8 September 2018
‘Threats are accelerating’ in computing speed and lethality: army chief
Space Is the Ultimate High Ground—That’s Why Militaries Fund Astrophysics
Neil deGrasse Tyson and Avis Lang
Astrophysicists deduce nearly everything we know of the contents and behavior of the universe from the analysis of light. Most of the cosmic objects and events we observe materialized long ago, and so their attenuated light arrives here on Earth after delays that stretch up to 13 billion years. Most of the objects of our affection lie forever out of reach and are, at best, barely visible from Earth. They don’t grow in a laboratory, they release stupendous energy, and they’re immune to manipulation. So astrophysicists have learned to be lateral thinkers, to come up with indirect solutions, never forgetting that we’re the passive party in a singularly one-sided relationship.
7 September 2018
TWO + TWO DIALOGUE BETWEEN INDIA AND USA – CRITICAL ISSUES
Maj Gen P K Mallick, VSM(Retd)
A joint statement issued at the end of the bilateral dialogue declared.“They welcomed the signing of a Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA) that will facilitate access to advanced defence systems and enable India to optimally utilise its existing US-origin platforms.”
I am reproducing the portion of COMCASA from my paper.
Sensitive Issues
Though no doubt that Indo – U.S relations have improved considerable since the cold war days, there are number of issues which need to be addressed to take the relationship forward. These are sensitive in nature and would required highest forms of diplomatic tight rope working, sagacity and maturity.
Trade. While the United States and India have made tremendous strides on defense cooperation and counterterrorism efforts, that progress has not translated into smooth and successful trade relations. India's exports to the US in 2016-17 stood at $42.21 billion, while imports were $22.3 billion. India has taken steps to increase imports from USA which helped narrow the gap by over $1 billion last year. India will be importing oil worth $2.5 billion from the US this year.
India On Quest For Undersea Dominance To Counter Chinese Navy’s Growing Presence – Analysis
By Abhijit Singh
As China and the US pursue development of unmanned underwater drones, the Indian navy is also adjusting its strategy to include autonomous vehicles in its armoury against China’s growing undersea footprint in the Indian Ocean Undersea warfare has come to the surface after the South China Morning Post reported on Beijing’s development of giant, smart, cheap unmanned submarines. The “sea bots”, operated by artificial intelligence, are intended to perform tasks as diverse as reconnaissance, mine placement and making self-destructive attacks. They are now undergoing testing at a facility in Guangdong province, and will be part of a network of manned and unmanned assets tracking rival submarines in the world’s oceans. China isn’t alone in its quest for undersea dominance. Last year, the United States commissioned its first-ever squadron of unmanned underwater vehicles, or drones, and contracted top defence firms to produce a new generation of such machines. It aims to enhance its combat potential, including in anti-submarine, mine clearance and even counter-underwater drone operations.
India, China face mounting pressure from US; Trump says stop buying oil from Iran or face sanctions
The world’s top oil buyers are discovering that U.S. sanctions on Iran will squeeze their trade flows whether they agree with America or not. It was only about three months ago that India’s foreign minister said that the country won’t adhere to unilateral restrictions and will continue buying Iranian crude. China also made similar comments and was said to have rejected an American request to cut imports. Japan and South Korea have held talks with the U.S. aimed at securing exemptions. Yet for all the pushback and negotiations, an emerging pattern shows U.S. sanctions are succeeding in throttling Iran’s sales to its customers even before the measures take effect in early November. While America initially wanted a complete halt in purchases, traders are now concerned that even a revised aim for only cuts would take out enough supply to create a market deficit — which other producers may struggle to fill.
China, India need to coordinate in face of US pressure
By Yu Jincui
The two-plus-two dialogue between the US and India is scheduled for September 6 in New Delhi. Talking at an event at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on the forthcoming meeting in late August, Randall G. Schriver, US assistant secretary of defense for Asian and Pacific security affairs, said "China and how to respond to it will be front and center" of the dialogue. Despite the two-plus-two dialogue being postponed unilaterally twice by the US citing "unavoidable reasons," the world has witnessed positive development in the US-India strategic partnership. Washington declared New Delhi a "major defense partner" in May, which puts India on a par with the closest allies and partners of the US. The same month the Pentagon renamed the Pacific Command the Indo-Pacific Command, signaling the growing importance of India to the US.
Don’t Buy the Panic About the Rupee’s Fall
BY ARVIND PANAGARIYA

The US-China Cold War Is Now Playing Out in Pakistan
BY JOHANN CHACKODOCTORAL

Former U.S. ally turned implacable foe dies in Afghanistan, Taliban announces
By Sayed Salahuddin and William Branigin
KABUL — A top leader of an insurgent group affiliated with the Taliban, who was once an ally of the United States and later became one of its fiercest opponents in Afghanistan, has died, the Taliban announced Tuesday. The radical Islamist group said in a statement that Jalaluddin Haqqani, leader of one of the most effective militant networks in Afghanistan, “passed away after a long battle with illness.” It did not specify a time, place or cause of death. He reportedly was afflicted with Parkinson’s disease and had been paralyzed for a decade. Haqqani “was ill and bedridden for the past several years,” the statement said. He was believed to be in his late 70s. His sons long ago took over the day-to-day running of the group known as the Haqqani network, and at a time of increased Taliban attacks on the government, his death is expected to have little impact.
Why China Is Wooing Eastern and Central Europe
by John Van Oudenaren

Ecuador’s All-Seeing Eye Is Made in China
BY CHARLES ROLLET

Beijing's global 5G ambitions threaten to disrupt telecoms
Alex Capri

France's Determined Struggle Against Salafi-Jihadism
Since 2015, terrorist attacks have killed 246 people in France, deepening political divides and undermining the country’s unity. France has undergone drastic reforms to reshuffle its judicial, security, and intelligence architecture to address the threat; it is now mobilizing the entire society to counter Salafi-jihadi radicalization. This brief examines how France escaped the trap of division, which sacrifices it accepted, and how such unique experience can prove useful to other Western countries.
The Toll of Putin’s Wars
ANDERS ÅSLUND

American Political Economy, Disrupted
WILLIAM H. JANEWAY
With the help of markets and the state, technological innovations such as electrification and the steam engine have periodically transformed the economic system from which they emerged. But never before has a technological revolution defined the entirety of economic, political, and social life – until now. History shows that the interactions between a mission-driven state, financial speculators, and the market economy – what I call the Three-Player Game – can marshal the funding needed to drive technological innovation beyond the frontier of visible economic value and commercial exploitation. Over time, the fruits of such innovation have transformed the market economy itself.
China has spent billions in Africa, but some critics at home question why
By ROBYN DIXON
All of Africa is now competing for Chinese money. Except for one country.
By Rick Noack

Conference Report: 2018 Vienna Conference on Strategy
CHIARA LIBISELLER
A few new concepts have come to dominate the more recent Western discourses on security and defence, both in the academic and practitioners’ sectors; these concepts include ‘hybrid war’, ‘cyber war’, ‘narratives’ and ‘resilience’.[i] They are invoked to help us understand, explain and react to threats that Europe and the United States are currently facing. Hence, think tanks, academics, politicians and military institutions have invested a great deal of resources, and produced a vast amount of papers trying to better understand these threats. But for the sceptic, questions remain.
RESOLVE Network 2018 Global Forum Innovative Approaches to Understanding Violent Extremism

Solving the United Kingdom’s productivity puzzle in a digital age
By Jacques Bughin, Jonathan Dimson, Vivian Hunt, Tera Allas, Mekala Krishnan, Jan Mischke, Louis Chambers, and Marc Canal
New research explains why the United Kingdom has been experiencing historically low productivity growth and what can be done to return to long-run averages. Declining labor-productivity growth characterized many advanced economies after a boom in the 1960s, but since the mid-2000s that decline has accelerated. Against that backdrop, the United Kingdom stands out as one of the worst productivity performers among its peers. Its absolute level of productivity has persistently ranked toward the bottom of a sample of advanced economies. Moreover, in the aftermath of the crisis, the United Kingdom, along with the United States, recorded one of the lowest productivity-growth rates and steepest declines in productivity growth, falling by 90 percent. Between 2010 and 2015, UK productivity growth flatlined at 0.2 percent a year, far below its long-term average of 2.4 percent from 1970 to 2007.
Clash of Civilizations—or Clash Within Civilizations?
SETH CROPSEY, HARRY HALEM
As parlous as the clash of civilizations might be, the implosion of our own is much more to be feared. The third in a series of three essays celebrating the 25th anniversary of the publication of Samuel Huntington’s The Clash of Civilizations. Other contributors include Francis Fukuyama and Daniel E. Burns. Samuel Huntington’s “The Clash of Civilizations” caused a stir when Foreign Affairs published it in the summer of 1993. Grand theoretical views by eminent thinkers deserve to cause stirs, whether they are right in the main or not—for being wrong grandly can start ultimately useful conversations in ways that being right trivially cannot. But Huntington’s “Clash” caused a stir for a special reason: He flew against prevailing zeitgeist, which...
Tenth Anniversary Of Financial Collapse, Preparing For The Next Crash – OpEd
By Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers

Japan's Auto Sector Is Poised to Weather a U.S. Tariff Storm

Setting the Record Straight on Secular Stagnation
LAWRENCE H. SUMMERS

Russia Opens a New Front in Its War Against Ukraine: the Sea of Azov
Nolan Peterson

German far right fuels Muslim ‘takeover’ fears

Why Technology Favors Tyranny
Favors Tyranny
I. The Growing Fear of Irrelevance

Fighting Terrorism on the Dark Web: New Tech to Fight Advanced Enemy Tactics
By Kris Osborn Warrior
What Does Google Know About You: A Complete Guide
John Mason

Amazon becomes world's second company to be valued at $1tn
Rob Davies and Dominic Rushe

Six Leadership Fallacies
L. Burton Brender
One of the hardest things a leader will ever have to do is accurately assess the performance and potential of his or her workers. Often, leaders have so much on their plate that really observing their people is a challenge, and it doesn’t help that there are false signals out there that can fool even the wisest of supervisors. These fallacies can make people who are less competent, and less scrupulous, appear better than they are. To be on guard against them, leaders must constantly assess themselves when meting out rewards, promotions, and punishment. Falling for a leadership fallacy can see the wrong person advanced and drive the right people away.
Air Force Secretary: The Law of War and the Power of Computing
by Heather Wilson

A 12 Step Program To Fix Army Generalship
BRIG. GEN. DONALD C. BOLDUC, U.S. ARMY (RET.)

6 September 2018
The impact of the river linking project
Mohit M Rao
India Pushes Back Against Tech ‘Colonization’ by Internet Giants
By Vindu Goel

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