M.S. Prathibha

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Dr M. S. Prathibha is an Associate Fellow at the East Asia Centre in MP-IDSA. Her research interests include China’s Nuclear Policy, Strategic Force Modernisation, Chinese Views on War and Strategy, Chinese Foreign Relations and Chinese Civilisation and Philosophy. Currently, she is working on Missile Defence and China.

Dr Prathibha is a Member of the Editorial Board of Strategic Analysis (Routledge). She has published in journals in Strategic Analysis (Routledge), China Report (Sage), and various international publications. She had received the Human Resource Development (India) and China Government Scholarship and completed her fellowship at the School of Political Science and International Studies, Beijing Normal University from 2009-2011. She had also conducted field trips to China in 2015 and 2016.

Dr Prathibha had completed her PhD at the Chinese Studies Division of East Asia Centre in School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University. Dr Prathibha did her Masters in International Studies at Stella Maris College, Chennai. She won the Best Dissertation Award in her Masters.

She did her Bachelors in Mathematics at Ethiraj College for Women, Chennai.Her publications include: China and the Indo-Pacific: Contestations for Power and Nuclear Uncertainties, East Asia Military Monitor, March-April 2019 India-North Korea Relationship: A Case of Limited Aims and Strategic Calculations in Titli Basu (Edt), Major Powers and the Korean Peninsula: Politics, Policies and Perspectives”, KW Publishers, New Delhi 2019 Reform and Restructuring: Chinese Military in Transition in Jagannath P. Panda (ed.), “China’s Transition under Xi Jinping”, Pentagon Press, 2016 A Partnership of Mutual Expediency: China-Russia Relations in 2014 in Prashant Kumar Singh (Edited), “China Year Book 2014”, Magnum Books, 2014, New Delhi Nuclear Developments in China during 2013 in Navgal Jagota, “China Year Book 2013”, Magnum Books, 2013

  • Associate Fellow
  • Email:prathibha[dot]idsa[at]gmail[dot]com
  • Phone: +91 11 2671 7983

Publication

Missile Defence and China

China has considerably improved its missile defence capabilities which is generally thought as a way to counter the US nuclear superiority after the abolition of the ABM Treaty. However, the Chinese responses show a broader understanding that the US nuclear superiority is more than a competition to reduce the efficiency of the Chinese deterrence.

Land to Seas: The Deployment of China’s Nuclear Forces

China's deployment of nuclear forces are diversifying in an effort to achieve effective deterrence against its adversaries. Whereas the robustness of its nuclear posture might mean that it is moving away from its limited arsenal, however, its strategies and patterns of deployment indicate the PLA Rocket Forces are focused on improving its response and coordination for a seamless and rapid counter-strike, updating its strategy of deployment of missile systems to reduce its vulnerabilities in the post-missile defence nuclear environment and integrate its nuclear responses to portray an effective deterrence.

Managing China’s Expectations Of India

Associate Fellow, Manohar Parrikar IDSA, Dr MS Prathibha's article ‘Managing China's Expectations of India’ has been published in Outlook on 5 May 2023.

The Chinese expect India to place the border issue in what they call an ‘appropriate position’ and wants normalised management. For India, however, normalcy could be restored when the military forces disengage from the remaining friction areas at the Line of Actual Control (LAC), says Dr Prathibha.

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  • Published: 5 May, 2023

Xi Jinping’s Vision and the 20th Party Congress

Associate Fellow, Manohar Parrikar IDSA, Dr MS Prathibha’s opinion piece, ‘Xi Jinping's Vision and 20th Party Congress’ has been published in ‘The New Indian Express’, on 22 October 2022.

For Xi, the threat to the Communist Party of China is not democracy as believed in the West but hidden capital, says Dr Prathibha.

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  • Published: 22 October, 2022

PLA’s Western Theatre Command in Transition

Post 2015 reforms, the Western Theatre Command (WTC) of the PLA has been transforming itself into a joint theatre command that can fight wars against an adversary like India. Considering that India and China are involved in a border standoff, any strengthening of WTC’s combat capabilities is likely to have an immense impact on India.