BRICS: Opportunities and Challenges This Brief outlines the practical and ideational role that BRICS can play as a grouping, in reforming the global financial system and in the norm-setting processes in world politics. The Brief also discusses some challenges BRICS countries are facing to realise their goals in the short to medium term. Joe Thomas Karackattu | May 03, 2011 | Issue Brief
TAPI – Still a Distant Dream If the TAPI pipeline does see the light of day, it will be due to US support and its larger political and strategic considerations. Shebonti Ray Dadwal | May 02, 2011 | IDSA Comments
Responsibility to Protect – The Case of Libya Along with a clear and unambiguous mandate, pre-intervention planning also demands an exit strategy which is lacking in the Libyan case. Keerthi Sampath Kumar | May 02, 2011 | IDSA Comments
Piracy in Somalia: Addressing the Root Causes Rampant piracy off the Somalia coast has brought the strife-ridden country back into attention. Economic hardship, and a deep resentment and anger against foreign exploitation of Somalia's maritime resources, have inspired the pirates to declare themselves 'coast guards of Somalia'. However, the growing attacks by the pirates have had an adverse impact on global commercial shipping. The international community has responded to this predicament by massive naval deployments in the Gulf of Aden. Ruchita Beri | May 2011 | Strategic Analysis
‘China in SAARC? To What Effect?’: A Response to the Debate The responses to the arguments that I forwarded in my initial essay, ‘China in SAARC? To What Effect?’, have introduced interesting dimensions to this debate. While most of the respondents have agreed with my proposition that it is premature to think about China's entry into the South Asian regionalist project and that it would introduce complex challenges that would be difficult to manage, they disagree with some of the reasons that I have cited. Sujit Dutta | May 2011 | Strategic Analysis
Integrating India with the Global Export Controls System: Challenges Ahead The rising economic and political profile of India is making it to search for a new pattern of interaction with global forces. India's unique relationship with export controls is passing through a new and positive phase. In recent years, India is trying to integrate itself fast with global best practices for export controls. However, it is facing roadblocks in its integration with the existing system. Rajiv Nayan | May 2011 | Strategic Analysis
The Time is Not Ripe for China’s Entry Is democracy a criterion for the membership of SAARC? It is not. One should not forget that it was General Zia ur Rahman, president of Bangladesh, who had initiated regional cooperation as a part of his strategy to diversify Bangladesh's Indo-centric foreign policy after Sheikh Mujib's assassination. The grouping in the beginning had two monarchs from Nepal and Bhutan, two military dictators from Pakistan and Bangladesh, and one authoritarian ruler from the Maldives, apart from India and Sri Lanka which were democracies as member countries. Smruti S. Pattanaik | May 2011 | Strategic Analysis
The United States in Central Asia: Reassessing a Challenging Partnership This article focuses on the evolving place of the US in the Central Asian arena, analysing how US interests have changed in this region since the 1990s. It studies how strategic relations were transformed around the NATO Partnership for Peace, the growing cooperation in the Caspian Sea, and the building of a regional security architecture surrounding Afghanistan. It also analyses Washington's difficulties in promoting 'civil society' and the limits of the US economic engagement in the region. Marlene Laruelle , Sebastien Peyrouse | May 2011 | Strategic Analysis
Comments on ‘China in SAARC: To What Effect?’ ‘China in SAARC: To What Effect?’ is a detailed article and the author has elaborated the modest achievements of SAARC despite its 25 years of existence. One of the foremost problems in the regional grouping has been a restricted charter which desperately needs a revision. Nishchal Nath Pandey | May 2011 | Strategic Analysis
Role of Force in Statecraft: Declining Utility or Inescapable Necessity Recent debates amongst the strategic community on the utility of force in statecraft have thrown up interesting perspectives that have seldom been debated in India. While great power rivalries, inter-state conflicts and coalition conflicts still remain distinct possibilities in the future, major principles of war fighting, conflict resolution, statecraft and nuclear deterrence have since been turned on their head when confronted by non-state actors and non-traditional threats. Arjun Subramaniam | May 2011 | Strategic Analysis