 1984 and the Act passed in 1986, in the aftermath of Operation Blue Star, modelled partly on Germany's GSG-9 and Britain's SAS.
  • Its personnel are popularly called "Black Cats" from their black combat dress; it functions under the Ministry of Home Affairs.
  • It is a task-oriented "Zero Error" force, not a border-guarding or static-security force; its core roles are counter-terrorism, counter-hijack, hostage rescue, and bomb disposal.
  • It draws personnel on deputation from the Army (the Special Action Group, the main strike element) and from the CAPFs and State police (the Special Ranger Groups).
  • It led the response to the 26 November 2008 Mumbai attacks (Operation Black Tornado) and now has regional hubs to cut response time.

Why it matters for CAPF

The NSG is the apex contingency counter-terror force; its raising after Operation Blue Star, its 1986 Act, the "Black Cats" tag, and its 2008 Mumbai role are common internal-security facts.

Common confusion

The NSG is a strike and rescue contingency force, not an investigation agency (that is the NIA) and not a border force. It is composed of deputationists from the Army and the CAPFs rather than being a force with its own permanent cadre at the operator level.

One-line recall

Elite "Black Cats" counter-terror and hostage-rescue force (Act of 1986), under the MHA, raised after Operation Blue Star.

concept nia, concept central armed police forces overview, concept special frontier force, concept uapa

Parent note

terrorism and counter terrorism

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