The Stormy Parliamentary Debates of 1962 Excepting in a war-like situation when there is threat to national security, unity and integrity, parliamentarians neither have the time nor the inclination to discuss issues that do not have a direct bearing on their constituency or on electoral politics. Besides considering the sensitive and professional nature of the subject, parliamentarians tend to leave the foreign policy issues to the professional diplomats and the foreign policy establishment. But there have been exceptions to the rule in most democratic countries, including India. R N Das | October 2012 | Journal of Defence Studies
Sino-Indian War, 1962 and the Role of Great Powers The easy availability of Indian Government documents allowed early commentators to focus on the policies pursued by India to counter the relentless advance by China in the Western border region, and the prospect of a similar thrust in the Eastern region in 1962. The spotlight settled on the inadequacy of the ‘Forward Policy’, which was a response to Chinese military pressure on the ground. S. K. Bhutani | October 2012 | Journal of Defence Studies
The Great Divide: Chinese and Indian Views on Negotiations, 1959-62 When will states bargain while fighting and when will they evade intrawar negotiations? This article addresses this question with respect to the 1962 Sino-Indian War and provides insight into the question of why talks did not occur for the duration of the war. To do so, I analyse Chinese and Indian strategic thinking regarding the prospects of talks in the lead up and throughout the short war, with information gathered through archival work at the Chinese Foreign Ministry Archives, interviews with former Indian political and military leaders as well as scholars and secondary sources. Oriana Skylar Mastro | October 2012 | Journal of Defence Studies
Enduring Legacy of 1962: Cementing the Conflict of Perceptions in Sino-Indian Ties Fifty years since the 1962 war, India and China have moved on to become world powers with engagement and competition characterizing their relationship in keeping with the rules of realpolitik. Both sides argue that the past has been forgotten, yet the border dispute remains unresolved. Despite the rapprochement and robust economic engagement undertaken, the relationship has a constant undercurrent of tension and is often described as fragile. Shruti Pandalai | October 2012 | Journal of Defence Studies
Corruption in Administration: Evaluating the Kautilyan Antecedents The significance of Arthasastra for the issue of corruption in contemporary times lies in Kautilya’s realisation that corruption in government is inevitable but can be combated through a set of strict measures Tarun Kumar | October 12, 2012 | Issue Brief
Cooperation is the key to manage the India-Bangladesh Border That cooperation between neighbours can pave the way for resolving issues relating to the management of shared borders is amply demonstrated by the outcomes of various bilateral interactions that took place between India and Bangladesh in recent months. Pushpita Das | October 12, 2012 | IDSA Comments
Is Arab Spring Part-2 Unravelling? Just when it seemed that the Arab Spring was almost over and the region was entering a phase of political transition, a flurry of developments in the first week of October 2012 has brought the region back into focus. Rajeev Agarwal | October 12, 2012 | IDSA Comments
From the Managing Editor This issue of the Journal of Defence Studies is being published 50 years after China attacked India across the Himalayas. A majority of Indians and Chinese today do not have any personal memories of the war. Since the war was seen as a victory for China and a defeat for India, it naturally evokes different sentiments in the two countries. For China, it was a punitive strike to teach India a lesson, to make it accept a lower position in the hierarchy of nations and, perhaps, an opportunity to convey its strength to the world at large, and particularly to the two superpowers of the day. Rumel Dahiya | October 2012 | Journal of Defence Studies
The Legacy of 1962 and China’s India Policy This article will argue that the legacy of the 1962 Sino-Indian War continues to affect China’s policy towards India even today. The three factors that led to China’s decision in 1962 to attack India—the status of Tibet, the militarization of their unresolved border and fears of containment—are present even today, albeit in slightly modified forms. This is not to argue that another Sino-Indian War is imminent because the larger strategic context within which China’s leaders took the decision to attack India in 1962 has changed. Manjeet S Pardesi | October 2012 | Journal of Defence Studies
Indian Army: Internal Challenges In Capability Building And Retention The Army, being the largest service and fielding the largest array of equipment, needs to improve its own processes by carrying out an internal analysis and taking effective steps to speed up the procurement process. Rumel Dahiya | October 11, 2012 | Issue Brief