Debates on military artificial intelligence (AI) often focus on great power dynamics, overlooking how middle powers like Pakistan embed restraint into their organizational and technical practices. This article introduces Systems Restrained Realism (SRR), a framework extending defensive realism into the machine age by theorizing restraint as a deliberate doctrinal posture.
Indian Strategic Studies
11 June 2026
Escalation by Algorithm, Restraint by Architecture: Pakistan’s Military AI Divergence
Pakistan: The Unfinished War Against Kharjeeyat – OpEd
Pakistan's counter-terrorism efforts, traditionally focused on security operations and kinetic force, face a persistent challenge from "Kharjeeyat," an extremist ideology that fuels violence even after terrorist networks are dismantled. This worldview, akin to the historical Khawarij, justifies violence against the state, society, and other Muslims, a rationale shared by groups like TTP and ISKP in modern South Asia.
Airpower Under the Nuclear Shadow: Lessons from Operation Sindoor for Limited War Doctrine
The four-day air war between India and Pakistan in May 2025, triggered by India’s May 7 missile strikes on Pakistani territory, represented the most intense air combat between nuclear-armed states in history. Pakistan’s Operation Bunyanum Marsoos demonstrated a sophisticated, integrated Chinese-origin defense architecture, achieving decisive tactical results against advanced Western platforms despite India’s numerical superiority.
How the Dreams and Aspirations of Bangladeshi Students Have Been Crushed
Bangladesh's political climate has significantly impacted the aspirations of its students, particularly concerning their affiliation with the Chhatra League, the student wing of the Awami League. Before October 2024, such affiliations were not considered an offense, and the author argues they should not be treated as one now, implying a retrospective application of new rules.
China and AI-Military Integration: Perspectives, Opportunities, and Challenges
China is strategically pivoting towards military "intelligentisation" (ζΊθ½ε), integrating AI into the PLA to gain a decisive edge against the United States. Driven by mandates from the 20th National Congress of the CPC, Beijing is aggressively modernizing its military from information-guided and network-centric warfare to AI and automation-driven systems.
China Expands Undersea Mapping To Gain Strategic Advantage And Secure Critical Resources – Analysis
China is undertaking an expansive effort to strengthen its position across global oceans through underwater mapping and surveillance, driven by strategic military interests and the search for critical seabed resources. Beijing has deployed a broad network of activities spanning the Pacific, Indian, and Arctic oceans, collecting detailed information on seabed conditions, terrain, and oceanographic patterns.
2028: Two scenarios for global AI leadership
The United States and its allies must secure a lead in AI development over authoritarian governments like the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to prevent unprecedented repression and shifts in global power. Access to advanced computer chips ("compute") is paramount, where American companies currently hold an advantage, maintained by export controls.
The Episodic War
On June 8, 2026, Israel's air force struck Iran's Karoon Petrochemical Complex, targeting ballistic missile infrastructure, prompting immediate Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps retaliation against Haifa's industrial facilities. This exemplifies an "episodic war," characterized by repeating high-intensity kinetic strikes and fragile pauses, where conflict shifts to economic blockades and proxy attrition.
The Cognitive Dissonance of Donald J Trump
Donald Trump, despite his self-proclaimed mastery of deal-making and crisis management, appears "paralysed by indecision" in the ongoing confrontation with Iran. The article contrasts his image as a tough leader, ready to face down villains, with his struggle to conclude a deal, which he perceives as a defeat for himself and the United States.
Ron Paul: We Should Not ‘Integrate’ Our Military With Any Foreign Nation – OpEd
Section 224 of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) proposes a controversial "United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative" to integrate the Israeli military with the US military, fusing technology, production, and intelligence-sharing across various defense tech areas including AI, quantum, and cyber. This provision would allow US military data to become Israeli military data.
Moscow Tells Baltics NATO Will Not Come to Their Rescue
Russian President Vladimir Putin's government is actively propagating a narrative that NATO will not come to the aid of Baltic countries if Moscow attacks them, despite Article 5 commitments. Senior Russian officials, including UN Permanent Representative Vasiliy Nebenza, publicly declare that Baltic support for Ukraine makes them aggressors, nullifying NATO protection.
Israel and Iran flare-up could strengthen Tehran's negotiating hand
Israel's tit-for-tat strikes with Iran over the weekend, despite US President Donald Trump's call for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to hold fire, threatened to thrust the Middle East into another direct confrontation. Israel bombed sites in Iran for the first time since April, after Iran fired missiles at Israel in retaliation for Israeli strikes on Beirut.
Iran Declares End To Strikes On Israel In Credibility Operation – Analysis
Iran’s military central command announced a halt to its strikes against Israel on June 8, declaring a “painful response” to Israeli strikes on Beirut’s Dahiyeh district. This move, framed as a completed operation with conditions, aimed to preserve Iran's credibility after publicly threatening retaliation for attacks on its Lebanese ally.
Ukraine’s Intermediate-Range Strike Campaign and New Mechanized Attacks Herald the Start of a New Phase of the War
Ukraine is actively challenging the positional character of the war that has dominated the battlefield since late 2023, reintroducing limited elements of mechanized maneuver and achieving an overall drone advantage. This shift, marked by Ukraine's intermediate-range strike campaign and new mechanized attacks, heralds a new phase of the conflict.
Trump Started a War He Can’t Control
Donald Trump initiated a conflict that he is unable to manage effectively. Despite his stated intention to conclude the ongoing Iran war, key regional actors—specifically Iran, Israel, and Hezbollah—hold differing objectives and strategies, complicating any efforts towards a resolution. This divergence of interests among the primary belligerents suggests that the conflict's trajectory is beyond the U.S.
Ukrainian Defense Ministry: Drones Now Autonomously Neutralizing Shahed UAVs
Ukraine's Ministry of Defense announced the scaling up of next-generation interceptor drones capable of autonomously neutralizing Shahed-type strike UAVs. A participant in the Brave1 defense innovation cluster developed this technology, which automates 95% of the interception cycle, from launch to destruction. This system has undergone successful combat testing in the Kharkiv region, demonstrating rapid progression from prototype to deployment within a year with Brave1's support.
Iran's strike on Israel suggests the regime's sense of resilience is growing
Iran launched missiles and drones at Israel in response to Israeli attacks on Hezbollah in Lebanon, marking a significant shift in Tehran's regional strategy. This direct strike, though militarily limited, carries substantial political weight, suggesting Iran's leadership perceives a growing resilience after enduring extensive military pressure, economic sanctions, and a US naval blockade.
Ukrainian Mid-Range Drones Target Russian Logistics
Ukrainian Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov announced a "logistical lockdown" for the Russian army on May 27, characterized by increased Ukrainian "middle strike" drone attacks on the Russian rear. Ukraine has quadrupled its destruction of Russian logistics, warehouses, equipment, and supply routes, leading to fewer Russian assault operations. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy stated on June 1 that Ukrainian drones can now reach Russian military logistics across virtually the entire depth of temporarily occupied Ukrainian territory, leaving no safe roads in the south and east.
The Iran Stalemate Could Be the Next Oil Supercycle Trigger
U.S.-Iran peace talks appear stalled, with both Washington and Tehran potentially benefiting from a prolonged conflict rather than a rapid settlement, keeping the Strait of Hormuz effectively disrupted. The Trump administration's "Donroe Doctrine" seeks to strengthen U.S. influence in the Americas and reduce China's leverage over global trade and energy routes, including through ongoing efforts around the Strait of Hormuz.
Data Rights and Surveillance: A Global Perspective
Governments worldwide increasingly wield technologically sophisticated surveillance apparatuses, justified under national security and administrative progress, threatening individual autonomy and liberty by meticulously archiving digital activities. India's landmark 2017 Supreme Court ruling in _Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India_ recognized privacy as a fundamental right under Article 21, extending to informational self-determination.
Data Center Warfare: Defending the Key Terrain of AI Infrastructure
The rapid expansion of AI-driven data centers is fundamentally altering critical infrastructure landscapes, creating new strategic high-value targets globally. Following the United States' and Israel's February attack on Iran, Iran retaliated with missile and drone strikes that hit three Amazon Web Services (AWS) data centers in the UAE and Bahrain, and later an Oracle data center in Dubai, disrupting digital services and leading Iran to declare eighteen major technology companies as legitimate military targets.
Iran Takes Its Chances With War – OpEd
The U.S. war with Iran has entered a new phase where Iran implicitly stakes its chances on continued conflict, likely in abbreviated episodes of limited war with regional widening potential. Iran holds the high cards, capable of imposing disproportionately heavier damage on Gulf infrastructure in retaliation. On June 3, the U.S.
What Teaching Cognitive Warfare Taught Me About Cognitive Warfare
Cognitive Warfare (CW), particularly with Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a force multiplier, aims to alter how adversaries think by inducing neuroplastic changes and epistemic closure through sustained, tailored influence. While AI offers a real scale advantage over traditional PSYOPs in generating thousands of individually calibrated products, offensive CW applications face significant challenges.
Revamping the Military Promotion and Personnel System
The U.S. military's promotion system, rooted in subjective evaluations and an "up-or-out" structure, incentivizes careerism and risk aversion over objective warfighting performance, as diagnosed by Stuart Scheller in his April 15, 2023, article. This dysfunction, highlighted by incidents like the August 2021 Kabul Abbey Gate tragedy and the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing, prioritizes "pleasing the boss" over troop welfare and merit.
Delivery by drone: the future of force sustainment
China began testing uninhabited aerial vehicles (UAVs) in 2020 to deliver supplies to soldiers in Tibet, replacing a 120-soldier, two-to-three-day journey across rugged, high-altitude terrain along the disputed Sino-Indian border. This demonstrates drone logistics' potential for force sustainment and operational design, enabling dispersed units, improving morale, and enhancing efficiency by reducing the 'tooth-to-tail' ratio.
10 June 2026
How Pakistan Is Using the Iran War to Reinvent Itself
Pakistan has emerged as the primary mediator between the U.S. and Iran in a war that has convulsed the global economy, facilitating the first high-level, face-to-face meetings in over a decade. This role has earned Islamabad newfound credibility as a peace broker and security partner, marking a "remarkable turnaround" from its previous status as a U.S. pariah.
Bangladesh’s Unfinished Revolution
Tarique Rahman's Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) achieved a decisive victory in Bangladesh's February 2026 general election, securing 209 of 300 seats following his seventeen-year exile. This election, the first credible one in nearly two decades, also saw 68 percent approval for the July Charter, a package of constitutional and electoral reforms aimed at preventing power overcentralization.
Beijing’s Regional Studies Push Risks Campaign-Style Overreach
China's Ministry of Education, responding to Xi Jinping's call for an "autonomous knowledge system," elevated area studies to a first-level discipline in 2022, aiming to address a lack of country-specific expertise for its international relations, particularly concerning One Belt One Road partner countries. This expansion has led to 453 research centers across 186 universities, with new doctoral and master’s programs.
The China-Russia Meta-Threat: The Architecture of Authoritarian Power
China has become the economic and logistical linchpin enabling Russia to wage a full-scale war against Ukraine, a development unforeseen by many analysts a decade ago. This authoritarian alignment, including cooperation with Iran on drone production and North Korea supplying ammunition and troops, has sustained Europe's longest land war since World War II.
North Korea needs China for survival: Why does Beijing need Pyongyang?
Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Pyongyang on June 8, 2026, his first overseas trip this year and first to North Korea in seven years, aiming to boost ties with the reclusive nuclear-armed nation. This visit occurs amid North Korea's strengthening relations with Russia, with whom it signed a mutual defence pact following the Ukraine war.
Cold War 2.0: How China Smartly Replaced the Soviet Union
China has strategically replaced the Soviet Union as the primary rival to the United States, initiating "Cold War 2.0," a competition fought through economic dependency and control of foundational technologies rather than military confrontation. Beijing leveraged globalization, Western capital, and universities to achieve dominance in critical supply chains, including 69% of global rare earth mining, 90% of processing, 90% of high-performance magnets, and 30% of precision bearings.
China proposes nuclear-powered floating island to reshape global shipping
China's Jiangnan Shipyard has unveiled a blueprint for a massive, nuclear-powered floating island, designed to function as a container transfer terminal and a charging station for vessels. This complex, powered by advanced molten salt reactors, is envisioned as a zero-carbon platform with the explicit aim to reshape global shipping operations.
Can Iran Negotiations Survive Israel-Iran Escalation?
The war with Iran, now on its 100th day, faces a full resumption following a dramatic military escalation between Israel and Iran, coupled with the Houthis' announcement of a Red Sea naval blockade of Israeli vessels. Tensions spiked after Israel's strikes on Beirut's southern suburbs and Iran's retaliation against Israel, including Israel hitting a petrochemical plant in Iran.
Pentagon Sees Growing Espionage Threat From Israel
The Defense Department has elevated its counterintelligence threat assessment against Israel to the highest level, from high to critical, due to intensified Israeli espionage efforts targeting American officials. Recent U.S. intelligence reports indicate Israeli spy agencies have eavesdropped on American negotiators involved in a peace deal with Iran, specifically concerning U.S.
Greeted as Liberators?
U.S. President Donald Trump launched a military offensive against Iran in January, approximately six weeks after publicly promising "help" to Iranians amidst widespread street protests where thousands were killed by government forces. Trump presented multiple rationales for the American attack, centrally asserting that the intervention would provide the Iranian populace with a crucial opportunity to dismantle their current regime and replace it with a more desirable system.