The Profession of Arms: A Guide for Young Army Officers
It takes courage, especially for a young officer, to check a man met on the road for not saluting properly or for slovenly appearance, but, every time he does, it adds to his stock of moral courage, and whatever the soldier may say, he has respect for the officer who does pull him up.
Read Document →The Dragon's Teeth: Assessing China's Military Modernization
PLA has focused on modernising its capabilities across all warfare domains to achieve these goals. This includes land, air, and maritime operations, nuclear, space, counter-space, electronic warfare and cyberspace operations, aiming to become a fully integrated joint force.
Read Document →Transforming the PLA: A Decade of reorganisation from SSF to ISF
PRC has engaged in a sustained and broad effort to transform the PLA from an infantry-heavy, low-technology, ground forces-centric military into a high-technology, networked force with an increasing emphasis on joint operations and naval and air power projection.
Read Document →Eyes without Borders: Exploring the World of Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) in the Digital Age
Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) is gaining prominence with the rise of social media, the digital society and the vast growth of publicly and commercially available information (PAI and CAI).
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The PLA’s Developing Cyber Warfare Capabilities and India's Options
Informationised warfare blurs the lines between peacetime and wartime. A nation in the information age cannot wait for the hostilities to break out to collect intelligence, carryout influence operations, develop antisatellite systems or design computer software weapons.
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Galwan and After
Why did China did this when he is under tremendous pressure in all fronts, is this China's salami slice tactics being progressed rigorously, what will be new Rules of Engagement, what will be escalatory control mechanism, who has taken this decision, will there be some pressure put by China in India's North-East through insurgency.
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India’s Joint Doctrine for Cyberspace Operations: A Critical Review
Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) General Anil Chauhan and Secretary, Department of Military Affairs, formally released declassified versions of the Joint Doctrines for Cyberspace Operations during the Chiefs of Staff Committee meeting in New Delhi.
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Know your Enemy General(now Field Marshal) Syed Aseem Munir
Gen SA Munir's position in the hierarchy of Pakistan was not very comfortable. The state of economy, insurgency in Pakhtoonistan and Balochistan, attack on the Jaffar Express, constant protests by supporters of Imran Khan's supporters inside and outside of parliament.
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Decoding Operation SINDOOR: Key Aspects and Implications
Precision strikes were carried out on nine sites—four in Pakistan and five in PoK—linked to anti-India terrorist groups such as the LeT, JeM and the Hizbul Mujahideen. The targeted sites included Muridke (LeT headquarters) and Bahawalpur (JeM headquarters).
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Chinese Cyber Exploitation in India's Power Grid - Is There a linkage to Mumbai Power Outage?
The New York Times (NYT), based on analysis by a U.S. based private intelligence firm Recorded Future, reported that a Chinese entity penetrated India’s power grid at multiple load dispatch points. Chinese malware intruded into the control systems that manage electric supply across India, along with a high-voltage transmission substation and a coal-fired power plant
Read Document →20 March 2014
India Will Not Support Western Sanctions Against Russia
In another Varanasi
As Varanasi becomes a gigantic political ‘akhara’, these esoteric histories might make us think more reflectively about our civilisational aspirations. (PTI)
Here, intellectual engagement transcended identities in the name of knowledge.
I was thinking of the project in the context of a rather perplexing conundrum. I was teaching two texts back to back: Iqbal’s dazzling book, The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam, and Sri Aurobindo’s ambitious The Human Cycle. One of the questions emerging from the discussion was this. These are works of breathtaking ambition. They have a philosophy of history, they deeply engage with Western thinkers like Nietzsche and Bergson, they synthesise reason with other aspects of the human personality, and they wrestle with questions of community and humanity. They engage with the whole world.
But they do not engage the traditions adjacent to them. It is almost as if, except for a cursory reference to idolatry, Hindu thought does not exist for Iqbal, and Islam does not for Aurobindo.
This is all the more surprising because the philosophical ground they occupied, a discussion of being and reason, could have been amenable to such a dialogue. After all, both are talking to Nietzsche. Aurobindo was later to say that he could have engaged with Islam if he knew Persian, and that Sufi philosophy could perhaps provide a philosophical meeting ground. Sufism was, of course, precisely the philosophical stance Iqbal criticised.
But the larger puzzle is this: why, despite an extraordinary coexistence of Hinduism and Islam, is their mutual philosophical engagement so meagre? Carl Ernst has laboriously documented Persian translations of yoga and other texts, and there are scattered references to Islamic thinking in Sanskrit texts. But the scale of deep conceptual engagement has remained surprisingly modest on all sides. Whatever the engagement between Hinduism and Islam at the vernacular level, at the level of philosophical thought, these were like the banks of two rivers running parallel but not destined to meet.
MH370: India’s wake-up call
Fighting terrorism involves imagining and preparing for the unimaginable. India has a dangerously poor record of doing either
Late in the summer of 2012, two young men sat at either end of an Internet connection linking Karachi with Kathmandu, weaving online fantasies. Their dreams, unlike those of most people their age, didn’t centre around music, or money, or love. Muhammad Zarar Siddibapa, alleged to have been the operational head of the Indian Mujahideen’s urban bombing campaign against India, wanted to know if his Karachi-based boss, Riyaz Ahmad Shahbandri, could find him a nuclear bomb. The two men, the National Investigation Agency says, discussed attacking Surat “with nuclear warheads if they could be procured.”
It was a meaningless, idle daydream — the kernel from which all hideous nightmares are born. The surreal disappearance of Malaysia Airlines MH370 is a good occasion for Indians to start thinking about what might happen if we are ever compelled to live those nightmares.
Bar online speculation as idle as the Indian Mujahideen’s Internet chatter, there’s no reason to think that MH370 was hijacked to stage a 9/11-type attack on an Indian city or nuclear installation. There’s even less reason to think the aircraft might have been fitted with nuclear, biological or chemical weapons. Yet, on the morning of September 11, 2001, there was no good reason at all to believe a terrorist attack involving hijacked jets might bring down the Twin Towers in New York.Threats from the air
The fact is, however, that speculation is a useful intellectual tool. MH370, which succeeded in evading detection during its suspected flight across multiple countries, was in range of Indian cities, industrial sites housing toxic chemicals and nuclear facilities — which necessitates asking the question, “what if”?
Fighting terrorism involves imagining and preparing for the unimaginable: and India has a dangerously poor record of doing either.
CHOOSING BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE
Talking to the Taliban won’t bring peace to Pakistan unless the militants are militarily weakened. Unfortunately, the Pakistani Army, trained for conventional warfare against India, is ill-prepared for counter-insurgency battles
Pakistan is at a crossroads, faced with an existential dilemma: Choosing between a liberal, progressive, inclusive Islamic democracy, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, or an extremist radical Emirate governed by the sharia’h. Pakistan was one of three countries that recently supported an ideologically similar Taliban regime in Afghanistan. The ill-thought and half-fought war against terrorism in Federally Administered Tribal Areas gave birth to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan which was baptised with the debris of the Lal Masjid and embedded in radical Islam.
The 40 or so motley groups that make up the TTP now enjoy strategic depth from Kunar Province in Afghanistan to Karachi, easily out-performing for honours in extremism the Punjabi Taliban, consisting notably of the Lashkar-e-Tayyeba, the Jaish-e-Mohammad and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, the original crown jewels and strategic assets of the ISI. The Punjabi Taliban do not threaten the Government in Islamabad as they are nurtured by it and could, in an extreme contingency, act as a foil to the TTP. The one point agenda of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is to keep Punjab off-limits for the TTP.
The national question is how best to deal with the TTP: Through military offensive or dialogue and deal, though neither works singly but only in tandem. An environment of confusion and uncertainty prevails in Islamabad. The ceasefire is broken and re-broken as the fear of a blowback and reluctance by the Army to join in close-quarter battle have given way to surgical strikes which too are now on hold.
Turkestan Islamic Party Expresses Support for Kunming Attack
THERE IS NO POINT PLAYING BADMINTON WITH A WRESTLER
Interview with Robert D. Kaplan
*** Low-Tech Terrorism
*** Andaman and Nicobar Islands: India’s Strategic Outpost
First, Do No Harm
IS TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE A FORGOTTEN ISSUE IN AFGHANISTAN?
Myanmar: Counting Problems
How China Strengthens Japan’s Navy
Leadership: China And The Bad Old Ways
China’s Energy Future at a Crossroads
Japan and China’s Dispute Goes Nuclear
China Reacts to the Crimea Referendum
Japan’s Strategic Push with Turkey
Stop this man: U.S. needs deeper involvement in Ukraine as Vladimir Putin raises the stakes
