India is actively transforming Arunachal Pradesh, a geopolitically sensitive frontier, into an integral part of the Indian nation to counter China's irredentist claims over the territory, particularly Tawang. New Delhi's strategy aims to solidify its sovereignty and presence in the region, which Beijing considers "South Tibet." This initiative involves significant efforts to integrate the border
Indian Strategic Studies
30 May 2026
India, China, and Claims over Tawang: Views From a Field Visit to Arunachal Pradesh
Colour Revolutions: How the US Deep State is Reshaping South Asia to Contain China and Isolate India
The United States has systematically reshaped the geopolitical landscape of South Asia through engineered political upheavals in sovereign nations like Bangladesh and Nepal, employing coordinated tactics such as youth mobilization, digital agitation, foreign-funded NGOs, and anti-corruption narratives. In Bangladesh, the August 2024 ouster of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, framed as a student uprising, installed Muhammad Yunus, advancing US access to strategic Bay of Bengal assets and consolidating Islamist forces.
Pakistan's Hajj Operators Are Robbing Pilgrims. The Ministry Calls It Under One Percent.
The Pakistan Hajj Mission, operating in Makkah, recently recovered 5.5 million rupees from private tour operators, who were found to have overcharged pilgrims during their Hajj pilgrimage. This direct intervention resulted in formal notices being issued to thirty-five distinct companies implicated in these financial malpractices. The article explicitly states that Pakistan's Hajj operators are "robbing" pilgrims through these overcharging schemes.
Bangladesh: Terrorist Nexus In Rohingya Camps – Analysis
Bangladesh's Rohingya refugee camps are experiencing escalating violence and fragmentation among armed groups, including ARA/Nabi Hossain Bahini, ARSA, ARO, Saddam Bahini, and Zakir Bahini, competing for territorial dominance and control over camp governance. In May 2026 alone, multiple killings occurred, such as Hasan Ahmed, Mohammad Kamal Prakash Noor, and ARO 'commander' Kefayet Ullah Halim.
Why Pakistan's biggest military deployment in Gulf in years is a geopolitical alarm
India Today | Pradip R. Sagar
Pakistan's reported deployment of a large military contingent, including F-16 and JF-17 Thunder aircraft and elements of the 25 Mechanized Division, in Saudi Arabia has raised concerns over Islamabad's strategic posture amidst West Asia tensions and geopolitical uncertainty surrounding Iran. Regional observers view this as a significant commitment, with the F-16s likely bearing the heavier operational burden while JF-17s perform defensive roles due to China's engagement with Iran.
Mediation And The Geopolitical Positioning Of Belarus And Pakistan In The Multipolar Order – Analysis
The contemporary international order is undergoing a profound structural reconfiguration from unipolar dominance to a complex, networked multipolar system, where mediation diplomacy is increasingly vital for global governance. Its effectiveness stems from the ability to foster dialogue and build trust through perceived neutrality, institutional predictability, and sovereign autonomy, rather than military or economic superiority.
Did Pakistan Actually Open Its Transit Corridors to Iran?
Pakistan launched the Pakistan-Iran Transit Corridor last month at a ceremony in Karachi, where Director General of Transit Trade Customs Sanaullah Abro and Director Transit Muhammad Rashid flagged off the initiative. Islamabad had announced six transit routes, prompting shipping lines to reroute thousands of containers to Pakistani ports like Karachi and Gwadar.
The Iran Deal Nobody Agrees On
Pakistan's military personnel were targeted on May 24 in Quetta, Balochistan, when a bomb detonated on a shuttle train, killing at least 24 people, including army servicemen, and wounding over 50. The Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), a US-designated foreign terrorist organization based in Afghanistan, claimed responsibility, consistent with its objective of Baloch independence and targeting Pakistani state integration projects in the resource-rich province carrying CPEC.
A ‘New Beginning’ for Xi’s Assimilationist Agenda
China's _Ethnic Unity and Progress Promotion Law_, passed by the National People’s Congress in March and effective July 1, establishes statutory obligations for Beijing's comprehensive assimilationist agenda. This law, building on over 20 provincial regulations, transforms ethnic unity work from "policy guidance" to "legal norms" and a "hard constraint," compelling officials to "forge a common Chinese national consciousness."
Iran Previews China’s Cyber Playbook
Iran's "Operation Epic Fury" cyberattacks offer a critical preview for Taiwan regarding potential Chinese threats. China, possessing a highly capable cyber arsenal, considers cyberspace a "critical domain" and "the core center for winning wars," actively launching 2.63 million daily cyberattacks against Taiwanese critical infrastructure in 2025. Iranian-tied groups conducted 5,800 attacks against American and Israeli companies, manipulating internet-facing programmable logic controllers to cause operational disruptions and financial losses.
Foreign Policy Analysis and Trump: Risk, Iran, and the Limits of Decision-Making Models
Donald Trump’s decision to strike Iran, a consequential use of force, is best understood as a hybrid case requiring multiple Foreign Policy Analysis (FPA) frameworks. While the rational actor model initially explains the strike as a calculated effort to restore deterrence and reassert credibility against Iran's advancing missile and nuclear capabilities and resilience, this framework encounters limitations.
When Our Word is No Longer Good
The Ron Paul Institute for Peace & Prosperity | Ron Paul
The US Administration's repeated pattern of signaling an "almost completed" agreement with Iran, only to follow with surprise attacks in June and February 28th, has eroded international trust. This "governmental nihilism," characterized by deception and a belief in no objective truth, signals moral and ethical bankruptcy, leading other nations to view negotiation with the United States as futile.
War Against Technology: An Analysis of Recent Developments in Anti-Technology Violence
Anti-technology extremism has consolidated as an emerging driver of terrorism and political violence, manifesting in widespread sabotage and attacks across Europe and North America. These incidents, though fragmented and geographically dispersed, converge on similar targets, primarily executed by lone actors and decentralised cells.
The Middle Power Delusion
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney warned leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos that states caught between Washington and Beijing must stop negotiating alone, emphasizing that "If we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu." This sentiment reflects a renewed focus on middle powers like India, Brazil, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Australia, Canada,
A Million Displaced.
Israel's 'Operation Arrows of Fire' has led to the displacement of families in central Beirut, specifically those on the Ramlet al-Baida corniche. These families are now living in tents, constructed from canvas and aluminum poles on a seafront walkway, having lost their homes and possessions due to actions by the Israeli air force.
The world urgently needs a US-Iran deal now
Al Jazeera | Ilan Kapoor
The world economy faces deepening energy, food, and cost-of-living crises, primarily centered on the Strait of Hormuz, necessitating an urgent US-Iran deal. Recent reports indicate Washington and Tehran are discussing a broader arrangement, including a 60-day truce, reopening shipping lanes, sanctions relief, and renewed nuclear talks. Approximately a fifth of global oil and a substantial
From Protecting Chokepoints To Breaking Their Grip: Why The ASTRA Corridor Debate Matters – Analysis
The debate surrounding the proposed ASTRA Corridor through Yemen's Hawf region signifies a strategic shift from merely protecting maritime chokepoints like Hormuz and Bab al-Mandeb to reducing global dependence on them. Recent regional confrontations highlight the vulnerability of concentrated energy flows and trade networks, prompting a re-evaluation of energy-security strategy towards diversification and structural resilience rather than perfect invulnerability.
The "Active Defense Doctrine": The illusion of firewalls
In 2026, the traditional information security paradigm of building high walls around organizational assets has collapsed, creating an absurd asymmetry favoring attackers. The solution is an "active defense doctrine," integrating offensive cyber capabilities for adversary intelligence, reverse engineering attacker intentions, and pre-server disruption. This proactive approach employs advanced deception techniques, like concealing real information within
How AI Warfare Is Redefining Human Oversight on the Battlefield
Has Anyone ‘Won’ the Iran War?
The US-Israel-Iran war has reshaped the Middle East's balance of power, yet produced no clear strategic resolution for any involved actor, leading to a fragile equilibrium. The United States, having spent an estimated $25-50 billion, prevented a broader conflict and degraded Iran's military, but exposed its eroding capacity for decisive victory.
The Bill Comes Due
On the morning of February 28, US and Israeli aircraft executed a coordinated military operation, striking Tehran. The explicit objective of this joint aerial assault was regime decapitation, directly targeting the leadership of the Islamic Republic. Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of the Islamic Republic, was specifically identified as a key figure in the context of this operation, indicating a direct focus on the highest echelons of the Iranian government.
Competition Warfare: Strategic Terrain Is No Longer Geographic
Modern strategic competition has shifted from seizing geographic ground to manipulating critical systems states rely on, fundamentally redefining strategic terrain. This transformation means pressure is now applied through infrastructure, institutions, markets, and information systems, rather than traditional military advances.
Six Key Lessons from Ukraine’s Drone War
Ukraine's drone warfare has provided six key lessons, demonstrating how unmanned systems are democratizing long-range precision strike capabilities and bridging conventional and unconventional warfare. These tactics and technologies, refined since Russia's 2014 invasion, have already appeared in conflicts globally, including Myanmar, Colombia, Mexico, Gaza, Lebanon, Iran, and Iraq, with China actively studying Russia's experiences for its own doctrines.
What Is ‘Electronic Warfare,’ Anyway?
Electronic warfare (EW) has become increasingly vital in modern conflict, evolving from rudimentary World War II "chaff" to today's sophisticated digital attack platforms that aim to control the electromagnetic spectrum. This mode of fighting disrupts enemy radars, communications, missile guidance, and networks, with early dedicated aircraft like the EB-66 Destroyer giving way to more advanced systems.
Strategy for a new nuclear age
Nuclear weapons have re-emerged as central to great power politics, ending the post-Cold War era's diminished focus. Russia has threatened nuclear use in Ukraine and tested new delivery systems. China rapidly expanded its nuclear arsenal, diversified delivery systems, and potentially conducted a low-yield nuclear test in June 2020.
29 May 2026
Rupees, Roubles & Refining: The Geopolitics of India’s Oil Sourcing
India, the world’s third-largest energy consumer, significantly diversified its crude oil imports between April and May 2026, increasing overall imports by 8.5% to 4,920,000 bpd. This strategic shift, driven by geopolitical tensions and favorable pricing, saw Russian crude imports surge by 413,000 bpd to 1.98 million bpd, while Saudi Arabian supplies plummeted by 330,000 bpd to 340,000 bpd due to cost-prohibitive Official Selling Prices.
INDIAN NAVY MARITIME SECURITY STRATEGY-2026 RELEASED BY CNS, ADMIRAL DINESH K TRIPATHI, DURING COMMANDERS' CONFERENCE IN NEW DELHI
The Indian Navy Maritime Security Strategy-2026 was released by CNS, Admiral Dinesh K Tripathi, during the Commanders' Conference in New Delhi, outlining the Navy's action plan for the coming decade. This crucial document aims to ensure secure seas and safeguard India's national maritime interests within the evolving security environment, building upon the foundational Defence Forces Vision 2047 and Indian Navy Vision 2047.
The Price of a Family
Nasir Masih's family became bonded laborers at a brick kiln in central Punjab when he was seven years old, a direct consequence of his father borrowing a small sum from the kiln owner to cover a medical emergency. This specific instance exemplifies the pervasive issue of bonded labor in Pakistan, particularly within the brick kiln industry, where families are compelled into servitude to repay debts.
The Iran Deal Nobody Agrees On
A bomb detonated on a shuttle train in Quetta, Balochistan, on Sunday, May 24, killing at least 24 people, including army servicemen, and wounding over 50. The Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) claimed responsibility for the attack, which derailed the engine and three coaches.
COI Report - Pakistan: Country Focus
Pakistan's geography, demography, ethnic groups, languages, and state structure are comprehensively detailed in a new COI Report published in May 2026. This report provides an overview of the country, examining its background and recent political developments within a regional context, and outlining the main armed actors, encompassing both state armed forces and non-state armed groups.
The Smoke Above Quetta
On November 9, 2024, at 8:25 am local time, an attack occurred in Quetta, Pakistan, directly impacting Ikhtiar Hussain, a 47-year-old senior ticket inspector, as he arrived for work at Quetta Railway Station. Pakistan’s government promptly condemned the incident, a response explicitly noted as customary, with the counting of the deceased already underway.
China and AI-Military Integration: Perspectives, Opportunities, and Challenges
China is strategically pivoting towards military “intelligentisation”, aggressively integrating AI into the PLA to achieve a decisive edge against the United States. Driven by mandates from the 20th National Congress of the CPC, the Chinese military is modernizing from information-guided and network-centric warfare to AI and automation-driven systems.
I Ran the N.S.A. This Is How to Defeat China’s Hacker Army.
China has actively targeted America’s telecommunications networks, intellectual property, and critical utilities for over a decade, utilizing hacking proxies like Volt Typhoon and Salt Typhoon to pre-position malware and tap officials' phones. This sustained campaign of intrusion, which annually steals $225 billion to $600 billion in intellectual property, necessitates a unified U.S. response beyond voluntary information sharing.
The Triangle of Happiness: How the Great Power Triumvirate Is Managing the Fourth Systemic Crisis
The United States and China engaged in critical, non-transactional discussions during the Trump–Xi summit in Beijing on May 14, 2026, establishing a framework for "managed stabilisation" and "strategic stability" amidst the "Fourth Systemic Rupture." This global crisis, triggered by the February 28, 2026 US-Israel operation against Iran and the subsequent closure of the Strait of Hormuz, caused a cascading failure across global energy and commodity supply chains. The summit quietly coordinated Iran's endgame, uranium enrichment, and global system competition rules, with Washington pausing a $14 billion arms sale to Taiwan as a "negotiating chip." Six days later, the Putin–Xi summit on May 20 saw Beijing transmit this framework to Moscow, despite the Power of Siberia 2 gas pipeline deal stalling.
China’s Global Initiatives: Limited Reach, Strategic Openings in the Indian Ocean
China's Global Development Initiative (GDI) and Global Security Initiative (GSI), along with the Global Civilization Initiative (GCI) and Global Governance Initiative (GGI), represent competing systems within a fragmented global order marked by intensified stakeholder competition. These initiatives, announced by President Xi Jinping in 2021 and 2023, do not introduce substantively new approaches to China's foreign development and security principles, largely reiterating concepts like the "New Security Concept" from the late 1990s and aligning with UN Sustainable Development Goals.