Bangladesh: Punish War Criminals but Maintain Law and Order The war crime trials should be taken to their logical conclusion to create a precedent that will discourage the extremist and radical elements. But the government must also act swiftly to maintain law and order so that the situation is not used by extra-constitutional forces to thwart the whole exercise. Anand Kumar March 21, 2013 IDSA Comments
China’s ‘String of pearls’ in Space A ‘pearl’ could be viewed as a sphere of influence seeded, secured and maintained through the use of economic, geopolitical, diplomatic or military means. The ‘string of pearls’ is about China’s unambiguous maritime strategy that investments in increasing its sea power. This is essentially a multi-pronged strategy that challenges dominant US interests in the Indian Ocean and sends a clear message to India that the Indian Ocean is not India’s ocean by increasing the dependence of the littoral states in the region on China. Ajey Lele March 21, 2013 IDSA Comments
America’s Asia Strategy in Obama’s Second Term Indian planners would be cautious about an open US embrace as India does not want to be drawn into a US containment policy, which is how China perceives US rebalancing. Arvind Gupta March 21, 2013 IDSA Comments
PLA’s Top 10 Exercises in 2012: An Analysis An analysis of these exercises reveals some interesting insights into the People's Liberation Army (PLA) thinking, its priorities, areas of interest and countries of concern. Mandip Singh March 21, 2013 IDSA Comments
Why India must vote against Sri Lanka at the UNHRC? India must vote against Sri Lanka in the UNHRC in order to force the latter to set up its own enquiry commission on war crimes, implement the recommendations of the LLRC pertaining to the rights of Tamils, and evolve its own ‘home grown’ solution to the ethnic issue. Smruti S. Pattanaik March 20, 2013 IDSA Comments
The Legacy of Hugo Chavez Chavez’s significance lies in his attempts to liberalise the international monetary system with regard to credit support for poverty alleviation schemes in Latin America outside the ambit of the IMF by setting up the Caracas-based “Bank of the South”, which was lauded by eminent economists like Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz. Gautam Sen March 20, 2013 IDSA Comments
Siachen: Possible New International Moves for ‘Mediation’ India must develop comprehensive and workable proposals to not just tone down the present Indo-Pak standoff on the glacier and the international attention it may be inviting, but also to ensure reasonable security arrangements against treachery by any third country. P. K. Upadhyay March 20, 2013 IDSA Comments
The Arab Churning and Implications For the Arabs, India’s caution, slow responses and long periods of situation assessments re-affirmed stereotypes about its inability to assume a leadership role in international affairs. However, given the volatility, the most effective way is to “think regionally but act bilaterally”. P. Stobdan March 20, 2013 IDSA Comments
Analytical Quality Ranking of Equipment under Procurement: An Improvement of Contemporary Practice Parameters, dimensions and operational requirements specified by the user must be evaluated exclusively by the user trial team, while DGQA must concentrate only on the testing of quality encompassing the product design, the material used and the manufacturing process in addition to the environmental testing of the product under simulated conditions. Mahendra Prasad March 20, 2013 IDSA Comments
Iraq: Ten Years after the US-Led Invasion The US has spent over a trillion and a half dollars and this huge expenditure has nearly unhinged its domestic economic equilibrium. At the strategic level the results for the US have been even more disconcerting in terms of Iraq's Shiite-led government refusing to let US troops stay on as well as extending support for fellow Shiites in Syria. R. S. Kalha March 20, 2013 IDSA Comments