Abhijit Singh

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Archive data: Person was Research Fellow at IDSA from July 2013 to February 2016
Joined IDSA
July 31, 2013
Expertise
Maritime Issues, Littoral Security
Education
B.Sc
Current Project
The Indo-Pacific – Towards a Comprehensive Maritime Security Architecture
Background
Commissioned in the Executive Branch of the Indian Navy in July 1994, he is a specialist in Gunnery and Weapons Systems and has served on-board frontline ships. During his tenure with the Flag Officer Doctrines and Concepts, he was actively associated in the formulation and articulation of naval doctrines and operational concepts. As the Officer-in-Charge of the Indian Navy’s History Division in 2008, he assisted the late Vice Admiral GM Hiranandani (Retd) in the authorship of the third volume of Indian Naval History, “Transition to Guardianship”. Prior to joining the IDSA, he was a Research Fellow at the National Maritime Foundation (NMF) for 3 years where he researched and wrote extensively on littoral security and geo-political events in West Asia and South Asia.
Select Publications
China’s ‘Maritime Bases’ in the IOR: A Chronicle of Dominance Foretold, Strategic Analysis, May 2015
Climate Change and Maritime Security in the Indian Ocean Region, Journal of Defence Studies, January 2015
Indian Ocean Challenges – a Quest for Cooperative Solutions, Edited book for NMF / KW Publishers, Feb 2013
Dark Chill in the Persian Gulf – Iran’s regular and Irregular Maritime Forces, Book under Publication at NMF
The Indian Navy’s New Expeditionary Outlook, Occasional paper for Observer Research Foundation (ORF)

Research Fellow
E-mail: abhijit[dot]singh27[at]gmail[dot]com
Phone:+91 11 2671 7983

Publication

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INS Vikramaditya – Deployment Options for India

With the INS Vikramaditya’s arrival in India, it is time to undertake a dispassionate assessment of the ship’s possible uses and deployment options. The Indian navy would be well served if it considered employing the ship in a ‘soft power projection’ role – as a versatile asset to be used in diplomacy and regional outreach, disaster relief and humanitarian missions.

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China’s ‘Three Warfares’ and India

For the past decade, China is known to have actively used ‘three warfares’ (3Ws) strategy—media, psychological and legal warfare—to weaken its adversaries in regions constituting what it perceives to be its ‘core interests’. While a wide range of tools have been deployed, the attacks have remained mostly confined to Taiwan and South-East Asian states involved in the territorial disputes in the South China Sea. But with Beijing’s influence in South Asia and the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) growing, there is evidence emerging of the 3Ws strategy being put to use against India.

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The Beginning of the End in Syria

The WMD insinuation by the West, the debate over the impending genocide in Aleppo, and the swelling ranks of refugees, all point to an orchestrated shift in the narrative of the conflict that makes external intervention an ‘inevitability’.