5 June 2026

How many years behind China is India?

The Indic Prism  |  Rohit Shinde

India lags China significantly across multiple economic and developmental metrics, with the gap often widening rather than converging. In nominal GDP per capita, India is approximately 18 years behind China, reaching China's 2007-08 level of around $2,900. When measured by Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) GDP per capita, India trails China by about 12 years.

A Review of India's 2023 Space Policy and Entrepreneurship Ecosystem

Carnegie India | Harshan Vazhakunnam

India's space sector is undergoing a significant transformation, shifting from a government-centric model to one increasingly accommodating private enterprise. The 2020 space reforms and the Indian Space Policy (ISP) 2023 have redefined public and private participation, projecting India's space economy to grow fivefold from $8.4 billion in 2022 to $44 billion by 2033.

Pakistan’s Diplomatic Pivot Makes It a Trump-Era Power Player

Foreign Policy | Azeem Ibrahim

Pakistan has strategically pivoted its diplomatic approach, positioning itself as a significant power player during the Trump administration. Islamabad has adeptly learned to present its diplomatic initiatives in a manner that aligns with the U.S. president's desired public image. This calculated strategy allows Pakistan to leverage its interactions with the United States, potentially enhancing its influence and achieving its foreign policy objectives.

China Aims A.I. at Predicting Who Could Pose a Political Risk

The New York Times  |  Julian E. Barnes

A Chinese company, Geedge Networks, is developing artificial intelligence-powered technology to enable authoritarian governments to not only monitor dissidents but also predict who might become one in the future. This work, appearing to be in the research stage with its government-supported MESA Lab, aims to generate profiles of Chinese citizens by examining location data and internet use to highlight individuals posing a political risk.

Iran Embraces a Forever War

Foreign Affairs  |  Mohammad Ayatollahi Tabaar

For the past two months, Iran and the United States have engaged in intermittent and ultimately unsuccessful peace negotiations. These discussions followed a very shaky cease-fire agreement established in early April. Throughout this period, officials from both nations exchanged and subsequently rejected various long-term proposals, indicating a fundamental disagreement on the terms for a lasting resolution.

Operation Jailbreak: the Army’s massive push to hack its own systems and make them talk to each other

DefenseScoop | Drew F. Lawrence

The U.S. Army launched "Operation Jailbreak," a month-long "hackathon" at Fort Carson, bringing together engineers from over 50 defense companies to integrate its disparate military systems. This initiative, part of the new Right to Integrate (R2I) strategy, aims to dismantle long-standing connectivity restrictions preventing missile systems, tanks, and drones from exchanging data.

Soldiers do not care about your milestones. Build accordingly.

LinkedIn  |  Matthew Paul

The U.S. Army is transitioning its software development from legacy waterfall systems to commercial, cloud-enabled platforms utilizing Agile principles and DevSecOps. The primary challenge, however, is not technological but cultural, requiring a sustained commitment to modern software practices. Successful programs must recognize that software is never truly "done," necessitating continuous evolution and treating sustainment as a core responsibility.

A Trump Deal With Iran Could Spell Trouble for Netanyahu

Foreign Policy  |  Aaron David Miller, Daniel C. Kurtzer

U.S. President Donald Trump consistently employs a "bully pulpit" strategy, threatening adversaries and allies with severe consequences to achieve his objectives. This approach has yielded mixed results, such as compelling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to accept a 20-point Gaza peace plan in October 2025 after Trump threatened to withdraw support.

Foreign Policy Analysis and Trump: Risk, Iran, and the Limits of Decision-Making Models –

E-International Relations | Kristian Alexander

Donald Trump’s decision to strike Iran represents a consequential use of force, emerging from a complex interplay of strategic calculation, political instinct, and leadership style. This action challenges existing Foreign Policy Analysis (FPA) frameworks, requiring a hybrid approach to understand a decision-making process that is both structured and deeply personal.

The Semantic Pixel: Why the U.S. Must Build the Ultimate Multi-Modal Foundation Model

The Cipher Brief  |  Mark Munsell

The United States must develop a National Geospatial-Intelligence Embedding Model (NGEM) to maintain decision advantage, building upon commercial advancements like Google DeepMind's AlphaEarth Foundations (AEF) model, released in July 2025. While AEF provides pixel-level geospatial embeddings, the proposed NGEM would integrate the intelligence community's diverse multi-physics and temporally deep data.

The Epidemic of GPS Jamming

Foreign Policy  |  Elisabeth Braw

On May 21, UK Defense Secretary John Healey's Royal Air Force plane, a Dassault Falcon 900LX, experienced satellite signal jamming, likely by Russia, during his return flight from Estonia after visiting British troops. This incident underscores a persistent and rapidly growing global epidemic of GPS disruption, impacting signals crucial for safe air and sea travel.

Arms Trends in Ukraine: 25 May - 31 May, 2026

Ukraine's Arms Monitor  |  Olena Kryzhanivska

Sweden will provide Ukraine with a major military assistance package worth approximately $2.7 billion, including 16 Gripen C/D fighter jets equipped with Meteor long-range air-to-air missiles. Ukrainian pilots are already training in Sweden, with deliveries of used aircraft expected by early 2027 and newer Gripen E/F models by 2030, aiming for 100-150 total.

False Targets, Real Survivability: Here’s What’s Keeping the Army from Borrowing Ukraine’s Air Defense Decoy Techniques

Modern War Institute  |  Trevor Alexander, Christopher Burlison

Ukraine's Patriot air defense units successfully employ medium-fidelity decoys to deceive Russian targeting, maintain critical infrastructure coverage, and increase enemy costs. Despite Russian claims of destroying numerous Patriot systems, Ukraine's limited seven batteries (as of October 2025) remain operational, showcasing decoy effectiveness. These cheap, attritable decoys, often made from wood and salvaged parts, force Russia to expend intelligence and matรฉriel resources.

How a monster ocean heatwave could fuel a super El Niรฑo

The Bulletin | Mariana Bernardi Bif, Franz Philip Tuchen

An over 80 percent chance of an El Niรฑo event emerging by July 2026, coupled with a 9,000-mile marine heatwave forming in the North Pacific since late 2025, is raising scientific concerns about a potential "super" or "Godzilla" El Niรฑo. These concurrent extreme warming events could prolong marine heatwaves, disrupt fisheries and ecosystems, and intensify global climate impacts into 2027.

Your Phone Is Watching You Right Now — Here's How to Prove It

Dejuremedia | Joshua Biddle

A global surveillance system, GAEN (Google/Apple Exposure Notification), continuously broadcasts smartphone locations, even when devices are off, according to an investigation. A whistleblower, "Brutus," in Central America, used a free Bluetooth scanner app to uncover devices with illegal, unregistered MAC addresses tracking individuals via device signatures and geographic encoding into "15-minute zones."

Deterrence Is Not Enough in the Age of Synthetic Asymmetry

The Cipher Brief | Dr. Dave Venable

Traditional deterrence is insufficient against synthetic asymmetry, an era where technological convergence enables small actors to impose disproportionate costs on states through diffuse, deniable, and mutating threats. This challenge, exemplified by incidents like the Colonial Pipeline attack and NotPetya, renders Cold War security strategies obsolete due to attribution breakdown and the low cost of attack versus high cost of kinetic response.

Managing the Strategic Gradient: Governance, Doctrine, and the Logic of Irregular War

Small Wars Journal | Andrew Rolander

French military intervention in Mali with Operation Serval in 2013, followed by Operation Barkhane, initially pushed jihadist fighters out but ultimately led to a less stable Sahel and French expulsion by 2022. This recurring pattern highlights a fundamental failure of irregular warfare doctrine to recognize the "governance gradient"—the dynamic movement of population allegiance between competing authority systems in transitional political spaces.

FIGHTING LENS: MILITARY DOCTRINE AND THE FUTURE OF WARFARE IN ASIA

The International Institute for Strategic Studies

Military doctrines are strong indicators of how armed forces plan and intend to fight, with the United States, China, and India preparing for potential wars in the Asia-Pacific. The US military doctrine focuses on denying China a fait accompli seizure of Taiwan by establishing capabilities for sustained defense, resilience, counter-air, anti-surface warfare, and countering anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) operations.

Invisible Conflict: Defending Against Hybrid Non-Kinetic Warfare

The Cipher Brief | Gilad Ben-Ziv

Iran-linked hackers recently targeted critical infrastructure in the US, disrupting multiple oil, gas, and water facilities, and a major medical device maker's operations, including an emergency system for first responders. This exemplifies hybrid non-kinetic warfare, a strategy where threat actors orchestrate prolonged campaigns to destabilize adversaries and erode social cohesion without triggering military retaliation.

The Killing Machine: Ten Thousand Years and We Still Haven’t Figured This Out

Small Wars Journal

Organized warfare over ten millennia has consistently failed to reduce civilian casualties, which now constitute 60%–90% of total conflict fatalities in modern urban combat, despite extraordinary technical advancements. In 2025, the Action on Armed Violence project recorded 45,362 civilians killed or injured by explosive weapons, with 97% of these casualties occurring in populated areas.

The Indispensable Interceptor: Air Defense and the Problem of Cost-Exchange Logic

Modern War Institute  |  Peter Mitchell

Iran's October 2024 launch of two hundred ballistic missiles at Israel demonstrated the indispensable role of high-end air defense systems like Patriot, THAAD, Aegis, and Arrow. While Admiral Brad Cooper noted success in flipping the cost curve for drone warfare, applying this cost-exchange logic to advanced interceptors risks undermining defense against catastrophic threats.

How America’s Adversaries Compete Across Peace and War

The Cipher Brief  |  Dave Pitts

Iran, facing precise and lethal U.S. and Israeli strikes beginning February 28, 2026, did not surrender, instead demonstrating a strategy of "Endless Warfare." This approach, also adopted by other U.S. adversaries, involves persistent confrontation operating both below and above the threshold of open conflict, aiming for cumulative gains and exhausting U.S.

Armies Can’t Win Wars Alone

Real Clear Defense  |  David A. Deptula

The claim that wars are won solely by conquering and occupying ground is challenged as an enduring, overly simplistic, and misleading clichรฉ. Modern military campaigns succeed through integrated capabilities across all domains—land, sea, air, space, and cyber—to achieve defined political objectives, which do not always necessitate occupation or territorial conquest.

Opinion – What the Iran War Vindicates about Clausewitz

E-International Relations  |  Andrew Latham

The U.S.–Iran war vindicates Carl von Clausewitz, not merely as a catalog of war's enduring features, but as a diagnostician of Washington's strategic failures. The conflict demonstrates an inversion of the means-ends relationship, where military operations dictated political objectives, leading to an undefined political end state. This lack of a legible terminal condition means the war merely pauses, rather than concludes.

Political Research Is Always Ethically and Politically Suspect

E-International Relations | Krishna Batabyal

Political research is inherently ethically and politically suspect, raising legitimate questions about power and values rather than being invalid. Research relationships feature structural power asymmetries, unpredictable harms, and compromised consent. Fujii (2012) highlights the power imbalance between researcher and researched, where consent is influenced by social pressure or perceived benefits, and Pachirat (2009) shows neutrality is an illusion.

4 June 2026

India’s Semiconductor Ecosystem Is Maturing—and ASML Is Taking Notice

Carnegie India | Konark Bhandari

ASML, the Netherlands-based semiconductor lithography machine manufacturer, recently signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Tata Electronics to accelerate the establishment of Tata’s semiconductor fab in Dholera, India. This partnership reflects India's maturing semiconductor ecosystem, which has also attracted Tokyo Electron, Merck Electronics, ROHM, and Intel. India offers a crucial new market for ASML, especially as Dutch firms face restrictions on selling semiconductor manufacturing equipment (SME) to China.

Pakistan Monthly Roundup: May 2026

Brief

Pakistan's army chief undertook two trips to Tehran and accompanied the Prime Minister to Beijing in May 2026, signaling significant diplomatic and strategic engagements. The Punjab wheat procurement model collapsed, with private aggregators securing less than a fifth of their revised target. Inflation was projected to hit 11.0 to 11.5 percent year-on-year, a 23-month high.

The 11th NPT Review Conference ends with a whimper

The Bulletin

The 11th Review Conference of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) concluded in deadlock, mirroring outcomes in 2015 and 2022, primarily due to an unresolved regional dispute concerning Iran. The United States insisted on explicitly naming Iran for non-compliance with the treaty, while Iran rejected any mention of its “peaceful nuclear program,” leading to an impasse.

Can China Stop Its Demographic Slide? Can the United States?

RAND  |  Michael Pollard, Jennifer Bouey, Tahina Montoya, Kelly Atkinson

China faces a significant demographic decline, with its fertility rate continuing to slump despite policy changes like allowing two children in 2015 and three in 2021. RAND researchers project China could end this century with 786 million fewer people, impacting its military security by needing better recruits for a technologically advanced force, and its economic security due to an aging, shrinking workforce increasing pension and healthcare costs.

Is Beijing the world’s ‘living room’? China is enjoying the global stage, but there are limits to its influence

The Conversation

Recent state visits to Beijing by Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump, alongside other world leaders, have positioned China in the global spotlight, leading some analysts to describe it as a "stabilising force" and an "indispensable global power." Chinese media even characterized Beijing as an international "living room" and declared the world was entering "Beijing time."

The Quad’s new agenda: ports, cables and minerals

Asia Times  |  Vivek Y Kelkar

The Quad foreign ministers' meeting in New Delhi unveiled new initiatives on Pacific infrastructure, maritime surveillance, critical mineral partnerships, and maritime domain awareness, signaling a strategic shift beyond military balances. Decisions included supporting a port in Fiji and India's Great Nicobar project, reflecting the growing importance of infrastructure, logistics networks, and maritime corridors for trade and energy flows in the Indo-Pacific.

Can Iran’s ‘Axis of Resistance’ Rebound?

National Interest  |  Mohammed Ayoob

The Iran War has severely impacted Tehran's "Axis of Resistance," a loose network of state and non-state actors across Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, and Gaza. US-Israeli strikes on Iranian leadership and attrition of key partners like Hamas and Hezbollah have weakened the axis structurally, but not fatally. Its future depends on organizational resilience, Iran's capacity to reconstitute networks, and shifting regional politics.

Chinese Missile Might Have Been Used to Shoot Down F-15E in Iran – U.S. Officials

The Aviationist | Parth Satam

U.S. officials are investigating the possibility that a Chinese-made shoulder-fired Man-Portable Air Defense System (MANPADS) missile was used to shoot down a U.S. F-15E Strike Eagle over Iran on May 30, 2026. This follows earlier Donald Trump’s hints from April and denials from the Chinese Embassy regarding Chinese weapon transfers.

The Gulf Cooperation Council’s Security Dilemma

Geopolitical Futures  |  Hilal Khashan

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) was established in 1981 by six Arab countries bordering the Persian Gulf, primarily to counter the security threats posed by their more powerful and ambitious neighbors, Iran and Iraq. Despite this foundational objective, the GCC member states have demonstrably struggled to achieve comprehensive military cooperation and robust defense integration.

Iran attacks damage 20 US military sites since start of war, satellite images show

BBC  |  Merlyn Thomas, Alex Murray, Matt Murphy

Iran has damaged 20 US military sites across eight Middle Eastern countries since the start of the war, satellite images and videos analyzed by BBC Verify reveal. This suggests Iran's counter-attacks are more extensive and precise than publicly acknowledged, inflicting millions of dollars in damage to state-of-the-art air defense systems, refuelling aircraft, and radars.